State California WC Sec 79400-79401 Short Title and Legislative Findings (CALIFORNIA BAY-DELTA AUTHORITY ACT) WATER CODE SECTION 79400-79401 79400. This division shall be known and may be cited as the California Bay-Delta Authority Act. 79401. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following: (a) The San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary is the largest estuary on the West Coast of the United States. It includes over 738,000 acres in five counties. The tributaries, sloughs, and islands support over 750 plant and animal species. (b) The bay-delta, its tributaries, and watershed are critical to California's economy, supplying drinking water for two-thirds of Californians and irrigation water for over 7,000,000 acres of the most highly productive agricultural land in the world. It also supports 80 percent of the state's commercial salmon fisheries. (c) The bay-delta is the hub of California's two largest water distribution systems--the Central Valley Project, operated by the federal Bureau of Reclamation and the State Water Project, operated by the California Department of Water Resources. It also provides the conveyance of flood waters from most of the rivers in the Central Valley. (d) Conflicts currently exist regarding water use for the purposes of water quality, fish protection, and water supply that demonstrate how little flexibility the state's water supply systems have to meet the state's growing demand for water and the need to protect the environment. (e) A solution to these problems requires state, federal, tribal, and local action in numerous regions throughout the state, not only in the bay-delta itself, but also in the bay-delta watershed and the areas that depend on water exported from the bay-delta. The California Bay-Delta Program is divided into the following five regions: (1) Sacramento and San Joaquin River Delta. (2) San Francisco Bay. (3) Sacramento Valley. (4) San Joaquin Valley. (5) Southern California. (f) Nearly two dozen state and federal agencies have some role in managing or regulating the natural resources of the bay-delta and its watershed. A coordinated implementation structure and organization is necessary for the effective implementation of the California Bay-Delta Program. The state and federal agencies participating in the program include all of the following: the Resources Agency, Department of Water Resources, Department of Fish and Game, Department of Food and Agriculture, California Environmental Protection Agency, State Water Resources Control Board, State Department of Health Services, United States Department of the Interior, United States Department of Agriculture, United States Bureau of Reclamation, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, United States Geological Survey, United States Bureau of Land Management, United States National Marine Fisheries Service, United States Environmental Protection Agency, United States Army Corp of Engineers, United States Natural Resources Conservation Service, United States Forest Service, and Western Area Power Administration. (g) The agencies participating in the California Bay-Delta Program have prepared a 30-year plan to coordinate existing programs and direct new programs to improve the quality and reliability of the state's water supplies and to restore the ecological health of the bay-delta watershed. (h) To ensure efficiency, transparency, and accountability in decisionmaking, the implementation of the California Bay-Delta Program requires the establishment of an authority. The authority is intended to accomplish all of the following: (1) Provide accountability to the Legislature, Congress, and interested parties for the program's performance. (2) Promote the implementation of the program in a balanced manner. (3) Provide consistent monitoring, assessment, and reporting of the agencies' individual and cumulative actions. (4) Provide the use of sound, consistent science across all program elements. (5) Coordinate existing and new government programs to meet common goals, avoid conflicts, and eliminate redundancy and waste. (6) Oversee coordinated implementation of the California Bay-Delta Program in a manner that is consistent with the mission statement, goals, and objectives of the CALFED Bay-Delta Program Record of Decision, dated August 28, 2000, or as it may be amended. (7) Promote the development and implementation of regional programs to advance the program elements. (i) The successful implementation of the California Bay-Delta Program will require the full cooperation and participation of many federal agencies. The Legislature, in adding this division, expects the subsequent enactment of federal legislation authorizing the full participation of federal agencies in the authority established and activities prescribed by this division. Until that federal legislation is enacted, federal agencies are invited to participate in the authority and its activities, as described in this division, to the extent possible under existing federal agency authorizations.