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PufPuf23

(8,759 posts)
31. California Water Project
Mon Apr 20, 2015, 04:45 PM
Apr 2015

The California Water Plan (1957) - Bulletin No. 3 was a plan to harness all the wild Rivers of California (including the Klamath and Smith) in a system of Reservoirs and tunnels and power plants. Dams built under this plan included Shasta, Trinity, Oroville, Keswick, Lewiston, Whiskeytown, etc. Governor Ed Brown was a political supporter of the Plan and Governor during most of the construction that did occur.

The argument then as now was the North versus the monied special interests of the South.

Back in the 1980s there was a plan to raise Shasta Dam and relocate the Shasta Lake communities and Interstate 5. Importing Columbia River water via a pipeline along the interstate 5 corridor has also been mentioned but is at least politically infeasible between the two Sates.

IMHO

Too many people live and too much industry and agriculture occur that are dependent on imported water.

Ground water has also been "mined" extensively.

Soils have been farmed and "salted", subsided, or eroded (by wind in the Delta area).


A good read about water in the West is Reisner's Cadillac Desert.

http://www.amazon.com/Cadillac-Desert-American-Disappearing-Revised/dp/0140178244/ref=sr_1_fkmr2_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1429561787&sr=1-3-fkmr2&keywords=Reiser+California+water

>>The State Water Project is Born

The Burns-Porter Act, formally known as the California Water Resources Development Bond Act, was placed on the November 1960 ballot. Also known as Proposition One, its chances for passage were unpredictable. Heated and continuous negotiations were still ongoing, with MWD withholding its endorsement until days before the election. The San Francisco Chronicle strongly opposed the proposition. California’s North-South regional rivalry was a strong factor in the election.

picture of political cartoon that appeared in the San Francisco ChronicleThe San Francisco Chronicle was among the Project's strongest opponents and urged its readers to vote down the bond issue.

On November 8, the Burns-Porter Act was narrowly approved by the slim margin of 173,944 votes from about 5.8 million ballots counted. Only one northern county supported the proposition--Butte County, site of Oroville Dam. But one fact was certain, construction was soon to begin on what is now the nation's largest state-built water and power development and distribution system, which would forever change the face and future of a once virgin land.

Construction Begins

picture of 1956 floods1956 was a devastating flood year.

Construction on the Oroville site actually began even before the passage of the Burns-Porter Act. A $25 million emergency appropriation was passed in 1957 after a record late 1955-early 1956 flood, which devastated Northern and Central California. Statewide, 64 deaths were recorded, most in Sutter County and Yuba City, and more than $200 million of property damage.

picture of Governor Ed Brown at groungbreaking ceremonyGovernor Edmond Brown at Oroville groundbreaking ceremony.

http://www.water.ca.gov/swp/history.cfm

The Water Wars...The North has been sending water south to the South and used to libdem4life Apr 2015 #1
I haven't heard about a Midwest drought. sufrommich Apr 2015 #2
The developing drought isn't really terribly serious in the upper midwest,yet HereSince1628 Apr 2015 #4
Yes, they're doing much better.My parents live on Lake Huron sufrommich Apr 2015 #7
Mainly Texas and Oklahoma KamaAina Apr 2015 #21
There has been some relief lately, but...see link libdem4life Apr 2015 #6
The way I remember it...a cow-calf team takes from 15-20 gallons of water per day. HereSince1628 Apr 2015 #24
That sounds about right. It causes a rise in meat prices, as well. We used to have a pond for the libdem4life Apr 2015 #35
My parents, who are 90 years old now, MineralMan Apr 2015 #3
Interesting. Do farmers pay for water in CA? sufrommich Apr 2015 #5
Oh, yes, they do. Irrigation costs are the largest expense for MineralMan Apr 2015 #9
That's very sad. I imagine it's even made more dire sufrommich Apr 2015 #12
That part of Ventura County grows less and less MineralMan Apr 2015 #13
I can't imagine the thinking behind replacing farms with suburbs, sufrommich Apr 2015 #15
Makes no sense to me, either. MineralMan Apr 2015 #19
That stretch along 126 did used to be more "countrified" villager Apr 2015 #27
Yup. My old home highway has changed, and MineralMan Apr 2015 #29
they sell it to LA reddread Apr 2015 #23
This reminds me of the phony "electricity crisis" back in the early 2000's 951-Riverside Apr 2015 #8
I don't think CA's drought is phony. nt sufrommich Apr 2015 #10
But apparently man made... dixiegrrrrl Apr 2015 #32
I can verify the last four years have been dry as hell REP Apr 2015 #11
This isn't phony. zappaman Apr 2015 #17
that would be the downside of allowing your media* to lie to you reddread Apr 2015 #20
Electricity is generated and distributed by people; rain is not nt geek tragedy Apr 2015 #25
I live 1/4 mile from Folsom Lake. The drought is real. Throd Apr 2015 #30
LMFAO ...and then there is the reality of the water situation. L0oniX Apr 2015 #34
Message auto-removed Name removed Apr 2015 #14
I'd really like to know how they decided which cuts are happening where XemaSab Apr 2015 #16
From what I read,it depends on how effective a city's sufrommich Apr 2015 #18
I live there for 5 decades, had family in San Diego, and watched the entire LA to libdem4life Apr 2015 #22
yes, the Brown family knows how to have ditches dug reddread Apr 2015 #26
California Water Project PufPuf23 Apr 2015 #31
Come now - ISIS is a way more serious threat than no water. tenderfoot Apr 2015 #28
Nestle will start paying it's fair share aaaaannnnnnyyyyyyyyy day now right? bluevoter4life Apr 2015 #33
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