By Ellen Knickmeyer
President Donald Trump on Tuesday created what he called a “subcabinet” for federal water issues, with a mandate that includes water-use changes sought by corporate farm interests and oil and gas.
An executive order from Trump put Interior Secretary David Bernhardt and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Andrew Wheeler in charge of the interagency water body.
Establishment of a water subcabinet “will streamline decision-making processes” across federal agencies, the EPA said in a statement.
The first priority set out by the executive order is increasing dam storage and other water storage, long a demand of farmers and farm interests in the West in particular. That includes California’s Westlands Water District, the nation’s largest agricultural water district. Westlands was one of Bernhardt’s main lobbying and legal clients before his appointment to the Interior Department under Trump.
Asked about whether the move would benefit his old client or represent a conflict for Bernhardt, Interior Department spokesman Nicholas Goodwin said, “The Secretary is resolute in upholding his legal and ethical responsibilities.”
The Interior Department has said previously Bernhardt follows ethics rules and the law in federal government actions involving the water district and other past clients.
Environmental groups say the amount of water sought by corporate farming would leave habitats and wildlife without enough water to survive.
Another of the many directives for the new interagency is implementing a water reuse plan. Oil and gas companies have supported one aspect of the plan that could allow them to dispose of briny, often chemical-laden oilfield wastewater on crops or in aquifers.
Note: This item came to us from long time member Marion Harless who spotted it in the Farm and Dairy Bulletin, published in Salem, Ohio. The part that many in West Virginia would find most alarming is the last paragraph. The Executive Order referred to in the story refers to implementing another plan, set forth in another lengthy document. Time and space considerations make review of all these documents impossible for this issue of The Highlands Voice. By next month it may be possible to do the more detailed study necessary to fully understand this story and tell us how much we have to worry.