[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 45 (Tuesday, March 22, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H1501]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WATER CRISES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
California (Mr. Costa) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, I would like to once again rise to address
the water crises that are facing not just California, but our Nation
and throughout the world.
Today, global communities and business organizations have joined
together, and the White House is holding a water summit to raise
awareness of the 650 million people around the world who don't have
access to safe drinking water, urging leaders to focus on ways in which
we can increase access to safe, sanitary water. This is appropriate,
but it is long overdue.
On the Web site, waterday.us, it states: ``Water stress is the impact
a lack of water has on a particular sector or population. Water stress
affects nutrition, public health, environmental services, housing and
urban growth, and national security.''
{time} 1030
And national security is directly related to our ability to grow food
to ensure that American consumers are independent and have sufficient
nutrition for their daily consumption.
Water, therefore, is a resource issue of the future not only for our
Nation, but throughout the world. These impacts of not having a
reliable and safe water supply are all too familiar for those of us who
live in the San Joaquin Valley in California and my colleagues who
represent that area.
So while I believe it is fitting and appropriate that we recognize
that there is a nationwide and worldwide issue regarding our water
resources and how we manage them--with the planet having 7 billion
people last year and by the middle of this century another 2 billion,
or 9 billion people--we need to look at both short-term and long-term
comprehensive solutions to our water needs not just throughout the
world, but here in the United States, specifically, in California.
So I find it extremely disappointing that California's San Joaquin
Valley is not at the forefront of this discussion after 4 years of
devastating drought.
While I empathize with those in Flint, Michigan, and other areas of
the country, like those of us in the San Joaquin Valley, we have been
facing water shortages for 4 years; it is getting much worse; and there
is less national attention being focused on our plight.
In the valley, instead of lead poisoning due to the failure of all
levels of government, as we have seen in Flint, Michigan, we are
dealing with waters that have high nitrate levels in drinking water. In
addition to that, in many places, we don't have access to water at all.
The solutions are clear. We need to increase Federal funding for
infrastructure to build resiliency during drought periods and reduce
the impacts of water quality using all the water tools in our water
toolbox.
We need to increase coordination between local, State, and Federal
agencies to reduce the impacts of communities impaired by water quality
or a lack of access to water.
Finally, we need to increase our focus on ensuring that regulations,
where they are in place, achieve their intended purpose while
minimizing negative impacts that they have with contradictory results.
For instance, due to the decisions made by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the
Bureau of Reclamation is required to operate pumps in California's
water system under what I believe are scientifically flawed provisions,
biological opinions, which have lost, as a result, hundreds of
thousands of acre-feet of water.
This year, if the Federal agencies had operated within the
flexibility provided even in those flawed biological opinions, San
Joaquin Valley communities could have been provided an additional 2- to
300,000 acre-feet of additional water. In addition to that, that would
have benefited over 400,000 households.
As a result of the drought and the inability to capture water that is
flowing in the system, over 600,000 acres of prime productive
agricultural land have gone unplanted, and we have seen families
impacted. Families that literally do not have access to water have had
to bottle in water.
There is a very certain human toll--the impact--that is taking place
to provide highly uncertain benefits for species. This is unacceptable,
it is avoidable, and it is immoral.
I urge the Federal agencies to take action to do experimental
increases in pumping with increased detection and monitoring so we can
find out if, in fact, delta smelt and salmon traveling through the
delta are even being harmed by the exact pumping levels under
discussion.
So while I appreciate the comprehensive plan the administration is
trying to implement to solve our Nation's water crisis, we need short-
term solutions now so that farmers, farm workers, and farming
communities in the San Joaquin Valley do not go without a water supply
under the Federal project for a third year in a row.
Additionally, we must do everything possible to get Federal
legislation passed and signed into law that would not only deal with
our short-term needs, but to deal with our long-term needs as well. We
passed the House bill last year.
We need to get Senator Feinstein's bill passed so we can go to
conference because, if the Federal agencies don't act--and they have
not been doing the job that I would like to see them do--then Congress
must act.
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