FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 02, 2011
U.S. House of Representatives Natural Resources Committee,
Chairman Doc Hastings
PERMALINK
Chairman McClintock: We must restore
abundance as the cornerstone of our federal
water and power policies
Bureau of Reclamation FY12 Budget
Scrutinized by Subcommittee on Water and
Power
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
The Subcommittee on Water and Power, held an
oversight hearing today to examine the FY
2012 budget request for the Bureau of
Reclamation (Reclamation). Subcommittee
Chairman Tom McClintock (CA-04) also focused
on Reclamation’s wasteful spending and a
divergence from its original mission of
providing water and power abundance that has
resulted in lost jobs and economic hardships
for Westerners.
“It is the objective of this sub-committee
to restore the original – and as yet
unfulfilled mission of the Bureau of
Reclamation – to develop and utilize our
nation’s vast water and hydroelectric
resources to build a new era of abundance
and prosperity for our nation.
The failure of the last generation to keep
pace with our water and power needs has
caused chronic water shortages and
skyrocketing electricity prices that are
causing serious economic harm,”
said Chairman McClintock.
“I hope that this Administration will become
a partner in this new era of abundance
rather than an obstacle. The rationing of
shortages has never solved a shortage – only
a policy of abundance can do that. We have
wasted not only money but time, and we can
afford to waste no more of either.”
Last year due to regulations imposed by
Reclamation to divert water from farms to a
three inch fish, some communities in
California’s San Joaquin Valley recorded 40%
unemployment. This year, with Sierra Nevada
snowpack at near record levels, San Joaquin
farmers may only get 50% of their water
allocations, keeping thousands out of work.
Reclamation’s policies have clearly
contributed to increased unemployment and
higher consumer costs, particularly in rural
communities.
"Even with reservoirs nearly overflowing,
anticipated water allocation levels are
nowhere near the full allocation farmers
should receive. Increasing water storage
must be a top priority in the Valley,”
said Rep. Jeff Denham (CA-19).
"It is incomprehensible that farmers cannot
receive the full allocation of water that
they have a contract for even in wet years
such as this one with a year-to-date
snowpack at 127%.”
Water lost due to environmental flows
doesn’t just affect irrigators or municipal
water users—hydropower generation also
suffers greatly. Glenn Canyon Dam in
northern Arizona has lost up to 1,000
megawatts, or enough to power one million
homes, due to environmental mandates. Some
wholesale electricity customers served by
Reclamation power facilities are paying 16
to 30 percent higher rates because of
environmental related regulations. Every
megawatt of clean, cheap, reliable
hydropower we lose must be replaced by more
expensive forms of electricity—costs that
will ultimately be passed on to the
ratepayer.
“The Administration is creating regulatory
and administrative uncertainty that
threatens thousands of jobs in my district
and the long-term water supply for Arizona.
Take for example the Navajo Generating
Station (NGS), located near Page, AZ - the
lack of coordination between the BoR, BIA,
and the Office of Surface Management on
critical services contracts related to the
operation of the plant threatens its
viability and the primary source of power
for the infrastructure that pumps water to
80% of Arizona's population,”
said Rep. Paul Gosar (AZ-01).
“With extremely high unemployment in my
district, as well as the scarcity of water
in Arizona, it is time we implement
commonsense policies that allow our region
to address our water and power needs, while
also protecting the environment.”
Instead of focusing on building new water
storage and infrastructure, the Bureau of
Reclamation is spending scarce taxpayer
dollars on questionable projects. At a time
when the federal government is running
record budget deficits, Reclamation has
funded dubious ventures such as toilet
exchange programs, tiger salamander
research, and “City Makeovers.”
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