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Mono
Lake
Mono Lake is
a saline remnant of a vast inland sea that covered an estimated 316
square miles of the Mono Basin and neighboring Aurora Valley more
than thirteen thousand years ago. Now, the lake is approximately 85
square miles due to receding glaciers. The level of the lake
constantly fluctuates, even by 100 feet, continuously due to Los
Angeles' water diversions.
The lake
lacks an outlet and this has caused concentrations of carbonates,
sulfates, and chlorides to form. The lake is not as rich as Owens
Lake to the south due to its lack of resources and also its harsh
climate and remote location.
There is lots
of wildlife in the area In the 1970s, bills were introduced to end
the diversion of Mono Lake. Environmental groups and people
condemned Los Angeles' thirst and joined the cause. In 1978, the
Resources Agency of California assembled a special task force to
draw up a plan for the preservation of natural resources of Mono
Basin.
In 1978, a
land bridge to Negit Island appeared due to the receding water
level. People put their efforts behind the California National
Guard to blast open a temporary channel. When the bridge was blown,
the birds took off and the bridge settled back. A second attempt in
April of 1979 proved unsuccessful. By the summer of 1979, all adult
breeding gulls had left the island. Only 12,500 gulls settled on
other islands in the lake compared to the 46,700 in
1978.
The state
task force published a report at the end of 1979. It gave nineteen
alternatives, one of these was a plan for the immediate reduction
of the withdrawal of water from 100,000 to 15,000 acre-feet of
water a year. To make up for the loss, it suggested stepping up
wastewater reclamation and continuing water conservation efforts.
The Department of Water and Power did not endorse the conclusions
and it felt ill treated since it had already spent $100 million to
build an aqueduct to Mono Lake and had to rights to build it and
take water.
The Los
Angeles city council unanimously voted to oppose implementing the
suggestions because less water from Mono Lake meant less water and
less electric power. The State said that losses could be made up by
purchases from other sources, but the city decided that it would
increase the cost for water and power. The city believed that
implementing these suggestions would not be worthwhile because they
estimated a two billion dollar cost and people would not conserve
enough. The state wanted Los Angeles to implement the suggestions
because it believed it would only cost $250 million to implement
and most of it was recoverable due to reduced energy
use.
Mono Lake is
one of the most challenging water controversies because it is one
of the least refined, least tractable, and least likely to allow
any compromises.
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