The
Delta Conveyance Project is the most consequential water infrastructure
project in recent California history, and will help ensure that the
state can continue to provide water for people, businesses, and farmland throughout the state.
The Delta Conveyance Project will upgrade the State Water Project,
enabling California’s water managers to capture and move more water
during high-flow atmospheric rivers to better endure dry seasons. The
tunnel, a modernization of the infrastructure system that delivers
water to millions of people, would improve California’s ability to take advantage of intense periods of rain and excess flows in the Sacramento River.
The
process to begin construction of the current Delta Conveyance Project
began in 2019 when Governor Newsom withdrew the previous “Water Fix”
twin tunnels project and began a new environmental process to study a
single-tunnel proposal. As in previous iterations of Delta conveyance,
requirements for environmental analysis, public review and comment
under CEQA and other permitting processes were completed, including extensive public outreach and more than 7,000 comments and responses.
DWR’s
Accountability Action Plan follows best practices for how to ensure the
local community can productively communicate with project
representatives and monitor community commitments throughout the
construction process.
With
public transparency being its most important tenet, the plan seeks to
facilitate awareness of the numerous available programs and commitments
made and aims to foster assurance and trust among interested parties
that DWR’s intent is comprehensive, earnest and binding.
Protecting Delta communities
The Delta Conveyance Accountability Action Plan has five key components:
Ombudsman Office: The
Ombudsman Office will provide for a single point of contact to help
ensure that construction-related concerns or grievances are efficiently
and fairly addressed and project transparency is sustained.
Regulatory Mitigation: The
Mitigation Monitoring and Reporting Program and other regulatory
processes identify measures, commitments and best practices intended to
avoid, minimize or offset potential environmental impacts within the
project area.
Community Benefits Program: The
Community Benefits Program—with a dedicated $200 million fund—will seek
to deliver tangible, lasting and measurable benefits to communities
nearest to, and most affected by, project construction activities.
Community Advisory Groups: One or more community advisory groups will engage community members in decision-making related to various items.
Project Communications: Information,
Outreach, Engagement: A transparent, accessible, and proactive
communication strategy will keep local communities informed about the
project’s progress, impacts, schedule, and available resources,
fostering trust and engagement through timely updates, community
feedback channels, and clear, inclusive messaging.
What’s at stake
The
Delta Conveyance Project would create much-needed and long-overdue
improvements to the State Water Project, which provides water for 27
million people and 750,00 acres of farmland. It would allow the State
Water Project to better capture high flows during storm events and move
that water to where it’s needed in the San Joaquin Valley, Southern
California, Bay Area, and Central Coast. It would also protect against
earthquake risk.
The
Governor will continue working to quickly advance these improvements to
ensure that California is ready for a drier and hotter future, and its
communities are safe and protected.