How Do We Save the Salton Sea?

For decades California's largest lake has teetered on the edge of ecological disaster. But a new deal and action plan may finally be gaining momentum.

The people who live around the Salton Sea, a 350-square-mile saltwater lake in Southern California, are rather sensitive about its reputation. Visit this onetime tourist destination on a typical 100-degree afternoon, and you might see Yellow-footed Gulls sailing past a deserted marina crusted in salt and over an upturned piano, a rusted crane, and a lifeless pit bull baking on a shoreline of fish bones and barnacle shells. Call it desolate or eerie, residents say, but do not call it an accident.

Given how it was created, it鈥檚 easy to see why people might describe California鈥檚 largest lake that way. It started forming in 1905 when floods breached a levee on the Colorado River, sending a massive flow roaring downhill into a natural bowl, the Salton Sink, some 230 feet below sea level. The water gushed for 18 months before engineers finally fixed the breach. Other ancient lakes had filled the sink after other big floods, only to evaporate over millennia in the sweltering desert heat. So far the sea has persisted, sustained鈥攁nd poisoned鈥攂y irrigation water from booming farms in the surrounding Imperial Valley, where today 500,000 acres of fields provide America with fruits, nuts, hay, and two-thirds of its winter vegetables.

Just a half-century ago the Salton Sea supported a thriving economy. Enterprising developers built marinas and hotels along the shore, attracting tourists and sport fishermen, who reeled in orangemouth corvina and sargo stocked by the state. Celebrities, including Frank Sinatra and Desi Arnaz, vacationed at the lake, and speedboat races drew crowds thousands strong. 鈥淚t was like a spring break party all the time,鈥 says Louis Knight, a 44-year veteran of the fire department at Bombay Beach, a town of roughly 300 people on the eastern side of the lake.

But with no natural outlet and rapid evaporation, the lake became more and more toxic as the concentration of salt and nutrients from irrigation waters increased. In the 1990s the desert oasis dream was largely abandoned; nobody wants to sunbathe beside algal blooms or amid the stench of rotting fish. Skinny cats and off-road enthusiasts have replaced Bombay Beach鈥檚 water-skiers and beachgoers. In Salton City, across the lake, a grid of streets with hopelessly romantic names like Honolulu and Sea Mist is fitted with electricity and plumbing but remains mostly undeveloped. Some of the few modest homes that were built on the water鈥檚 edge are now a football field inland.

Even as the human crowds have diminished, millions of birds continue to flock to the Salton Sea, second only to the Texas Gulf Coast in terms of avian diversity and abundance in the Lower 48. It might seem an unlikely key stopover site or breeding grounds along the Pacific Flyway, particularly because the sea is now one-third more saline than the Pacific Ocean and periodically belches noxious clouds of hydrogen sulfide that have, on occasion, wafted as far as Los Angeles. But with the vast majority of the West Coast鈥檚 wetlands now ruined, hundreds of avian species have little choice but to rely on what is essentially a huge ag sump. Burrowing Owl nests dot miles of drainage canals, Brown Pelicans gorge on large schools of hardy tilapia, and American Avocets hunt tiny invertebrates like brine shrimp that have hung on in the lake.

Yet life and death already mingle uncomfortably closely at the Salton Sea, and things are about to get a whole lot worse鈥攗nless drastic measures are finally taken. That鈥檚 because at the end of 2017, the Colorado River water that has been sustaining the sea鈥攚hich makes its way to the lake via the region鈥檚 irrigated farmland鈥攚ill instead go to thirsty San Diego, due to a massive water-transfer deal struck in 2003. Under legislation passed the same year, the state is legally required to create a master plan to preserve the Salton Sea.

If it doesn鈥檛, experts say, the sea will shrink by 60 percent by 2030. Salinity will increase threefold, killing off every last fish and desiccating countless acres of marsh and grasslands, leaving millions of birds without food or nesting habitat. Dust storms will pick up farm chemicals and pesticides from tens of thousands of acres of newly exposed lakebed, sending the powdered toxins swirling through surrounding rural Southern California communities that are home to about 650,000 residents, many of them poor and Latino. Already the children in the region suffer some of the highest asthma rates in the state.

Now government agencies and local stakeholders, including 爆料公社 California, are racing to devise a plan that will stave off a full-out environmental catastrophe. The good news is that, finally, at this late hour, after years of half-baked attempts to restore the vanishing ecosystem, it looks like they just might succeed.

Bob Miller is bouncing along the shore in his dusty white jeep when he hits the brakes and snaps his binoculars to his eyes. 鈥淲ell, I鈥檒l be dipped in hooey!鈥 he exclaims as he spots a small Rock Wren alighting on nearby scrub brush. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the first of the season.鈥 It鈥檚 September, and Miller, a self-proclaimed redneck tree hugger and former truck driver who hosts regular birding trips around the lake, is driving past bubbling mud pits and hills of obsidian. He proceeds to rattle off a dozen more bird species. Some 40 percent of endangered Yuma Ridgway鈥檚 Rails nest at the Salton Sea, and it鈥檚 a wintering site for up to 30 percent of American White Pelicans and, in some years, as many as 90 percent of the state鈥檚 wintering Eared Grebes. 鈥淭here鈥檚 just so much here,鈥 he says.

