Adam Gray's water bill shot down by Brown

 

“The bureaucrats at the State Water Board have lost any and all credibility with the communities I represent. I will continue to pursue every avenue at my disposal to promote greater public transparency and expose this out of control kangaroo court of an agency.” -- Assemblyman Adam Gray press release, Oct. 17, 2017

We've never seen as clear a statement that this legislator does not represent the environmental community in his district than this. He represents agribusiness and its parasitic water and irrigation districts and, like his predecessor and mentor, Dennis "The Shrimp Slayer" Cardoza, is terrified of the environmentalists in his district. --blj
 
10-17-17
Mavens Notebook
 NEWS WORTH NOTING: Governor vetoes Gray’s fair water rights hearing legislation (AB 313)
Governor Vetoes Gray’s Fair Water Rights Hearing Legislation
https://mavensnotebook.com/2017/10/17/news-worth-noting-governor-vetoes-...
 
From Assemblyman Adam Gray's office:
Assemblyman Adam C. Gray (D-Merced) expressed frustration and disappointment today upon learning that the Governor had vetoed Gray’s fair water rights hearing legislation.
“For more than half a century, the State Water Resources Control Board has kept a dirty little secret,” said Gray. “They are the judge, the jury, and the prosecution in the water world. They have zero accountability to the people of California, yet their decisions impact the daily lives of millions of people.”
Gray’s bill, AB 313, would have inserted checks and balances back into water rights enforcement. Rather than allowing the Water Board to write the rules and then unilaterally decide who breaks them as is done now, the bill would have required water rights enforcement hearings to occur at the Office of Administrative Hearings under the direction of an administrative law judge.
“I am disappointed that AB 313 was not signed by the governor,” said Senator Anthony Cannella. “For too long the water users believed that the process was stacked against them. This bill would have inserted a nominal step to make the process more fair. Those of us who represent the valley will not stop fighting for a fair process.”
Under current law, the State Water Board issues complaints against water users for allegedly violating water rights and provides 20 days for the water user to request an appeals hearing. The hearing occurs at the Water Board itself, with Water Board staff acting as the prosecution and a member of the Water Board acting as the judge. A legislative report found that out of more than 2,500 cases in the last decade, the Water Board has only overturned a single complaint.
“It’s no wonder the Water Board wins 99.9% of its cases when they are essentially being asked whether or not they agree with themselves,” said Gray.
“I’m disappointed that the Governor wasn’t able to sign AB 313 and help restore some faith in the State Water Resources Control Board process,” said Assemblyman Heath Flora. “This issue isn’t going away and we will continue to fight.”
In his veto message Governor Brown said that, while he could not support Gray’s bill, he is “directing the Secretary of the Environmental Protection Agency to evaluate the potential role for administrative law judges and provide a recommendation on improvements to the Board’s hearing process…” 
“I am encouraged that the Governor recognizes the lack of transparency and fairness in the Water Board’s process,” said Gray. “The bureaucrats at the State Water Board have lost any and all credibility with the communities I represent. I will continue to pursue every avenue at my disposal to promote greater public transparency and expose this out of control kangaroo court of an agency.”
 
10-9-17
Legal Planet
California’s AB 313–A Solution in Search of a Problem
Richard Frank
http://legal-planet.org/2017/10/09/californias-ab-313-a-solution-in-sear...
 
