The following is a press release issued by The Office of United States Congressman Jared Huffman:
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation today announced a $2 million grant to Sonoma County Water Agency (Sonoma Water) meant to study a diversion from the Eel River to the Russian River that will have the least possible impact on salmon and steelhead.
The crucial funding for this study comes from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which Rep. Huffman helped author. Rep. Huffman personally advocated for this grant, which is a part of the Bureau of Reclamation’s WaterSMART program to support the study, design and construction of collaboratively developed ecosystem restoration projects that provide widespread regional benefits and improve the health of fisheries, wildlife and aquatic habitat through restoration and improved fish passage.
“Now that PG&E has decided to remove the dams, these federal funds will set us up to develop the Two-Basin Solution I have been encouraging for years,” said Rep. Jared Huffman. “In the face of compounding climate change impacts, dam removal and a modern diversion for water will help protect salmon and steelhead while ensuring a dependable water supply.”
“The Round Valley Indian Tribes are grateful that this funding is being provided to advance implementation of the Two Basin Solution, and we thank Rep. Huffman for his leadership on these issues,” said President Lewis Whipple of the Round Valley Indian Tribes.
“Funding for this design work represents a major milestone in the progress toward a true regional solution for the Potter Valley Project,” said Sonoma County Supervisor James Gore, who also serves on the Sonoma Water Board of Directors. “We’re grateful to Congressman Huffman for his efforts and advocacy in securing this grant. Through this planning process, we hope to create the best possible outcome for fish in the Eel River while also continuing critical diversions into the Russian River.”
PG&E has decided to remove the Potter Valley Project’s two dams on the Eel River that block fish passage. Sonoma Water, Mendocino Inland Water and Power Commission, Round Valley Indian Tribes, Trout Unlimited, Humboldt County, Cal Trout, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, and Round Valley Indian Tribes have proposed to continue a diversion to the Russian River in a way that is most protective of fish.
PG&E released an initial draft surrender application on Nov. 17 which includes several of the measures proposed by the coalition. PG&E’s final application is expected to be submitted by Jan. 29, 2025 and dam removal is expected to begin in 2028.
The Potter Valley Project has been diverting water from the Eel River into the Russian River watershed for more than a century, playing a critical role in supplying water for agriculture, homes, and instream flows to benefit aquatic ecosystems and threatened salmonids in Mendocino and Sonoma counties. Stakeholders of the new Eel-Russian Facility proposal sent to PG&E seek to build facilities to continue diversions from the Eel River into the Russian River as well as improving fisheries in the Eel River.
I think removing dams that aren’t broke is a mistake. The state needs to maintain its dams. We need all the water storage we can get. Not only for irrigation and the people who depend on it, but for fire protection. The fish are also affected by illegal stream contamination and diversion. I understand that, in the old days, before the diversion was put in, the river would dry up in the summer and the fish survived. Let’s hope the fish, people, and crops survive this??
That is the issue. The dams are not owned by the state, they are owned by PG&E. Environmental regulations and requirements, aging of the dams and deferred maintenance, have all factored in to make continued operations unprofitable.
I would prefer pubic ownership and operation of the PVP but our elected officials at the state and federal level aren’t supporting that. Jared Huffman supports the dams coming down so coming down they are.
I was misinformed thinking the state had ownership of the dams. PG&E owns them. It would be great if the public had ownership!
Of course, the feds and state aren’t supporting that. It’s not a priority for them. The infrastructure has been allowed to deteriorate. What a shame
Because Mendo and Lake County are too bad at handling money…
Cannabis farms only get a max diversion rate of 6 gpm for surface water. This SIUR diversion is only allowed November 1st through March 31st. The state decided that the farmers should store enough water to make it through the summer. Can Mendocino Sonoma and Marin county store enough water to make it through the forbearance period?
There needs to be a lot of storage and delivery infrastructure put in place to take advantage of whatever water continues to be diverted by the new infrastructure put in place. Lake Mendocino needs to be raised, a reservoir needs to be built in Potter Valley, lots of ponds need to be put in on farms or existing ones enlarged.
My estimate is all this infrastructure is going to cost $1 billion.