Miller has seen promise after promise to save the Salton Sea die in the cradle, and he鈥檚 grown tired of government decision makers who won鈥檛 make decisions. 鈥淭hey study it. Nothing. And they study it. Nothing,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to get fixed, or it鈥檚 going to be a nightmare.鈥

Like Miller, Vic Leipzig, head of 爆料公社鈥檚 Sea & Sage chapter in Orange County and a natural history instructor at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo, California, has led Salton Sea birding tours for decades. He, too, frets over what will become of the birds if the lake is allowed to collapse. 鈥淲here would the cormorants go? Where would the Caspian Terns go?鈥 he asks. Some believe Mexico鈥檚 Laguna Salada could play a bigger role in the Pacific Flyway. But Salada is an ephemeral water body, and it is replenished only by very high tides or Colorado River floods. Even when it has water, it is shallow. Biologists, in all, say it would be an exceptionally poor substitute for the Salton Sea. 鈥淚 know of no real alternative,鈥 Leipzig says.

Walking along a dried-out cove, Leipzig describes how he has watched the lake shrink before his eyes, and how the birds have suffered. There was the mysterious die-off of 150,000 Eared Grebes in 1992. Then there are the periodic outbreaks of avian botulism, a bacterial disease that can kill birds in close quarters by the thousands. 鈥淭he birds know the sea is in trouble,鈥 Leipzig says as he wipes sweat from his forehead and scans the horizon for the last of the lake鈥檚 flamingos, introduced decades ago by the owners of a now-shuttered lakeside dance club called Hell鈥檚 Kitchen.

Leipzig doesn鈥檛 mince words when he lays blame for the grim reality in front of us on the Imperial Valley鈥揝an Diego water deal鈥攖he largest agricultural-to-urban water transfer in American history. 鈥淚t was one of the unwisest environmental decisions in recent history,鈥 he declares.

In 2003 San Diego County struck a deal with the Imperial Valley to buy water to support its growing population of three million-plus. The Imperial Irrigation District (IID) is entitled to 3.1 million acre-feet of Colorado River water a year. The agency agreed to transfer increasing proportions of its allotment to San Diego in exchange for billions of dollars that it would use to, in part, make improvements to outdated irrigation infrastructure in the valley. With the metropolis buying hundreds of thousands of acre-feet a year and Imperial Valley farms receiving a windfall to install drip irrigation and line canals, both sides win. There鈥檚 the additional environmental benefit of boosting water efficiency鈥攕omething that鈥檚 become increasingly critical as the drought gripping California extends into its fifth year.

Yet there is an enormous downside to the deal: The reduced agricultural runoff would mean disaster for the sea, which is fed almost entirely by that water. So the agreement called for 鈥渕itigation water鈥 from fallowed farmland to be added to the lake鈥攚ith farmers receiving compensation for unplanted acres鈥攖hrough 2017. After that the volume will go to San Diego instead. To address the problem, the state, a party to the Quantification Settlement Agreement, agreed to draft a master plan to preserve the Salton Sea.

That hasn鈥檛 happened yet.

If the state doesn鈥檛 step in very soon, the reverberations could be felt far beyond the Imperial Valley. Failure to act could put the whole transfer agreement in jeopardy and open the state to litigation. Already, Kevin Kelley, general manager of the irrigation district, has gone so far as to intimate that if the state doesn鈥檛 develop a long-term plan by the deadline, the IID might cut off water deliveries to San Diego entirely.

鈥淚ID鈥檚 position is that you can鈥檛 just continue to transfer water and leave a giant question mark at the Salton Sea. You can鈥檛 just leave an environmental ghetto,鈥 says Kelley. He is under no illusions that the sea will be anything like the body of water it was when he was growing up in the town of Brawley, south of the lake. 鈥淚t will necessarily be smaller,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just saying it has to be sustainable.鈥

There is no shortage of ideas about how to fix the Salton Sea. Grander schemes include a $9 billion restoration project the state proposed in 2007, as well as a perennial pitch to pump water from the Pacific Ocean or the Sea of Cortez, which would also cost billions. The vast majority of plans, big and small, have been stymied by state-level gridlock, bureaucratic infighting, budget constraints, and the record-breaking drought. Since the water-transfer deal was struck in 2003, only a few dozen acres of wetlands have actually been rebuilt.

The current push for a solution, however, is unlike anything seen before, says Andrea Jones, director of bird conservation for 爆料公社 California. There鈥檚 been more forward momentum in the past year than in the previous 12. In October, Governor Jerry Brown signed a law that mandates the restoration of up to 12,000 acres of habitat by 2020. A patchwork of restoration projects is already breaking ground. Last fall, for example, construction began on a 420-acre, $3.5 million project that will transform Red Hill Bay, part of the Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge. This dried-out landscape, where Ospreys nest in trees once rooted in two feet of water, is on its way to becoming shorebird habitat again.

