California officials say more money is needed to fix the state's water system. Voters may see a measure on next year's ballot to improve the Sacramento River Delta . The Delta supplies more than half of San Diego's drinking water. KPBS Reporter Ed Joyce has more.
State Department of Water Resources Director Lester Snow says a $4 billion bond measure could pay for two dams and possibly a canal or other repair for the Delta. The waterway has more than a thousand miles of deteriorating levees. Those levees protect Delta agriculture and the state's water supply by keeping salt water out of freshwater. Ken Weinberg is with the San Diego County Water Authority . He says the need for water, along with the state's population, continues to grow.
Weinberg: I mean we really are kind of on the verge of a crisis in the Delta as it relates to the smelt. And also our water supply. I mean we really don't have time to waste.
Delta pumps were shut down last month for ten days to protect endangered smelt. The waterway supplies farms and more than 18-million Southern Californians with water. Governor Schwarzenegger created a panel to find ways to improve the waterway. The group's findings are expected in about three months. Ed Joyce, KPBS News.
(Photo: Sacramento Delta, sacdelta.com )