Butte County “Water Policy Workshop” – please attend this important meeting.

If you have any concerns, ideas or comments about water, saving wildlife habitat, or rural and urban water use in Butte County, then please attend this important meeting. Some of the items to be discussed are: The Tuscan Aquifer, the proposed Paradise Irrigation District water pipeline, ground water use, surface water use and the proposed new “Tuscan Water District.”  See details below photos.

Paradise Irrigation District reservoir, before the Camp Fire.

 

Paradise Reservoir during the drought of 2015, compare with above photo, by KarenLaslo.

 

Sacramento River, Butte County.

 

Oroville Dam.

 

Mallard pair on Chico Creek.

 

Chico Creek, Five Mile, Bidwell Park

Water Policy Workshop
December 17, 2019
Start time 1:00 PM
Board of Supervisors Chambers
25 County Center Drive, Oroville

On December 17, 2019, the Butte County Board of Supervisors will hold a Water Policy Workshop. The workshop will include a presentation of adopted Butte County water resource policies as well as an overview of water supply challenges. Over the past two decades, Butte County has enacted numerous water resource policies and programs. Starting in 1996, through the voter approved Butte County Code,

Butte County Water Policy Workshop

Chapter 33, Groundwater Conservation, a significant policy foundation has been established. In 2010, the Board of Supervisors adopted the Butte County General Plan 2030, which includes an optional Water Resource Element that specifies the County’s water resource policies, programs and intended future actions. Since the adoption of the General Plan 2030, water resource issues in the County have been affected by periods of severe drought, ongoing climate change, implementation of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act and water supply impacts from disasters such as the Camp Fire. With these ongoing and emerging issues, it is timely for the Board and community to revisit Butte County Water Policies with an opportunity for Board discussion and/or action, public comment, and Board direction to staff. The Water Policy Workshop is timed for 1:00 p.m. on December 17, 2019, and may be continued to a future date if the Board determines additional time is needed for discussion, public comment, or Board direction.

The agenda for the workshop is listed below.
1) Introduction
2) Policy Foundation
3) County Activities
4) Local Water Supply Challenges
5) Public Comment
6) Policy Discussion and Direction to Staff
Workshop materials can be found at the Department of Water and Resource Conservation web page.
Thank you for allowing us the opportunity to work with you. We look forward to continuing our dedication to cooperation, collaboration and keeping control of our water in the hands of locals. Please feel free to contact our office with any questions you may have.
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Administrative Analyst
Butte County Department of Water & Resource Conservation
530.552.3595

 

The Chico Green New Deal: Inter-generational force needed

By now, most everyone in Chico has heard about the Chico Green New Deal (CGND). It’s been plastered all over local media, and speaks to me of the urgency of the impending climate crisis. And so I went downtown to a press conference held by the co-authors of the Chico Green New Deal: Vice-mayor Alex Brown and Council member Karl Ory. I wanted to hear first hand about their plan to deal with the most devastating and catastrophic issue of our time. (See link below to CGND.)

Vice-mayor Alex Brown, Council member Karl Ory and supporters.

As I listened to Alex and Karl speak about what we must do as a community to combat the worst affects of climate change, I was struck by the juxtaposition of a young and newly elected Vice-mayor appearing aside an older seasoned veteran of the City Council. Together, they constituted the essential inter-generational force that alone can avoid climate catastrophe and move us toward a way of life that can be sustained for future generations. It will take both young and old. It will take all of us.

Alex and Karl.

No generation can escape the consequences of an unrestrained climate crisis. The young among us will bear the unchecked consequences for the whole of their lives, and the older among us, in their aging vulnerability, will suffer, as they already are now. I thought about the trailer park in Paradise inhabited mostly by senior citizens and disabled people that was totally obliterated by the Camp Fire. I thought about how it’s we current oldsters, and the generations before us, who participated in a social, economic and environmental system that caused the problems we now face. I thought about how this current generation of young people, including Alex, will replace mine and Karl’s generation. What will it be like for the current generation of young people as they age if we don’t work together now to do what we can to mitigate climate change?