Governor Brown Should Veto Ill-Conceived Bill That Would Undermine State Water Board’s Enforcement Authority
Overall, the California Legislature had a most productive year when it comes to environmental issues.  It extended until 2030 the cap-and-trade program that’s a centerpiece of the state’s ongoing efforts to reduce California’s aggregate greenhouse gas emissions.  It passed the mis-named “gas tax” legislation, which not only provides funding to rebuild California’s once-proud but now crumbling road and highway infrastructure but also makes available much-needed funding for the state’s public transit systems.  And the Legislature finally mustered the will to enact a 15-bill package designed to address California’s long-festering affordable housing crisis.  (That housing legislation, which Governor Brown signed into law 10 days ago, is no panacea but, rather, a promising start to what should be an ongoing effort by California’s political leadership to address the state’s chronic shortage of housing for low and moderate income state residents.)
But the California Legislature laid at least one large political egg when, at the end of its 2017 session, it enacted and sent to Governor Jerry Brown’s desk AB 313 (Gray).  That ill-conceived bill would severely undermine the California State Water Resources Control Board’s authority to halt and penalize illegal water diversions.
Currently, when the Water Board’s staff learns of illegal diversions of California water supplies, it can ask the five-member Board to consider those charges in formal hearings at which the water diverter may defend his or her conduct.  (Board enforcement staff are separated by an ethical wall from Board members and their advisors, to assure the fairness of the administrative process.)  If the Board finds that illegal diversions have occurred, it has the authority to both order the diverter to cease the illegal conduct and to impose civil penalties for the past, improper diversions.  This administrative enforcement authority tracks that currently available to other California natural resources agencies such as the Coastal Commission and San Francisco Bay Conservation & Development Commission.
AB 313 would strip the Board of its authority to hold administrative hearings on these proposed enforcement actions.  Instead, it would shift responsibility for holding those hearings to a new program within the state Office of Administrative Hearings.  Recommended actions arising out of those OAH hearings–which could take weeks or months to complete–would be sent back to the Water Board for final action.
Central Valley agricultural water districts who are the principal proponents of AB 313 claim that this “reform” is necessary to provide fairness and due process to those charged with illegally diverting the state’s increasingly scarce water resources.  Implicit in their argument is the assertion that the Board’s current administrative hearing process is unfair to those charged with violating California water law.
But these arguments are wrong on the law, and wrong on the facts.
Water users have advanced the identical due process arguments to challenge the Board’s administrative enforcement process in the courts.  In 2009, however, the California Supreme Court unanimously rejected those claims, finding that the Board’s existing enforcement procedures provide an impartial hearing process and fully comply with constitutional requirements of due process.
Nor does the history of the Board’s current water rights enforcement process yield evidence of biased results or excessive administrative enforcement efforts.  Between 2012 and 2016, Board staff received over 2500 complaints of illegal water diversions but requested the Board to consider undertaking enforcement hearings in only 39 cases.  The Board only initiated enforcement hearings in five of those 39 cases, and wound up dismissing one of the actions brought before it by Board staff.
That record hardly demonstrates a pattern and practice of the Board routinely “rubber stamping” the administrative sanctions proposed by its staff, as AB 313’s supporters assert.  To the contrary–and especially in the wake of an unprecedented five-year California drought–the statistics suggest that the Board and its staff have been unduly cautious and insufficiently rigorous in halting illegal diversions of finite state water supplies.
Moreover, the altered administrative process mandated by AB 313 would bifurcate, complicate and inevitably delay state administrative water rights enforcement hearings designed to halt such illegal water diversions.  It would deprive the Board, water claimants and the public alike of the scientific, engineering and legal expertise necessary to render these often complex water rights determinations.
President Abraham Lincoln once said, “Without enforcement, laws are nothing more than good ideas.”  Rigorous enforcement of California’s water rights system is critical to the public interest.  The state has a highly variable, drought-prone climate.  California possesses the largest population and largest irrigated agricultural economy in the nation.  At the same time, we have highly degraded aquatic resources, including numerous endangered species and vulnerable fish species that are of significant commercial, cultural and economic value.  And, finally, California’s water rights system is substantially oversubscribed.  (Recent academic studies reveal that statewide, water rights have been issued for approximately five times California’s available supply.)
AB 313, in sum, is a solution in search of a problem.  The Water Board should be commended for finally taking steps to curb and sanction illegal water diverters.  Its current administrative enforcement process most certainly should not be made more cumbersome, time-consuming and uninformed.
California Governor Jerry Brown should veto AB 313.