Court Ends Private Property Rights: All Water To Be Controlled By Government

water in your handsSurvival Backpack

(Stephen Frank)  Democrat Senator Fran Pavley has a bill that would give the State the responsibility of “managing” all groundwater. That means the water projects and the groundwater will be controlled by government—which will pick the winners and loser. Government will decide if you can use your private property—water—to grow your crops or be forced at the barrel of a gun give your water to your neighbor that paid nothing for the well you dug and now he will use. Want to collapse agriculture in this State literally overnight, give control of water to government.  

Now a court may have decided the issue—against the free market, against private property and is ordering a county to take over control of water in its domain. This is like watching a car crash in slow motion—you see it but feel helpless to stop it.

“Sacramento Superior Court Judge Allen Sumner just issued a preliminary ruling that Siskiyou County must regulate groundwater well permits along the Scott River in accordance with “Public Trust Doctrine.” This means the water now mainly used by hay farmers also will have to be divided among commercial sports fishing, kayaking, Indian Tribes and tourist-hotel interests.”

If upheld, this is the how California will be shut down, due to water.

Lawsuit could expand state control of groundwater
July 23, 2014 – By Wayne Lusvardi, Calwatchdog, 7/23/14 

Sacramento Superior Court Judge Allen Sumner just issued a preliminary ruling that Siskiyou County must regulate groundwater well permits along the Scott River in accordance with “Public Trust Doctrine.” This means the water now mainly used by hay farmers also will have to be divided among commercial sports fishing, kayaking, Indian Tribes and tourist-hotel interests.

The result will be more water shortages as additional political special interests divvy up a limited supply.

The key is the “Public Trust Doctrine,” which was explained in a 1993 report by the California State Lands Commission:

“This Doctrine originated in early Roman law and, as incorporated into English Common law, held that certain resources were available in common to all humankind by ‘natural law.’ Among those common resources were ‘the air, running water, the sea and consequently the shores of the sea.’ Navigable waterways were declared to be ‘common highways, forever free,’ and available to all the people for whatever public uses may be made of those waterways.

“In California, the Public Trust Doctrine historically has referred to the right of the public to use California’s waterways to engage in ‘commerce, navigation, and fisheries.’ More recently, the doctrine has been defined by the courts as providing the public the right to use California’s water resources for: navigation, fisheries, commerce, environmental preservation and recreation; as ecological units for scientific study; as open space; as environments which provide food and habitats for birds and marine life; and as environments which favorably affect the scenery and climate of the area.

“In National Audubon Society v. Superior Court of Alpine County (1983), the California Supreme Court held that the public trust doctrine protects not only navigation, commerce, wildlife and fishing, but also ‘changing public needs of ecological preservation, open space maintenance and scenic and wildlife preservation.’”

Court case

ThSiskiyou County court case involves a recent lawsuit brought by the Environmental Law Foundation and the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations against the State Water Resources Control Board and the County of Siskiyou.  ELF charged that decreased water flows in the Scott River over the past 20 years are due to excessive agricultural extractions of groundwater that flow into the river, which has harmed fish populations and the navigability of the river for recreational rafting and boat fishing.

The Scott River runs 60 miles in Siskiyou County, located along the northerly state border with Oregon.  The Scott River watershed is 800 square miles.  About two-thirds is privately owned and a third publicly owned.  Forty-five percent is used for forestry, 40 percent for grazing, and only 13 percent for cropland.  The Scott River Groundwater Basin is still the only one in all of California that has surface water and groundwater legally defined as “interconnected” (Water Code 2500.5).

The Scott River watershed was “adjudicated in 1980,” meaning the normal court system for water rights settled local disputes.  The Siskiyou County Superior Court ruled that all groundwater within 500 feet of the river was subject to court monitoring and restrictions on pumping.

The ruling included safeguards for fish, wildlife and natural river flow under the Public Trust Doctrine.  The county issues well drilling permits outside the 500-foot zone, and the court-appointed Watermaster does so within the 500-foot setback.  However, the county court has never appointed a Watermaster to govern well permits along the banks of the river within the 500-foot strip.

Writing in the June 26 issue of the California Water Law Journal, Bryan Barnhart said the ELF suit could have sought enforcement by the state Attorney General or the modification of the Siskiyou County court decree to assign a Watermaster for enforcement.  Instead, the ELF filed its case in a Sacramento County court seeking to expand the Public Trust Doctrine to groundwater for the first time in California.

The Sacramento Court has issued an interim ruling that California groundwater falls within the jurisdiction of the Public Trust Doctrine. For the interim ruling to stand under final court review, ELF would have to prove that the Scott River is navigable and that sufficient groundwater flows into the river for Public Trust purposes to be impaired.  A superior court ruling, however, would not set legal precedent across the entire state.

