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White House Releases Memo on California Water

On January 20, the White House released a Presidential Action memo on California water (see below). While the intent of the memo is pretty clear, there are no details about how these goals would be carried out. President Trump is visiting California today, and it is possible that more specifics will be forthcoming.

  

And now an update from last week's article on the pumping restrictions for the delta smelt. While the throttling back of water exports for the delta smelt was terminated after two days, the pumping restrictions continued because of regulations just adopted by the Biden administration to "protect" the longfin smelt. The longfin smelt, which is struggling in the delta, but very healthy in the colder climate of the Pacific Northwest and therefore in no danger of going extinct, was listed as endangered in July of 2024. Same water cutbacks; different species. The bottom line is more water will go to the ocean in a year that, at least for the part of the state south of Sacramento, is looking very dry.

 

Presidential Memo Released January 20, 2025

MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE, THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR 

 

SUBJECT: Putting People over Fish: Stopping Radical Environmentalism to Provide Water to Southern California

 

I hereby direct the Secretary of Commerce and Secretary of the Interior, in consultation with the heads of other departments and agencies of the United States as necessary, to immediately restart the work from my first Administration by the National Marine Fisheries Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Reclamation, and other agencies to route more water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta to other parts of the state for use by the people there who desperately need a reliable water supply. 

 

During my first term, the State of California, at the direction of its Governor, filed a lawsuit to stop my Administration from implementing improvements to California’s water infrastructure.  My Administration’s plan would have allowed enormous amounts of water to flow from the snow melt and rainwater in rivers in Northern California to beneficial use in the Central Valley and Southern California.  This catastrophic halt was allegedly in protection of the Delta smelt and other species of fish.  Today, this enormous water supply flows wastefully into the Pacific Ocean. 

 

The recent deadly and historically destructive wildfires in Southern California underscore why the State of California needs a reliable water supply and sound vegetation management practices in order to provide water desperately needed there, and why this plan must immediately be reimplemented.

 

Within 90 days of the date of this memorandum, the Secretary of Commerce and Secretary of the Interior shall report to me regarding the progress made in implementing the policies in this memorandum and provide any recommendations regarding future implementation.


Geoff Vanden Heuvel

Director of Regulatory and Economic Affairs

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