Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Auburn Dam on the Table, Part Five

In a timely story from today’s Bee, we see the Auburn Dam debate moving forward with the local sponsorship getting organized and approving an increase in their budget to accommodate planning costs associated with sponsoring the dam project.

Another good sign, and though it will be years before a dam is actually built, it is hoped that local leadership is finally beginning to understand the many ramifications of not having the ability to control the water that regularly surges down the American River, killing salmon, flooding the Parkway, eroding the levees, and posing the greatest metro flood risk in the nation since New Orleans.

Here is an excerpt.

Debate renewed on local Auburn dam sponsorship
By Matt Weiser -- Bee Staff Writer Published 2:15 am PDT Tuesday, May 16, 2006


The American River Authority voted Monday to begin investigating what its duties would be as a local sponsor of the controversial Auburn dam project.

That stops short of actually undertaking such a sponsorship, which could require $1 billion or more in matching funds for a dam. But the authority left little doubt about its goals.

"We need to continue to pursue looking at this local sponsorship," said Bruce Kranz, a Placer County supervisor and chairman of the authority. "In my view, it will never get cheaper to build an Auburn dam than it is today."

The vote came over objections from more than 80 Auburn dam opponents who packed the authority's meeting. They wore buttons and carried signs denouncing the project, and spoke at length about their love for the American River.

"There's no price tag you can put on this project," said Mark Root of Newcastle. "What you're seeking to destroy is priceless. It will never be recovered."

The American River Authority is a joint-powers agency whose members include Placer and El Dorado counties, their respective county water agencies, and San Joaquin County. It was formed in 1982 specifically to become the project's local sponsor, largely as a result of its members' desire to obtain American River water.

"Local sponsorship" is a legal term that means the agency would be obligated to share the costs of the project with the federal government.