I just sent this to the Sacramento Bee

Is it not true that virtually every large public works project suffers from
serious cost overruns?  Will the ballot initiative inform voters about the
actual probable costs of this project?



Is it not true that the first Governor Brown, Jerry's father Pat,
constructed the first California Water Project with the understanding that
large recipients of water would repay the state for the costs of delivering
water?  Is it not true that they reneged on that promise?  Will the
greatest recipients of water really pay their fair share this time?
Without some certainty, should the ballot initiative reflect the risk that
the state will not be able to collect adequate repayments for its water?



Without guarantees of adequate repayments, should the ballot initiative
reflect the risks?  For example, in light of the first reneging of the
payment obligations, the state had to turn to other sources of funding.  It
took money from the Tidelands Oil Fund to cover the failed promised
payments, which required the California State system and the University of
California system to initiate tuition hikes, which set off decades of
spiraling tuition.

Does it make sense to send the water to the Central Valley to grow crops
that would be unprofitable without huge federal payments and subsidized
water?  For example, cotton is not particularly suited for semi-arid land.
Besides, such federal and state subsidies seem to violate trade agreements
such as the WTO and NAFTA.



Could one make the case that importing cotton from Africa, where farmers
have trouble competing with highly subsidized American growers, might help
to stabilize parts of the continent, which would reduce the incentives for
continually increasing the costly level of the US government's military
entanglements in that part of the world?  Might cutting back on subsidized
cotton production in the Central Valley be the first step in reducing
military involvement in Africa?



Such a suggestion might admittedly seem to be a stretch but it serves as a
reminder that the consequences of such a huge undertaking as the twin
tunnels will have significant unintended consequences that will be unlikely
to be presented to the voters in a ballot initiative.



The questions disregard a much larger question regarding the need to
conserve water supplies, both locally and statewide.

-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA
95929

530 898 5321
fax 530 898 5901
http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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