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Environmental Law

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Golden Gate University School of Law

2010

Water resource management

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Law

Show Me The Water Plan: Urban Water Management Plans And California’S Water Supply Adequacy Laws, Ellen Hanak Nov 2010

Show Me The Water Plan: Urban Water Management Plans And California’S Water Supply Adequacy Laws, Ellen Hanak

Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal

This Article reviews the effectiveness of California’s strategy of using enabling legislation and passive enforcement to encourage more integrated local water and land use planning. To shed light on the effectiveness of the current policy framework, the Article begins with a critical overview of the Urban Water Management Planning process, drawing on a detailed analysis of plans submitted in the early 2000s. It then evaluates how water supply assessments are proceeding, with a particular emphasis on steps used to identify adequacy, drawing on telephone surveys of land use authorities and water utilities conducted by the author in 2004 and 2009. …


Recapturing The Anacostia River: The Center Of 21st Century Washington, Dc, Uwe Steven Brandes Oct 2010

Recapturing The Anacostia River: The Center Of 21st Century Washington, Dc, Uwe Steven Brandes

Golden Gate University Law Review

For decades, the Anacostia River -- its shoreline, waterfront neighborhoods and watershed -- has been neglected by parties responsible for its stewardship. The river's water is severely polluted; obsolete transportation infrastructure isolates neighborhoods and divides Washington into areas "east" and "west" of the river; public parks are underutilized and suffer from chronic disinvestment; and several communities along the river are among the poorest in the metropolitan Washington region. With the river forming a boundary between race and class and with over 70 percent of the river's lands in public ownership, the need to rethink the management of this urban river …


Deep Tunnels And Fried Fish: Tracing The Legacy Of Human Interventions On The Chicago River, Christopher Theriot, Dr. Kelly Tzoumis Oct 2010

Deep Tunnels And Fried Fish: Tracing The Legacy Of Human Interventions On The Chicago River, Christopher Theriot, Dr. Kelly Tzoumis

Golden Gate University Law Review

Reversing the flow of the Chicago River is just one of many interventions to the natural system. In section II, the authors trace the historical use of innovative engineering approaches for managing the Chicago River. Then, the article analyzes two current engineering solutions that continue the pattern of human intervention. Section III turns to the tunnel and underground reservoir project, the vast system of deep tunnels designed to manage wastewater and storm water flooding. Section IV reviews the aquatic nuisance species dispersal barrier or electric fence as it is commonly referred to. This barrier is a last ditch effort to …


Daylighting Salt Lake's City Creek: An Urban River Unentombed, Ron Love Oct 2010

Daylighting Salt Lake's City Creek: An Urban River Unentombed, Ron Love

Golden Gate University Law Review

This article addresses the background of this historically significant creek, its encapsulation early in the twentieth century, and a modern-day attempt to daylight the creek using legislation originally enacted as part of the Clean Water Act. The article also traces the background leading to the national movement towards the current trend of restoring rivers and streams, which began in the 1970s, and has continued to the present time. The article also looks briefly at the Brownfields Showcase Project which spurred the daylighting. It will also explore in detail the US Army Corps of Engineers' ("USACE") efforts under the ecosystem restoration …


A Perpetual Experiment To Restore And Manage Silicon Valley's Guadalupe River, Richard Roos-Collins Oct 2010

A Perpetual Experiment To Restore And Manage Silicon Valley's Guadalupe River, Richard Roos-Collins

Golden Gate University Law Review

This Article emphasizes how the Santa Clara Valley Water District (SCVWD), the Guadalupe-Coyote Resource Conservation District (GCRCD) (as the plaintiff in the several complaints), and other parties developed a joint scientific record as the basis for their negotiations, and how the resulting settlements use adaptive management to assure cost-effective restoration in the face of continuing uncertainty about the impacts of SCVWD's water supply and flood protection facilities. Section I addresses the settlement of a water rights complaint brought against the SCVWD to modify the operation of its water supply system in the upper reach of the river. Section II explores …


New Ideas For Old Dams: Developing Solutions For A Shrinking Colorado River, David L. Wegner Aug 2010

New Ideas For Old Dams: Developing Solutions For A Shrinking Colorado River, David L. Wegner

Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal

The objective of this article is to discuss the need for a comprehensive and public review of alternative management options for the Colorado River system in the future. Due to the institutional and physical complexity of the basin, this analysis should be accomplished through the use of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (“NEPA”) and incorporating the requirements of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (“ESA”). We believe this review is necessary due to requirements of the ESA, impacts to the Colorado River delta, and increasing concerns related to the changing climate.