On
Wednesday, July 17, BEC staff met with members of the Community Advisory Board
(CAB), a group of people that live and/or work in Oroville and have expertise or
capacity to contribute to the upcoming Public Forum on Dioxin and research
project.The
CAB so far consists of members from
- Butte County Air Quality Management District,
- Butte County Environmental Health,
- the California Health Collaborative,
- Oroville Boys and Girls Club,
- and the Oroville Democratic Club.
The
Forum is scheduled for Wednesday,
July 31 at
the Public
Library in Oroville, 1820 Mitchell Ave. We've
got an event onFacebook with
more details.Board
discussions covered potential test strategies and the need to be very clear on
known and potential dioxin sources, both industrial and domestic (the latter
being primarily barrel burning, a significant source of dioxin). Advisory
Board members identified what they could contribute to the Forum, and outreach
to the community in general. Everybody learned something as we shared our
specific expertise relating to the larger issue of dioxin in
Oroville. Huge
BEC thanks to all of the CAB members who attended the meeting; your generosity
and your time is a real gift.
Attend a
hearing
Download the factsheet
The United States Bureau
of Reclamation has released for public review the Shasta Lake Water Resources
Investigation Draft Environmental Impact Statement (SLWRI DEIS). It’s a long
name for a simple but incredibly expensive and destructive idea – raising one of
the tallest dams in California to expand what is already the largest reservoir
in the state, supposedly to improve downstream river conditions for salmon and
steelhead.
If the bizarre concept of a dam helping fish made
your head spin, you’re not the only one confused by this
oxymoron.
The Bureau claims
that spending more than a billion dollars to raise Shasta Dam by 18.5 feet will
provide additional water that will be used to provide cold water downstream for
threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead. Apparently, no one at the Bureau
realizes that Sacramento River salmon began their downward spiral towards
extinction when Shasta Dam was completed in 1945, thereby blocking the river’s
historic spawning grounds for salmon and steelhead and modifying downstream
flows to the extent that the river no longer provides suitable fish habitat,
particularly in drought years.
Here’s the real kicker – the Bureau hopes that you
won’t find in the DEIS’ thousands of pages of analysis, general verbiage, and
complex appendices a report from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) that
states unequivocally that raising the dam will have negligible benefits for
endangered fish. According to the USFWS, the raised dam will provide no fishery
benefits 90% of the time. That’s because dams don’t produce water, they simply
capture it when rain falls from the sky and flows downhill. If the rain doesn’t
fall (as often happens during California’s chronic drought periods), there will
be little or no additional water stored behind the raised dam to benefit
salmon.
Also hidden in this
massive document is the real reason for the dam raise – every extra
drop of water stored behind the raised dam will be sold to federal water
contractors downstream, with 77% of the water sold for export south of the
Delta. Which means the Shasta Dam raise is directly tied the
proposal by water contractors and Governor Jerry Brown to build enormous twin
tunnels under the Delta, which will divert large amounts of fresh water from the
Sacramento River (much of it stored upstream behind Shasta Dam) for export to
large corporate farms in the San Joaquin Valley and Tulare
Basin.
Friends of the River is still reviewing the current
version of the DEIS. But our analysis of the preliminary DEIS last spring
identified many more problems with this proposal, in addition to lack of fishery
benefits, cost, and true purpose.
The dam raise and reservoir expansion will drown
thousands of acres of National Forest land managed for recreation, fish, and
wildlife. The expanded reservoir will drown the remaining homeland of Winnemen
Wintu Tribe, who lost much of their tribal territory when Shasta Dam was
constructed more than 65 years ago. Reservoir expansion will also destroy and
degrade habitat for dozens of sensitive, threatened, and endangered plants and
animals. The raised dam will further modify downstream flows, to the possible
detriment of aquatic and riparian ecosystems along the Sacramento River
important to fish and wildlife. The expansion itself violates state law
protecting the free flowing condition and extraordinary values of the McCloud
River. It also violates federal law that requires consideration of possible
National Wild & Scenic River protection for segments of the McCloud, upper
Sacramento, and Pit Rivers, as an alternative to expanding the
dam.
Because of the size
of the DEIS, we’re not yet prepared to ask people to send official comments in
response to the documents. But the deadline for public comments is September 26,
so there is plenty of time. Meanwhile, the Bureau’s will hold three public
workshops next week, which will provide an ideal opportunity for activists and
the general public to learn more about this project and ask piercing questions.
The workshops are:
- Tuesday, July 16,
6-8PM in the Holiday Inn Palomino Room, 1900 Hilltop Drive, Redding,
CA.
- Wednesday, July 17, 1-3PM at the Cal Expo Quality
Inn Hotel & Suites, 1413 Howe Avenue, Sacramento, CA.
- Thursday, July 18, 6-8PM, Merced County Fairgrounds
Geronimo Building, 403 F Street, Los Banos, CA.
The Bureau will also hold public hearings in the
same cities on September 10-12. Look for a detailed alert from Friends of the
River before then.
You can review the DEIS online at http://www.usbr.gov/mp/slwri. You can also download
Friends of the River’s fact sheet concerning the dam raise by visiting
http://www.friendsoftheriver.org/NoDamRaise. The fact
sheet is based on our review of the preliminary Feasibility Report and DEIS last
spring. Please note that some of these issues and concerns may change based on
our upcoming analysis of the most recently released DEIS.
For more information concerning this issue, please
contact Steve Evans, Wild Rivers Consultant for Friends of the River, phone:
(916) 442-3155 x221, email: sevans@friendsoftheriver.org.