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 http://www.fresnobee.com/local/story/7585987p-8494850c.html

Westlands to pitch water deal

District could land bigger share for irrigation under proposed settlement with Indian tribe.
By Mark Grossi
The Fresno Bee

(Published Monday, October 13, 2003, 10:59 AM)


Westlands Water District, locked in a bitter dispute over irrigation water from Northern California, is planning Tuesday to offer a settlement proposal with a Trinity River Indian tribe.

The west San Joaquin Valley farm district wants to settle a 3-year-old lawsuit against the Department of Interior over a federal restoration plan for the Trinity River. The Hoopa Valley Tribe, which intervened in the lawsuit, would need to approve the settlement.

Westlands officials say the settlement would provide almost the same features in the federal restoration plan, with increased river flows to nurture damaged habitat and fisheries.

The settlement also would allow Westlands to get a little more irrigation water than the federal plan projects. The extra water would prevent potential cutbacks in dry years.

Hoopa officials said they are mystified that Westlands officials last week approached the Trinity County Board of Supervisors with the proposal before meeting with the tribe.

"Why haven't they stopped by to show it to us before talking with people who are not involved in the lawsuit?" asked Hoopa spokesman Tod Bedrosian.

Westlands spokesman Tupper Hull said there was a misunderstanding. He said district officials tried to present the proposal to the tribe last week but were unable to arrange a meeting.

"We made the effort to meet with the tribe," said Hull.

Westlands will meet with the Interior Department and the Hoopa in Sacramento on Tuesday, officials said.

The tribe supports the original restoration plan signed by the Interior Department in 2000. The Trinity, with headwaters in Northern California's Trinity Alps, was diverted decades ago to contribute to the federal Central Valley Project.

Federal officials were obligated by a 1992 law to restore the river. The 2000 plan represented many years of scientific study and political compromise.

But, as a result of the plan, water supplies would be reduced to the Central Valley Project, further cutting back an already-dwindling supply for Westlands. The district contracts for more than 1 million acre-feet of project water annually.

Westlands, a 600,000-acre district in west Fresno and Kings counties, has experienced chronic water shortages over the last decade, due to irrigation reform, drought and endangered species protections.

Aside from the farm water, Trinity flows also are used by hydroelectric plants for Sacramento Municipal Utility District and other Northern California areas. The Sacramento utility district originally joined in the lawsuit, but has since pulled out. The Northern California Power Association remains in the litigation.

In a ruling on the lawsuit, a federal judge in 2000 ordered further environmental studies of the Trinity plan, largely because of the effect on hydro power. The lawsuit was filed during a time when energy production was critical for California.

The reporter can be reached at mgrossi@fresnobee.com or 441-6316.







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