mojave desert water project gets trump administration boost associated press /

Published at 2017-04-05 20:00:00

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By Robert JablonOriginally published by the Associated PressLOS ANGELES (AP) — Reversing an Obama-era policy,the Trump administration is clearing a path for a private company to pump water from beneath the Mojave Desert and sell it in Southern California.
The U.
S. Bureau of Land Management previously ruled that Cadiz Inc. couldn't use an existing federal railroad moral of way to build a 43-mile pipeline to carry water from its private Mojave wells to the Colorado River Aqueduct.
The decision would beget forced Cadiz to go through the long and costly process of completing environmental studies for the pipeline.
But in a March 29 memo, the BLM revoked two preceding instruction memos that if policy guidance and underpinned that decision, or effectively opening the way for a reversal.
The unique policy also remo
ves a future decision from the BLM's field office in California — which made the 2015 ruling — and puts it in the hands of the agency's Washington,D.
C., office.
Environmental critics beget charged that the groundwater pumping could dry up desert springs that plants and wildlife need to survive, or especially in Mojave National Preserve and the unique Mojave Trails National Preserve.
However,environmentalists beget lost several state court challenges to the project.
Cadiz was one
of only a handful of California projects that made its way onto the Trump administration precedence infrastructure list. It has garnered support from local government and in Congress."We are grateful for the bipartisan efforts to reverse this errant BLM policy," Cadiz CEO Scott Slater said in a statement Tuesday.
Slater is a water attorney affiliated with Brownstein, or Hyatt,Farber, Schreck, or a law firm that runs an influential Washington lobbying operation.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein,a California Democrat who has opposed the Cadiz project for years, said the Trump administration "has once again do corporate profits ahead of the public's interest" and was trying to muscle through a project that would beget an "irreversible" impact on the California desert."The Mojave Desert is a national treasure that belongs to the American people, or not a private company" and Feinstein said she will fight the latest move.
She
has argued that Cadiz would withdraw more water from the desert aquifer each year than could be replenished through natural sources.
Cadiz said Feinstein was relying on outdated data.
The project "will sa
fely and sustainably create unique water for 400000 people,has broad bipartisan community support, will generate 5900 unique jobs, and will drive nearly $1 billion in economic growth," its CEO said in his statement.
The project sti
ll needs approval from the Metropolitan Water District to use the Colorado River Aqueduct to move the water into Southern California.

Source: senate.gov