[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 96 (Thursday, June 16, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H3957-H3959]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FARM CREDIT SYSTEM
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the gentleman from California (Mr. Costa) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority leader.
[[Page H3958]]
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, I rise, first, to recognize the 100th
anniversary of the Farm Credit System in America.
The Farm Credit System in America was set 100 years ago to provide
lending opportunities for American farmers, ranchers, dairymen--those
who tilled the soil, those who put food on America's dinner table every
night. Through the success of the Farm Credit organizations throughout
this country, we celebrate now 100 years of that successful ability to
make loans to those who are young, who are older farmers, who are
starting out, who have been farming for generations--to those who in
every region of America do best, which is to produce the healthiest,
the most nutritious, the most bountiful crops anywhere grown in the
world so that American consumers and their families can enjoy those
food products at the lowest cost value possible.
Clearly, we know that the success of American agriculture is, in
large part, due to the success of the Farm Credit organizations across
this country. We commend them for their efforts and celebrate 100 years
of making America the most productive agricultural country in the
world.
Terror Attack in Orlando, Florida
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, I rise, sadly, to address the terror attack
that occurred last Sunday in Orlando, Florida.
Today, the President and the Vice President are journeying to Orlando
to mourn with those families and friends who felt this terrible tragedy
that has reverberated across America.
As we mourn the loss of those lives, we stand with the LGBT community
and decry all crimes of hate against all people in America and
throughout the world.
Sadly, in my district, there have been multiple instances of hate
crimes committed, in part, against the Sikh community and against other
communities. In the wake of the deadliest shooting in U.S. history,
issues like hate crimes, access to weapons, and the threat of terrorism
are at the forefront of Americans' thoughts.
As Members of Congress, we have to ask ourselves: At what point are
we going to have an honest discussion about the continuation of hate
crimes that happen throughout our country? When is enough enough? If
now is not the time, then when is the time?
The deadly shootings that took place in Orlando, we know, could have
happened anywhere in the United States. The reality is that we do not
have a consensus here in this House on the appropriate policies that
are needed to prevent it from happening again. It is time that we stop
playing politics if we are ever going to have an honest discussion, a
conversation, about preventing hate crimes in America. Sound bites and
blaming others do not translate into improving policies that make
Americans safer. It simply doesn't.
I urge my colleagues, on a bipartisan basis, to thoughtfully discuss
and to hold hearings on these very important issues so that we can pass
meaningful legislation. Yes, if we pass meaningful legislation, it will
have to be, by its very nature, bipartisan. Pass it, and send it to the
President's desk so that it can be signed into law. Hopefully, we will
point back to a time when we won't have to stand for a moment of
silence for a tragedy that occurred in some part of America. Americans,
I believe, want us to do better, and we owe them that.
California's Water System
Mr. COSTA. Mr. Speaker, finally, I rise, as I have on a regular
basis, to update Members of the House on the situation that faces
California's water system--the devastating drought that now has gone
beyond 4 years.
Today, the Shasta Lake and Folsom Lake, which are part of the Central
Valley's project--two major reservoirs in the Sacramento River
watershed--have enough water to supply 100 percent water allocations to
farmers in the Sacramento Valley and to the San Joaquin River Exchange
Contractors, along with wildlife refuges in the San Joaquin Valley. We
had hoped for an El Nino year. We didn't get it, but we did get between
80 and 95 percent of our normal supply, which is much better than the 5
percent of snow and rain that we received the year before.
Notwithstanding that fact, the United States National Marine
Fisheries Service and the Fish and Wildlife Service are now proposing
new efforts in recent weeks to recover species, which will impact
Reclamation's ability to deliver the water that they had previously
allocated. In the spring, the way the Federal and State water projects
work, is that, in April, the snow depths are measured--that is about
the end of our snow in California--as is the precipitation during our
rain time period of the year, and they measure how much water is
available to be allocated for all of the water contractors, both in the
Federal service areas and in the State service areas.
Yet, if the action that is being proposed 2 months later by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and by NMFS--as a part of the NOAA Federal
agency--is taken, it would be unprecedented that 2 months after
allocations have been made, based upon what we believe the snow to be
in the mountains and the rain we receive this winter, the allocations
somehow would be taken back or dramatically cut back.
