More genius land use from the same article:

“Natomas Central (which supplies irrigation water to the Natomas basin)
recently reached a tentative agreement with the city of Folsom to sell it a
big chunk of water for its expansion south of Highway 50."

Seth Sandronsky

Date:    Wed, 15 Aug 2007 18:55:45 -0700
From:    Michael Perelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Environmental Ironies

Wetland rice in dryland California does not make sense, except with the
benefits of enormous agricultural subsidies.  Now, some farmers are making
an environmentally good decision for environmentally bad reasons.  First,
they want to sell their land to contribute to suburban sprawl.  They fear
that an endangered species, which finds a good habitat in their rice
paddies, might make it difficult to sell their land to developers.
Vellinga, Mary Lynne. 2007. "Owners Turn Off Spigot On Rice Fields Hoping To
Develop In Natomas." Sacramento Bee (14 August): p. A 1.
"Rice fields are drying up in the Natomas basin, and agricultural economics
aren't the only reason why.  The shift out of rice is part of an effort by
landowners north of the Sacramento city limits to avoid harboring endangered
garter snakes, which spend much of their lives in water, said a half-dozen
people who either own land in the basin or are familiar with the situation.
Landowners who hope to one day develop don't want to have their properties
viewed as valuable wetland habitat
by federal and state wildlife regulators.  So they're letting their fields
sit fallow or growing crops that require little or no irrigation."

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

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com

_________________________________________________________________
A new home for Mom, no cleanup required. All starts here.
http://www.reallivemoms.com?ocid=TXT_TAGHM&loc=us

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