Most important, by the end of the year, Governor Brown is widely expected to finally approve a long-range management plan.

Bruce Wilcox is the man charged with creating that unified blueprint鈥攁nd wrangling money and cooperation from the many federal, state, and local agencies working on the lake. A former IID environmental manager with a reputation for getting things done, Wilcox was appointed last September to the newly created position of assistant secretary for Salton Sea policy within the California Natural Resources Agency. Wilcox says, 鈥淲e have what we need to get the ball rolling鈥: authority, knowledge of the lake, and relationships with the people responsible for conserving it. Jones, Kelley, and other stakeholders share his confidence that he鈥檚 up to the task.

The plan Wilcox puts forth will likely draw largely from the Salton Sea Restoration and Renewable Energy Initiative, a $3.15 billion proposal released by the IID in 2015 that would kick-start shovel-ready pilot projects and new geothermal energy development along the lake鈥檚 shores. The proposal would move the state closer to its goal of getting half of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030, and generate funds for restoration efforts. In March an Australian company, Controlled Thermal Resources, took the first steps toward gaining approval for a 250-megawatt geothermal plant on the lake鈥檚 southern shore.

Whatever framework is approved promises to stand as one of the most significant restoration projects in the country, says U.S. Fish and Wildlife biologist Chris Schoneman.

Implementing the plan will cost billions of dollars over dozens of years, and where all of that cash will come from has yet to be hammered out. Still, managers won鈥檛 be starting from scratch. Some $80 million of the $7.5 billion state water bond California voters passed in 2014 is earmarked for the Salton Sea, and in January, Governor Brown proposed another $80 million in aid. In addition, President Obama鈥檚 2017 budget, announced in February, included $3 million to build wetland habitat along the Alamo River, which drains into the lake鈥檚 southern end. Wilcox says he鈥檚 working closely with federal agencies to identify other funding streams, including the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

Glimmers of what鈥檚 likely to come already exist. On the southern shore sits a 640-acre marsh the IID created over the past seven years for endangered Ridgway鈥檚 and California Black Rails. The area is divided into 鈥渃ells鈥 of varying sizes, some up to tens of acres, where grebes and coots paddle along, frequently diving in the four-foot-deep water to snatch up the abundant crawfish. Cattails and bulrushes grow thick in the water, and stands of willow and cottonwood on the nearby shore are periodically flooded to mimic natural river cycles. Farmer Al Kalin, whose family has grown alfalfa and sugar beets in the valley for three generations, worked on the marsh and has long believed that it鈥檚 these relatively small, inexpensive plots鈥攔ather than large-scale projects that would cost exponentially more鈥攖hat will best cover exposed lakebed. 鈥淚鈥檝e been preaching that for years,鈥 he says.

Wilcox says the paralysis that gripped bureaucracies for so long could be blamed in part on the 鈥渟ilver bullet syndrome.鈥 A lot of years were spent trying to find the perfect solution, he says. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 one. It鈥檚 a very complex problem.鈥 It鈥檚 an inescapable issue that touches everyone around the Salton Sea, Wilcox continues, whether they realize it or not.

A September 2014 study published by the Pacific Institute, an Oakland-based think tank focused on water policy, predicts a staggering financial toll without intervention. Impacts to property values, public health, recreational revenue, and natural habitats could cost the region as much as $70 billion over the next 30 years. 鈥淲e should all care about not having a disaster at the sea,鈥 Wilcox says. 鈥淲e should be above that kind of thing, frankly.鈥

Forces of nature determined the fate of the Salton Sea in its past iterations. This time, it鈥檚 up to us.

What's 爆料公社 California's Role in the Salton Sea Relief Efforts?

By Xander Zoellner

Conservation groups have been vying unsuccessfully for years to stop the slow-motion ecological disaster at the Salton Sea, but that isn鈥檛 scaring 爆料公社 California away now.

鈥淭here鈥檚 just no way that you can talk about doing flyway-level bird conservation in California and not throw your weight into finding a solution at the Salton Sea,鈥 says Executive Director Brigid McCormack. 鈥淭he challenges are daunting, but there hasn鈥檛 been a better time to make real progress than right now.鈥 With the sea facing major water cutbacks starting in 2018, 爆料公社 California is working closely with the state and other stakeholders on to avoid massive habitat loss and the ensuing public health crisis that would result from huge dust storms fed by exposed lakebed.

爆料公社 California is providing the state with detailed habitat mapping, and raising awareness about the millions of birds that depend on the sea, including sandpipers migrating between Alaska and South America and threatened Snowy Plovers. Without the sea, these birds and many others would struggle for survival.

鈥淯ltimately, the state of California is going to need to make a substantial, sustained investment in restoring the Salton Sea,鈥 McCormack says. 鈥淥ur engagement now will help ensure this is done right鈥攖hat critical bird habitat is protected, and the toxic dust no longer threatens local communities.鈥