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National News See other National News Articles Title: California Water Idiocracy Targets the Nation's Food Supply California Farm Water Coalition Warns Domestic Food Supply In Peril with State Cutting Water California farms produce over half of the countrys fruits, nuts, and vegetables By Katy Grimes, May 25, 2022 The California Farm Water Coalition issued a dire statement Tuesday warning that Californias agriculture industry and food supply is in peril because of restricted agriculture water supplies. Todays State Water Board emergency water conservation regulation continues to demonstrate how serious this years drought is. Water conservation measures are reaching farther and farther into our communities and now go beyond the water supply cuts felt by California farms and rural communities earlier this year. The California Farm Water Coalition represents agriculture water suppliers, water districts, agribusiness, farmers, as well as the supporting agribusinesses such as farm equipment suppliers, tractor manufacturers, and the like. It was only last summer that the State Water Resources Control Board eliminated water supplies for thousands of family farms throughout the Central Valley, a mere two years after the states reservoirs were full from a particularly wet year. The California State Water Resources Control Board announced that thousands of farmers in the Central Valley up to the Oregon Border will have their water curtailed until winter, the Globe reported. When the State Water Board orders water cut off to farmers, the food supply is also cut. Californias drought conditions are actually historically normal however, each of Californias droughts are billed by government and media as the driest period in the states recorded rainfall history. Scientists who study the Western United States long-term climate patterns say California has been dry for significantly longer periods more than 200 years. The Globe spoke Wednesday with Mike Wade, Executive Director of the California Farm Water Coalition on the State Water Board Emergency Water Conservation Regulation. Wade said the most important measure they can take right to highlight the seriousness of Californias water shortage is to connect consumers through the food they eat. Wade said that the surface supply of water is short, so farmers will have to rely on groundwater. But the state is encroaching on groundwater availability through the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA), passed in 2014. And water district irrigation managers are putting caps on water by limiting pumping. The taps that deliver surface water to the farms that grow the local food we buy at grocery stores were effectively turned off in March and April. Almost half of the irrigated farmland in California has had its surface water supply reduced by 50% or more, the CFWC said. The Globe asked Wade if water authorities recognize that it is food production being harmed. We are starting to see acknowledgment of Californias importance in the nations food supply, Wade said. He noted that agriculture is shrinking in the state. We live in an increasingly unstable world, but politicians and regulators are not doing the work needed to guard our safe, affordable, domestic food supply during these uncertain times. Failing to act will not only worsen rising food costs, they may permanently disrupt the food systems that many now take for granted, the CFWC said. We need to invest in surface and groundwater storage, Wade said. California farms produce over half of the countrys fruits, nuts, and vegetables. California foods arent just in the produce aisle, but also in the ready-made foods and ingredients we eat every single day. That cant happen without water and we cannot simply move California production to other states. A safe, affordable, domestic food supply is a national security issue, just like energy. The government must make it a priority, the CFWC said. Water supply shortages affect families throughout the state and the nation that depend on California farms for the safe, fresh, and locally-produced farm products we all buy at the grocery store. Wade said the Public Policy Institute of California published a recent policy brief: Tracking Where Water Goes in a Changing SacramentoSan Joaquin Delta, which found there is plenty of water in wet years which can be stored, but currently is not. One of the biggest issues Wade said is the ongoing discussion in public that California has seen all of the water were going to get, and restrictions and conservation are the only way forward. But that is not accurate if additional reservoirs are built as voters have already approved, and desalination plants are approved. The Globe asked about the use of recycled water, noting that only one county in the state actually uses recycled grey water. Agriculture is the largest user of recycled water at 700,00 acre feet per year, Wade said. This has tripled since the late 1980s. The California Farm Water Coalition asks a very important question: Are Curtailments a Balanced Water Use? The California Water Code requires reasonable decisions among competing water uses, yet the State Board is asking for the beneficial use of water for fish to almost entirely supersede the beneficial use for agriculture, which is not reasonable. And the Public Trust Doctrine seeks a balance of uses, yet this curtailment is not a balance. Katy Grimes Katy Grimes, the Editor of the California Globe, is a long-time Investigative Journalist covering the California State Capitol, and the co-author of California's War Against Donald Trump: Who Wins? Who Loses? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Horse (#0)
Can they say de-sal plants out there?
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