Site of the Paradise trailer park after the Camp Fire destroyed it.

 

Young climate activists of the Sunrise Movement on Halloween at the CSUC campus.

 

On the first year anniversary of the Camp Fire I read the Chico Green New Deal.  Republican City Council members and climate change deniers, Kasey Reynolds and Sean Morgan, have said the CGND will “cost too much.” Council member Sean Morgan was quoted by KRCR as saying, “If it’s anything like the Green New Deal for the country it will bankrupt us and drive the price of everything through the roof.”

November 8, 2018, 6:00AM, the morning the Camp Fire started, as seen from our house in Chico.

But, I ask, what is the cost of doing nothing, or denying that the problem even exist? How many millions of FEMA dollars have already been spent  trying to mitigate the disastrous consequences of climate change — consequences like the twisted wreckage left in the wake of super hurricanes, whole counties with farms and towns awash with flood waters, entire towns like that of Paradise, California, left in ashy ruins? What is the true cost of a state, a nation, a planet laid siege by climate chaos? And far beyond the economic cost, what is the truly human cost of 86 lost lives and 20,000 fire refugees driven down to Chico from homes and a way of life that was burned to the ground?

 

Susan Dobra and John-michael Sun, Paradise Camp Fire refugees.

 

FEMA trailers in Chico for Camp Fire refugees.

 

And what is the cost to the millions of global climate refugees whose lives have been destroyed by the consequences of climate change? And where will they go? What will be the cost to our local food production and water supply when droughts are more severe and prolonged?

In May 2015, Chico Creek shriveled up during a severe drought caused by the miniscule snow pack in the Sierra mountains.

 

What affect will climate change have on our nut orchards, one of Butte County’s main cash crops?

 

Rice fields in the Sacramento Valley use a lot of water. Will they be sustainable in the coming climate crisis?

 

Chico Saturday Farmers’ Market – GRUB Community Supported Agriculture, a local, organic family farm. How long will they be able to grow food for us?

 

A Chico Saturday Farmers’ Market customer.

 

Local Chico Saturday Farmers’ Market farmer.

 

Another of the Chico Saturday Farmers’ Market farmers.

And can we put a price on each of the wondrous plant and animal species that are at risk of becoming extinct (many species are already gone forever) due to habitat loss as a result of this climate crisis?  What a lonely planet this Earth would be without these species. (See link below to U. N. report on species extinction.)

 

The Carmel River fails to flow to the sea every summer now.  Without the volunteers who transport them to the ocean waters, these young Steelhead trout would not be able to complete their life cycle.

 

An adult Osprey brings a fish to feed its 3 chicks.

 

 

California Redwood tree (and admirer).

 

Black-throated Gray Warbler.

 

The Chico Green New Deal was meant to be a template that the Chico City Council and the newly formed Climate Action Commission will be able to use to come up with a more detailed plan that will move our town towards sustainability. But it’s not up to the City Council and the Commission alone – we need to do this as a community. Young and old must work together so that future generations of humans and non-human creatures can have a planet that’s worth living on. Only a collective will, wherein the old think and act with the mind of the young and the young with the mind of the old will suffice to turn this crisis around. I’m brought to consider that old adage, “If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.”

When the press conference with Karl and Alex was over, I felt some relief from the despair I’d been feeling. I got on my bike and rode home.

 

Link to the CGND:   https://drive.google.com/file/d/1bRark_-LbYCOB7_2BTa0Xg7HKyOISRK9/view?fbclid=IwAR21hXThZvOyVQ-EV8Jy5qtdJDL4LfviCLuoNz004mSLTJoIhgPXOOwE2hQ

Link to U.N. report on species extinction:  https://ipbes.net/news/Media-Release-Global-Assessment

Banana Slug