For Immediate Release: 8/23/22
Sacramento, CA – Represented by the Environmental Law Clinic at Stanford, California Tribes and environmental justice organizations have sent a formal Request for Reconsideration of the State Water Resources Control Board decision in June of this year denying their Petition to review and update water quality standards for the Bay-Delta.
The Request points out the serious deficiencies in the Board’s decision, including its failure to address the Board’s decades-long neglect of its duty to update water quality standards and its failure to set forth a pathway to remedy the discriminatory effects of that inaction on Indigenous Peoples and disadvantaged communities in the Delta.
“The State Water Board has made a public commitment to addressing the State sponsored racial inequity baked into the water rights system. It now needs to act in alignment with that commitment by addressing the issues raised in the Petition,” said Rica Garcia, an attorney with the Environmental Law Clinic at Stanford Law School.
Stanford Environmental Law Clinic submitted the Request for Reconsideration on behalf of Petitioners Little Manila Rising, Restore the Delta, Save California Salmon, Shingle Springs Band of Miwok Indians, and Winnemem Wintu Tribe.
In addition, a Letter of Support for Petitioners’ Request for Reconsideration was signed by Councilwoman Kimberly Warmsley of the City of Stockton, the NAACP Stockton Chapter, Nopal: Community Cultura Activism Educación, Catholic Charities Diocese of Stockton, Reinvent Stockton Foundation, Third City Coalition, P.U.E.N.T.E.S, Edge Collaborative, Reinvent South Stockton Coalition, and Public Health Advocates.
Under state law, the State Water Resources Control Board has 30 days to respond to the reconsideration request.
Background
On May 24, 2022, the Petitioners listed above filed a Petition for Rulemaking with the California State Water Resources Control Board.
The May 24 Petition included an extensive description of California’s racist history that formally granted water rights only to white men. Indigenous Peoples and communities of color in the Delta were not given the opportunity to acquire water rights under state law. And the water rights system continues to fail to recognize that Indigenous communities, who used and stewarded the waterways since time immemorial, have prior rights to the water. Today, so-called “senior” water rights holders, who acceded to the colonialists’ water rights claims, still have a tight grip on river flows, even during an unprecedented drought. The Sacramento-San Joaquin Bay-Delta, the largest estuary on the West Coast of the Americas, is dying as a consequence.
The Petition was recognized as presenting a critical and sorely overlooked lens into California’s ongoing water battles. Delta water crisis linked to California’s racist past, tribes and activists say, Los Angeles Times, 5/26/22
The State Response Found Lacking
On June 24, the State Water Board, responded by denying the petition.
Among other errors pointed to in the Reconsideration Request, the Board failed to acknowledge that it is decades behind schedule in reviewing outdated water quality standards for the majority of the watershed, or set forth meaningful commitments to completing its review. It was also silent on the documented harms that Indigenous Peoples and disadvantaged communities in the Delta continue to experience as a result of low flows and poor water quality resulting from the Board’s inaction. And it was silent on what actions it would take, as the law requires, to correct this discrimination and to consult with tribes and environmental justice communities in doing so.
“The State Water Resources Control Board’s dereliction of duty continues. The Board’s response did not actually address the issues central to our Petition for Rulemaking. So we are now considering all of our options,” said Gary Mulcahy, Government Liaison for the Winnemem Wintu Tribe.
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Contact:
Rica Garcia Environmental Law Clinic, Stanford Law School, (408) 398-4278, rica.garcia@stanford.edu; Stephanie Safdi, Environmental Law Clinic, Stanford Law School, (650) 497-9443, ssafdi@stanford.edu
Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Restore the Delta, 209-479-2053, barbara@restorethedelta.org