Shasta Dam Fight Resurfaces
The Trump administration committed $40 million Tuesday toward planning work for raising Shasta Dam, reviving a long-running dispute over California water policy.
The 602-foot dam north of Redding forms the state’s largest reservoir, storing over 40% of the water used by the federal system to irrigate Central Valley farmland. Westlands Water District, the nation’s largest agricultural water supplier, called the funding “long-overdue.“
Opponents say the project could violate state law and would harm the McCloud River’s wild trout fishery and doom endangered Chinook salmon restoration. The Winnemem Wintu Tribe says the original 1940s construction swallowed 90% of its sacred sites, and an expansion would take the rest.
The full project could cost nearly $2 billion at today’s prices. The tribe’s government liaison, Gary Mulcahy, was skeptical: “Throw $40 million away. They do not have the personnel, one way or the other, to even complete a planning process.”
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