Despite an abundance of water in the Shasta Reservoir--it is almost
full--the National Marine Fisheries Service is considering a
temperature control plan that would limit releases of only 8,000 cubic
feet per second of water. Now the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is
asking that we allow more water out, and, of course, the National
Marine Fisheries Service is asking that we restrict water to reserve a
cold water pool. The constraints, which are required by existing
regulations, have the following implications if, in fact, these actions
are taken:
One, it would prevent farmers in the Sacramento Valley from diverting
water already promised by Reclamation. Unheard of;
It would limit Reclamation's ability to export water to meet its
commitment to the Exchange Contractors and to senior water rights
holders in the San Joaquin Valley. It has not happened before;
It could lead to Reclamation's having to make releases from Friant
Dam, which is in my service area, to meet other contractors' needs and
reduce water previously promised to farmers in the Friant system, who,
over the last 2 years, have received a zero water allocation. In April,
Reclamation said they could get 35 percent of their normal water. Then,
in May, it was increased by another 30 percent to 65 percent. Now they
are talking about cutting it in half, maybe. Unacceptable;
It would also be unlikely that Reclamation could supply the meager 5
percent of allocation that was made for south-of-delta agricultural
water service contractors. Let me tell you that these contractors, for
over 2 years, have had a zero water allocation. Hundreds of thousands
of acres, as a result of that, have gone unplanted--fallow.
These are devastating impacts for farmers, farmworkers, and the farm
communities that I represent that work so hard every day to put food on
America's dinner table. That is the consequence. Reclamation would be
required to, once again, drain the reserves in the Folsom Reservoir,
the Folsom Dam. These consequences, in my view, are unacceptable and
should not occur.
While the National Marine Fisheries Service is proposing water to be
held in Shasta through the summer and fall, the Fish and Wildlife
Service is requesting additional outflow, during the summer, for
increasing the habitat for delta smelt.
{time} 1430
These conflicting requests make no sense. They make no sense to the
person on the street. They make no sense if you try to explain it to
people enjoying their dinner at their dinner table. And they certainly
don't make any sense to the farmers, the farmworkers, and the farm
communities.
The request, I might add, is outside of the requirements of the 2008
biological opinion--I called them the flawed biological opinions--under
the Endangered Species Act, and it is in direct contradiction to the
requests made by the National Marine Fisheries Service.
Further, the Fish and Wildlife Service has failed to conduct the
statutory analysis on the outflow request; and when they made the
request, it was made without adequate scientific support under the
environmental review process.
If I sound frustrated, I have good reason to be frustrated.
[[Page H3959]]
Additionally, the Fish and Wildlife Service is also failing to
implement a comprehensive plan for species recovery. In testimony, the
head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, when I asked over a month
ago if they had a recovery plan, said: Well, yes.
I said: Well, what is it?
He said: Well, it is 20 years old, so it is really out of date.
I said: Well, then, you really don't have a plan.
And they acknowledged that.
Part of the comprehensive recovery plan does include provisions like
those in legislation that we voted on yesterday in the Natural
Resources Committee, the Save Our Salmon Act, of which I am a
cosponsor. This act would begin to limit the impacts of predator
species that are one of the principal causes of the decline of salmon
and smelt in the delta. So the Save Our Salmon Act needs to be heard
here on the floor, and I hope it will be passed and ultimately signed
into law.
So the requirements made by the National Marine Fisheries Service,
the Fish and Wildlife Service are unprecedented, I say again; and the
impacts, intended or not, are real. They will be severe throughout
California, especially in the San Joaquin Valley that I represent a
part of, affecting as much as 6 million acres of productive, prime
agricultural land that produces half the Nation's fruits and
vegetables. That is the number one citrus State in the Nation, the
number one dairy State in the Nation, number one production in wine and
grapes. The product lines, 300 commodities, go on and on and on. That
is how devastating these decisions could be if, in fact, they were
granted.
So I urge the administration to reject these harmful actions. Common
sense, at some time, must be applied. Let's prevent this train wreck
from happening. Let's get to work on fixing a broken water system in
California that was designed for 20 million people. Today we have 41
million people living in California. It was designed for the
agriculture we had in the sixties.
Today, we are far more productive in our agricultural efforts, and it
was never designed in a way to provide for environmental water as it is
being requested today. So it is a broken water system because, when we
have continuous dry years, it cannot serve all the demands that are
placed upon it for our people, for our farms, and to ensure that we
have the ability to maintain the environment for future generations to
come.
I yield back the balance of my time.
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