The Public Trust Doctrine also is supposed to apply only when “feasible.”  Whether the Scott River is navigable would have to be a factual finding of the court, as well as whether the Doctrine is feasible during an historic drought.

Inconsistencies with lawsuit 

Other developments have not deterred the ELF from filing and threatening lawsuits to agricultural irrigation districts both in Siskiyou County and California’s Central Valley asserting that groundwater falls within the Public Trust Doctrine:

Overblown lawsuits? 

ELF has also sent letters to 22 water irrigation districts in the state threatening to sue if they fail to comply with a 2009 law requiring the reporting of the measurement of groundwater basins.

A reply came from Robert Kunde, manager for the Wheeler Ridge-Maricopa Water Storage District in Bakersfield: “We comply with the vast majority of what the law requires.  We just haven’t filed some paperwork to document it.” He said high water prices due to drought are driving water conservation more than the threat of regulation.

Mark Mulkay of the Kern Delta Water District in Bakersfield said his district has been measuring water in order to charge its customers since 1965.

And nine of the purportedly noncompliant districts have already provided verification to ELF that they are following the law.  Where some water districts are too small to be able to afford such paperwork, Ted Trimbleof the Western Canal Water District in Oroville is working on creating a regional water plan.

Water Grab? 

If the ELF case prevails in Siskiyou County, it may not be long before such legal challenges are made againstadjudicated urban water basins upon which Southern California depends for about 60 percent of its water supplies in a dry year.

The recent $10.5 billion proposed water bond that recently failed in the California Senate included $150 million for projects proximate to “major metropolitan cities for a river that has an adopted revitalization plan” (alluding to the proposed Los Angeles River Revitalization Master Plan).  All such a project needs besides money is more water than the trickle that travels down the concrete-lined flood channels today.  And the only place to get that water is from local groundwater basins.  Water is turning into an elixir for ecological redevelopment projects.

At stake in the Siskiyou County groundwater case — for both rural and urban groundwater users — may be more than a drop in the bucket. Making room for kayaking in the Scott River may also make way for it in the Los Angeles River by diverting drinking water from residential users to kayakers and water-oriented real estate development in a replay of “Chinatown.”

– See more at: http://survivalbackpack.us/court-ends-private-property-rights-water-controlled-government/#sthash.Al9ufOWE.dpuf

4 thoughts on “Court Ends Private Property Rights: All Water To Be Controlled By Government

  1. This is part of a worldwide attempt by fascist(government/business) elements to control ALL water rights.
    They will use any means necessary to control food and water resources in order to control the people of the world.

  2. yes, they’re going to control the water, and they’re going to ignore your rights, and eventually kick you out of your home, too.

    The only question is WHEN (if ever) will you decide to get off your ass and fight for what’s yours?

    The wetbacks already stole your job, and they’re streaming over the border unhindered. They get the goodies, and you get beaten up by cops. Think that’s going to stop? You’re an idiot.

  3. back in 97 I had a house that was still on a well, very good water too I might add.
    well it was an old home and caught fire due to an electrical short..
    once the new home was being built , the contractor that did the original home demmo was told by the township to destroy the well head , because the new home was going to be hooked up to city water system , ( I was not ever made aware of this until after it was destroyed , i believe on purpose the township made sure i wasnt told until it was too late)
    I came one day while the new home was being constructed to see that my well head had been destroyed , pissed me off because I marked it with a sake in the ground so it could be used as a secondary water source .. they made sure it would never work again on purpose

    I found the well pipe a year later with a metal detector , it was pretty packed full of soil ,buried about 8″ deep in dirt and the pump had fell to the bottom of the well.
    they thought they had F’ed me.. but they were wrong . I still have that well, and they dont know it

    I also found out that all the homes in my area had their wells all decommissioned when the city water lines came in that area, no option..

    again another slow rolling train and were all on the tracks

  4. By accident I had a conversation with a member of my country “Water Resources Bourd”. That B.I.- Itch told me she wants to put meters on our wells. I told her that that would be the end of her political career and that she and the OTHER communist fellow travelers would be removed from office, and that Ranchers and other property owners are never going to stand for that. I also reminded her that she was the “LITTLE MOUSE FLIPPING OFF AN EAGLE CIRCLING ABOVE”, and suggested also that doing something like that you’d have to be mentally ill.

    I walked off and her eyes were as big as dinner plates. They don’t get it.

    I’ve always maintained that people with a death wish, or suicidal are mentally ill. It is why I also think most politicians are CRAZY!!!!!

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