
So there’s been a bit of a minor, text-based tussle on an environmental issue in California.
The culprit? Hetch Hetchy Reservoir. A valley just north of Yosemite - described in its prior state as being a close rival to its neighbor’s beauty - dammed by San Francisco for drinking water and hydroelectricity.
It’s not surprising that our little fledgling outdoor blogger community has differing opinions on the matter. People have been arguing vehemently on both sides since the project was first proposed in 1906.
Tom at Two-Heel Drive brought up the issue after learning the Bush Administration budgeted a few million dollars to study the feasibility of removing the O’Shaughnessy Dam, which currently creates an 8 mile long reservoir inside Yosemite National Park.
Tom questioned the move, saying the removal of a major source of water and electricity would just require the addition of a dam somewhere else. As for hiking, he said the place is still beautiful (and rarely traveled) with the lake, and mentioned the removal of the dam would most likely make the area inaccessible for many years.
Climb_CA at the GetOutdoors Blog wrote of another blogger’s gentlemanly disagreement, and added his own two cents, as well. They’d rather have the valley back and correct the mistakes of our ancestors, even if it means the next generation would be the first to be able to enjoy it again.
The commenters on National Parks Traveler were quick to add points for both sides, too, as did the San Francisco Gate.
Personally, I think this is more of a political wedge issue for California Democrats and environmentalists in general. The fact that an administration as openly anti-environment as this one is throwing such a large sum of money at a cause near-and-dear to green hearts should raise some eyebrows.
Earlier in the week, Ranger X dissected the so-called “increase in park funds,” calling it nothing more than a budgeting shell game. And other bloggers noted the irony of prominent Republicans - like former Sec. of the Interior Don Hodel under Pres. Reagan and current California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger - being on the pro-environment side against overwhelmingly Democratic San Francisco.
Is this just another example of Bush emulating Reagan’s tactics? An article from current Sierra Club President Carl Pope on the original matter in 1987 sounds like it could easily be applied to today’s debate.
Because really, what better way to rip seams in the strengthening environmental movement than to have the Beacon City of Liberalism fight to protect a valley-drowning dam in the middle of a National Park?
Interestingly enough, the study commissioned by Gov. Schwarzenegger (who I’m oddly less cynical about for some reason) found that it is indeed possible for San Fransisco to get its water and electricity from other sources. It would, of course, come at a very substantial cost to the State of California, ranging from anywhere between two and ten billion dollars.
I can’t imagine any politician - even in California - making a ten billion dollar cost seem palatable to voters. Especially when the majority of them don’t even know where Hetch Hetchy is, let alone what it used to be. But with dams coming down all over the country, and the potential of grassland on the valley within two years and near-complete vegetation cover within fifty, maybe it is worth doing.
It won’t be easy, and it won’t be fast, but what great accomplishment ever is?
EDIT:
Jerry is correct in pointing out that big projects like this usually get a nice chunk of change from the Federal Government, and the costs are often reduced by donations from private individuals. So the final cost to Californians will indeed likely be a fraction of that estimate, if it ever goes through. But you can bet when election season rolls around, whatever number’s the higher one is going to be the one you hear in attack ads.



Web Hosting by ReadySetConnect

Two “little” mistakes in the otherwise good description of the issue: restoration proponents are not saying that the cost of reservoir removal andvalley restoration be borne solely by Californians (it should be split between the feds, the state and private philanthropists). And we don’t for a minute accept the high end $10 billion cost. We’re pretty confident in our estimate of about 1 billion for everything.
Jerry Cadagan
Restore Hetch Hetchy board chair
Casey: canny assessment of the situation.
Sounds like a classic example of one political faction doing something primarily to make its rivals squirm.
I posted my response to Tom at my dan’s outside blog.
There is a lot to say about this issue, some of which I mentioned in my piece. In addition to other issues that come up any time a reservoir is constructed, in this case we must keep in mind that this particular reservoir is not only filling a valley that rivaled its sibling a few miles to the south but that it sits in one of our greatest national parks. These are among the factors that differentiate this issue from those that might be at play if we were discussing some other reservoir.
Take care,
Dan
To me it’s also a question of priorities. In an ideal world, sure, I’d love to see Hetch Hetchy restored. But: whether it’s a billion or 10 billion, it’s a lot of money on an environmental initiative that in the grand scheme of things has to be considered a luxury.
Even though it’s a blight on the landscape, the damage is essentially done, the reservoir a known quantity that does not represent a risk of further ecological degradation in a time when ecosystems around the world are facing mass extinctions and global warming threatens the survival of our species.
With a couple days research I could easily find hundreds of delicate ecosystems at risk that are much higher priority, to say nothing of what’s being done to our oceans.
This is what I mean when I said this is the abortion/guns issue for environmental types. I agree with the sentiment that the dam at Hetch Hetchy is an abomination, it is absolutely appalling, yet to spend a billion dollars (or whatever the cost) on this when there are so many other far more pressing needs is akin to buying a speedboat with your rent money. Sure, the boat’s nice to have, but a home is a bit more of a requirement.