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Court docket ruling may complicate plans for California water tunnel
U.S.

Court docket ruling may complicate plans for California water tunnel

Scoopico
Last updated: January 8, 2026 4:55 pm
Scoopico
Published: January 8, 2026
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In a call that might complicate Gov. Gavin Newsom’s push to construct a large water tunnel and remake California’s water system, a state appeals courtroom has rejected the state’s plan for financing the mission.

The third District Court docket of Attraction dominated in opposition to the state Division of Water Sources’ plan to situation billions of {dollars} in bonds to construct the 45-mile tunnel beneath the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

The choice is a win for California ratepayers and taxpayers, stated Roger Moore, a lawyer representing six counties in Northern California and two water businesses within the Delta area.

He stated it underlines that state businesses “should take actual steps to ensure that there’s transparency and accountability.”

Upholding a 2024 choice by a Sacramento County Superior Court docket decide, the courtroom dominated the water company doesn’t have the authority beneath a 1959 regulation to situation bonds for a brand new “unit” of the State Water Challenge, which delivers water from the Delta to farms and cities, and “exceeded its delegated authority” in planning to finance the tunnel by bonds.

Kirsten Macintyre, a spokesperson for the division, stated the courtroom didn’t say the Division of Water Sources lacks the authority to construct the mission or borrow funds to pay for it, however somewhat that the outline the state offered within the case was “overly broad.”

“Whereas DWR respectfully disagrees with that conclusion, we’ve taken further steps to resolve the problem,” she stated in an electronic mail.

Final yr, the company opened a second courtroom case in an effort to substantiate its bond-issuing authority, a step that Macintyre stated was taken to “handle the courtroom’s considerations.”

If the appeals courtroom choice stands and the continuing case doesn’t deliver a special conclusion, it’d lead the Newsom administration to revise its plan for financing the mission. Officers may additionally petition for the California Supreme Court docket to listen to the case.

The state estimated in 2024 that the tunnel would price $20.1 billion, whereas opponents say it may price three to 5 instances extra than that.

State officers have stated that the tunnel, known as the Delta Conveyance Challenge, finally could be paid for by collaborating water businesses that comply with repay the bonds.

The tunnel would create a second route to move water from new intakes on the Sacramento River to the south aspect of the Delta, the place pumps ship water into the aqueducts of the State Water Challenge.

The system of aqueducts and pipelines transports water from the Delta to 27 million individuals in cities from the Bay Space to San Diego, and to 750,000 acres of farmland.

In 1960, California voters authorized bonds for the development of the State Water Challenge. Laws in 1959 had given DWR the authority to construct the Feather River Challenge, an preliminary part of the State Water Challenge.

However within the ruling final week, the courtroom stated DWR officers have been unsuitable to depend on that provision. The three judges stated it doesn’t permit the company to situation bonds “beneath the guise of a ‘additional modification’” of that unique water system.

Newsom has stated the mission is crucial for the state’s future and has made it a central precedence of his administration.

State officers and supporters of the mission have stated the tunnel would modernize the state’s water system for extra extreme droughts and deluges with local weather change, and would stand up to sea degree rise and the dangers of a serious earthquake within the area.

Opponents, together with environmental advocates, fishing teams and tribal leaders, argue the mission would hurt the Delta’s communities and ecosystem, and additional threaten native fish which are already in decline.

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