After 93 years, L.A. gives its water back
In what some call the most ambitious US river restoration ever,
water will once again flow into the Lower Owens River.
By
Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer of The Christian Science
Monitor
LOS ANGELES
At a dusty desert ceremony 235 miles north of the city
Wednesday, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa will close a
century-long chapter on what may be the biggest water grab in
the history of the American West.
Mr. Villaraigosa will push a button to send water flowing
down a 62-mile stretch of rocky culverts and scrubland once
known as the Lower Owens River. The move effectively turns the
clock back to 1913, before city fathers diverted the water that
flowed down from the Sierra-Nevada Mountains, and channeled it
to Los Angeles. That diversion, orchestrated after years of
backroom deals (chronicled in the 1974 classic, "Chinatown"),
helped give rise to America's second-largest city. But it turned
the mountain-ringed valley into a desert.
Now, several officials call the current effort the most
ambitious river restoration ever attempted in the US.
It will create a flowing river through what is now dry land
dotted only with tiny pools of runoff. The project comes after
decades of animosity between northern and southern California
that led to a 1970 court case and a 1997 promise by the Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP) to return the
water by 2003.
After further stalls and fines, a mayoral administration
wishing to turn over a new leaf acquiesced to the project.
"The significance of this cannot be overstated," says H.
David Nahai, president of the Los Angeles Board of Water and
Power Commissioners. "Inyo County gets 62 miles of desert reborn
with fish, birds, wildlife, plants, and wetlands, and Los
Angeles sees the end of decades of acrimony by doing the right,
environmentally responsible thing."
Mr. Nahai says that because four new pumps will then return
the redirected water to the L.A. aqueduct after its 62-mile
journey, the project will barely affect L.A.'s water supply.
But the new agreement will mean Los Angeles customers will
have to find about 9,000 acre feet of water - roughly the needs
of 9,000 homes for one year - from other sources, such as the
Colorado River, or through better reclamation, reuse, and
conservation. But Nahai and other officials say the city has
been successful with conservation efforts as a result of public
education campaigns, tested during intermittent droughts since
the 1980s. Though Los Angeles has added more than 750,000
residents since 1986, it uses the same amount of water today as
then.
For Inyo County, however, the change is considered to be
dramatic.
"This is definitely an historic turning point for Inyo County
that residents have been waiting for for a long time," says
Denise Racine of the California Department of Fish and Game.
Besides the aesthetic beauty of a flowing river that attracts
anglers, boaters, and swimmers, the river is expected to
generate an explosion of plant life that includes banks of new
trees.
That, in turn, helps to spur the return of more birds and
wildlife, including elk, deer, and wild mink.
"In 10 years this place will be magnificent," says Kathleen
New, president of the Lone Pine Chamber of Commerce and a
lifelong resident. "This is a very, very big deal for us to know
that people will want to come here, spend time and enjoy the
beauty."
Some residents, including Ms. New, say the original 1913 land
and water grab by LADWP had one positive result: The area was
never developed. The county's 18,000 residents live on 1.7
percent of the land. The rest is owned by the state, the federal
Bureau of Land Management, or the LADWP. In the early 1900s,
city agents posed as farmers and ranchers to buy land and water
rights. Later, Los Angeles built pumps and dams to divert the
water from local springs and wetlands to Los Angeles.
Local opposition to LADWP water diversions is not limited to
the Owens River saga. Beginning in 1939, the LADWP built a
tunnel beneath Mono Lake, another pristine, environmental
treasure 90 miles north, and began draining it for use in Los
Angeles. After 50 years of litigation, the water depletion was
halted about a decade ago, and water levels are now close to
pre-1939 levels.
"If it weren't for LADWP, we would probably look like
Palmdale and other developed cities in the California desert, so
I am thankful for that," says New. "But it would be nice to have
water."
The water's return will mean beauty and more tourism, the
region's primary source of income, she says. But significant new
development is not a concern because available land is in short
supply.
She and others say the river's return will cause confusion
and concern for ranchers in the first few years, as the flowing
water finds its old river route - now scoured away by wind,
rain, and cattle erosion. A number of fish kills is expected in
the smallish pools where fish now thrive, as incoming water
brings surface sediment.
"The old channel is just dirt, and we are expecting that it
will take awhile for the water to find its way," says Doug
Daniels, Inyo County program manager for administrative
services. Some desert shrubs will die off because of too much
water in the groundwater table. But once water is flowing again,
officials say, bass, bluegill, and catfish will begin
multiplying.
The water is expected to flow at an annual average rate of 40
cubic feet of water per second, with seasonal rushes of up to
200 cubic feet per second. Three weeks ago the LADWP announced a
plan to spend $105 million on berms intended to mitigate dust
storms in an area that used to hold the Owens Lake - now a dusty
lake bed.
Retired rancher Stan Matlick has complained that it has taken
court orders for LADWP to move forward, despite its claims of
newfound environmental sensitivity. "It's a good thing, but I'm
a bit dubious of how the LADWP will stick to this," says Mr.
Matlick.
But most observers say the agreement is a win-win that will
serve as a model for other river restoration projects in the
West.
"I would call this a long-overdue milestone," says Rita
Schmidt Sudman of the Water Education Foundation, a nonprofit in
Sacramento, Calif.
"It is very significant for the benefits it is giving both
parties here in California, but also in setting the tone for
reconciliation among others across the West to not just continue
to fight their battles out in court."
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