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23 Hastings W.-Nw. J. Envt'l L. & Pol'y 115 (2017)
Ad-Hoc Drought Management on an Overallocated River: The Stanislaus River, Water Years 2014-15

handle is hein.journals/haswnw23 and id is 128 raw text is: 











Ad-hoc Drought Management on an

Overallocated River: The Stanislaus

River, Water Years 2014-15



     Philip Womble*

     *J.D., Stanford  Law  School,  2016;  Ph.D.  Candidate, Emmett
Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources, Stanford University.
Many  thanks to stakeholders who took the time to share their thoughts with
me  in interviews and to Leon Szeptycki, Jeffrey Mount, Brian Gray, Molly
Melius, Ellen Hanak, Ted  Grantham, Caitlin Chappelle, John Ugai, and
Elizabeth Vissers for their feedback and support. This publication was
developed with partial support from Assistance Agreement No. 83586701
awarded  by the US Environmental Protection Agency to the Public Policy
Institute of California. It has not been formally reviewed by EPA. The views
expressed in this document  are solely those of the author and do not
necessarily reflect those of the agency. EPA does not endorse any products or
commercial services mentioned in this publication.

Introduction


     Like  many  rivers in California, the Stanislaus River is heavily
overallocated.  The river faces substantial demands  from established
agricultural users and environmental needs. When persistent drought strikes
and supplies drop to a level where needs cannot all be met, no blueprint
exists for allocating water among these competing demands. Water users and
regulators disagree regarding which water uses hold the highest priority, and
no court has resolved this issue. No specific criteria establish when and how
state water quality objectives may be relaxed when supplies become scarce,
and reducing water volumes for federally endangered species likely involves a
lengthy regulatory process. Likewise, state water quality objectives and
regulatory criteria for federally endangered species on the Stanislaus
institutionalize little in the way of contingency or scenario planning
requirements when water supplies drop below important thresholds.
     This uncertainty does not provide a good platform for effective water
management.   During California's recent drought, water allocation decisions
on the Stanislaus have been primarily ad hoc. Water sales that moved water
downstream,  provided benefits for water quality and endangered species


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