Programs: Water Quality
Monitoring Water Rights and Improving Water Quality
We approach improvements to water quality by also addressing issues with water quantity. Using new instream flow standards and technologies, we advocate for adequate bypass flows at all permitted diversions, as well as stronger enforcement of unpermitted diversions and point source pollution. The program area differs from others, in that sometimes a systems-approach is not possible, therefore we occasionally engage in water rights processes to place appropriate restrictions on use or pursue water quality enforcement against egregious violations.
Friends of the Eel was the first environmental organization in the region to speak out about the cumulative impacts that cannabis cultivation has on our landscape. A sustainable industry is possible, and many are working hard to realize that today. We are proud to play a role in helping to funnel resources to advance that effort and to ensure that county regulation of the industry is meaningful and effective.
Water Rights
Water Quality
Cannabis
Water Rights
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Water Quality
Mendocino County property owner fined $37,000 for water reservoir breach
Escaping water from a bladder used to store water for fire protection has fouled nearby land and run into the Upper Main Eel River in Mendocino County. As a result, the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board reports it has fined the property owners where the...
Mohawks become first tribe to take down a federal dam
HOGANSBURG, N.Y. (AP) — A century after the first commercial dam was built on the St. Regis River, blocking the spawning runs of salmon and sturgeon, the stream once central to the traditional culture of New York's Mohawk Tribe is flowing freely once again. The...
At Standing Rock – Water, History, and Finance Converge As Sioux Nation Mounts Storied Battle Over Dakota Access Pipeline
Heavy snow and winter cold settled this month on thousands of Native Americans and their supporters encamped on the banks of the Cannonball River, some 30 miles south of Bismarck, North Dakota. Nearby, the Missouri River slipped past. The river’s clean waters serve as...
State Assessing Contaminated Water Infiltration to Scotia Drinking Water
State agencies are currently assessing potential impacts to Scotia’s drinking water system after three separate incidents at the Humboldt Redwood Company sawmill caused water contaminated with woody materials to infiltrate into the town’s drinking water system on the...
Cannabis
FOER Discusses Cannabis Impacts on the Humboldt Chronicles
From the Humboldt Chronicle: In the July episode, we took a look at environmental issues as they pertain to cannabis cultivation -- regulation, compliance, best practices. Our guests included Drew Barber of East Mill Creek Farms, Scott Greacen, Conservation Director...
FOER Discusses Humboldt County Lawsuit on Jefferson Exchange
"When we're talking about the watershed impacts the impacts on fisheries and fish habitat and things that need our rivers and streams, the biggest overall by far is sediment production" Friends of the Eel River's Conservation Director Scott Greacen joins...
Econews Report: Salmon People in an Era of Ecological Colonialism
“When we call ourselves salmon people, that’s very literal in our purpose to take care of salmon. So that means the river and the forest, and all of these other things that create salmon habitat. So if the salmon aren’t here, I think that’s a very cosmological...
Friends of the Eel River Demands Tougher Cannabis Regulations
Friends of the Eel River (FOER) has filed suit against the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors for failing to adequately protect our native fish and waters from the impacts of cannabis cultivation.
Compliant Cannabis Cultivation Resources
Best Management Practices
State Agency Permits
- Department of Fish & Wildlife
- State Water Resources Control Board
- North Coast Water Quality Control Board
- California Department of Food & Agriculture
County Regulations
What Effective Cannabis Regulation Might Look Like
A sustainable set of policy solutions to the environmental, social, and legal challenges presented by the Green Rush needs to:
Reflect Community Concerns
The spectacular failures of marijuana prohibition are to a large degree unanticipated problems generated by yesterday’s apparently simple solutions to complex problems. Better solutions address all critical concerns and stakeholders.
Optimal solutions are most likely to emerge from an open process that seeks out expert and lay perspectives on problems and solutions and looks ahead to future changes.
Reduce Cumulative Impacts
Rising environmental impacts associated with the Green Rush threaten our iconic North Coast rivers, fish and wildlife.
Summer water diversions must be halted, and sources of excess sediment corrected, to give threatened coho salmon and steelhead their best shot at recovery.
Environmental review at the program level to ensure impacts are limited.
Effective regulation should:
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- Halt Green Rush increases in the number and scale of cultivation operations.
- Reduce watershed impacts of cultivation in general, not just willing permittees.
Work Toward Comprehensive Solutions
While Cannabis remains federally prohibited, even state legalization can only go part of the way to correcting the unintended consequences of prohibition. Nonetheless, county-level regulation should go as far as possible down that road, not least to show state and federal policy-makers where we would like to go.
- Regulate all but de minimis individual cultivation.
- Appropriate limits on personal, medical, and commercial production.
- Include both willing and unwilling cultivators on the private landscape.
- Consistent to the extent possible with Department of Justice guidelines for state legalization and regulation.
Be Practicable and Effective
It is essential that the marijuana industry itself take effective responsibility for reducing its watershed impacts to the greatest extent possible. Due to the peculiar circumstances of the industry’s long evolution under prohibition, enforcement efforts targeting specific environmental harms associated with marijuana cultivation have been limited in scope and effectiveness.
At the same time, enforcement will remain an indispensable element of any comprehensive approach to managing the marijuana industry and its environmental impacts. Better-targeted and better-funded enforcement, coupled with incentives structured to support community-based watershed protection efforts, can drive better outcomes on the ground and in our streams.
- Adequate funding and clear direction for enforcement and inspection measures prior to implementation.
- Growth of permitting program should reflect agency capacity and need for adaptive management.
- Nuisance abatement to address operations in violation of ordinance.
- Incentives by watersheds as neighborhoods correct sediment sources and protect summer stream flows.
- Disincentives: Uncorrected willful violations of permit terms disqualify permittee and parcel.
Implement Sustainable Practices
- Deter unsustainable practices to the greatest practicable extent: No indoor cultivation, pesticides, or water hauling.
- Individual parcels: Suitability screens, site fixes, and BMPs in operation.
- Watershed and community level: Net compliance with water protection measures, including winter diversion rates, no summer diversions, and effective sediment abatement.
- Where effective practices have been demonstrated at the subwatershed level, increases in net and individual parcel cultivation may be considered.
- Fund and support prevention and remediation of trespass operations, watershed restoration, and pollution prevention.
Reflect Limits
- Limit total number of permits.
- Limits on scale by parcel size, location, parcel suitability, and other concerns.
- Permits only to natural persons.
- Permits limited to one per person and one per parcel.
- No incentive for parcel division: If a parcel is split, the net limit on the two remaining parcels may not be greater than the original parcel for a period of ten years.
Contact Us
Membership forms and other printed material may be mailed to:
Friends of the Eel River
PO Box 4945
Arcata, CA 95518
Email: foer(at)eelriver.org
Phone: (707) 798-6345
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