Restoration Mitigation Compliance
Our restoration programs are State Water Project (SWP)-funded to comply with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) biological opinions for SWP and the Central Valley Project (CVP) operations.
Our restoration programs are:
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Delta Pumping Plant Fish Protection Agreement (also known as the “Four Pumps Agreement”)
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Fish Restoration Program Agreement (FRPA)
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Yolo Bypass Habitat Restoration Program
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Habitat Expansion Agreement
Fish Restoration Program Restoration Project Status
Table 1. Projects Constructed
Project | Est. Creditable Acres | Construction Completed | Estimated Receipt of Credits | Actual Cost to Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Winter Island | 544 | 2019 | July 2023 (DS/LS) | $7,150,487 |
Wings Landing | 190 | 2020 | Oct-2023 (DS/LS) | $6,563,694 |
Yolo Flyaway Farms | 296 | 2018 | Dec-2022 (DS) | $6,456,144 |
Total projects constructed: 3,604
Table 2. Projects in Construction
Project | Est. Creditable Acres | Construction | Estimated Receipt of Credits | Actual Cost to Date | Total Est. Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bradmoor Island | 490 | 2022 | Jul-2024 (DS/LS) | $12,537,786 | $18,894,334 |
Lookout Slough | 2,975 | 2022 | Dec-2023 (DS) | $71,529,101 | $110,181,581 |
Total projects in construction: 3,465
Table 3. Project in Planning
Project | Est. Creditable Acres | Construction Start | Estimated Receipt of Credits | Actual Cost to Date | Total Est. Cost |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chipps Island (DWR | 687 | 2023 | Nov-25 (DS/LS) | $8,039,460 | $22,713,285 |
Portero Marsh | 489 | 2023 | Dec-2025 (DS/LS) | $15,667 | $15,515,632 |
Prospect Island (total credits estimated - 1515 | 486 | 2024 | Dec-2025 (DS) | $16,944,000 | $58,194,000 |
- Total number of constructed and planned projects: 8,731
- Total cost to date: $193,456,047
DWR and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW)’s Delta Fish Agreement offsets adverse fishery impacts caused by the diversion of water at the Harvey O. Banks Delta Pumping Plant, a key part of the State Water Project.
Direct losses of Chinook salmon, steelhead, and striped bass are offset or mitigated through the funding and implementation of fish mitigation projects.
The Delta Fish Agreement has completed approximately 15 projects in the Sacramento and San Joaquin river basins and in the Bay-Delta area.
These projects consist of:
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Salmon habitat enhancement projects
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Water exchange projects to provide fish passage flows for salmonids
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Fish screens and ladders
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Guidance barriers
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Enhanced law enforcement
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Stocking of salmon, and steelhead
Publications and Reports:
- Please submit a PRA request to see the publications and reports for the Delta Fish Agreement.
The FRPA implements the fish habitat restoration requirements of the Biological Opinions in the Delta, Suisun Marsh, and Yolo Bypass. The FRPA is also intended to address the habitat requirements of the Longfin Smelt Incidental Take Permit (ITP).
The Fish Restoration Program is focused on restoring 8,000 acres of tidal habitat in the Delta and Suisun Marsh to benefit Delta Smelt and 800 acres of low salinity habitat to benefit Longfin Smelt. These actions will also provide benefits for Winter-run and Spring-run Chinook Salmon, Steelhead, Green Sturgeon, and other native species. The directors of both DWR and CDFW signed the FRPA on October 18, 2010.
Restoration projects currently under way:
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Arnold Slough Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Bradmoor Island Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Prospect Island Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Tule Red Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Winter Island Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Yolo Flyway Farms Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
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Wings Landing Tidal Habitat Restoration Project
Table 1: Fish Restoration Program Restoration Projects Status
The Habitat Expansion Agreement required DWR and Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) to evaluate and select the most promising and cost-effective actions to expand spawning, rearing, and adult holding habitat for spring-run Chinook salmon and steelhead in the Sacramento River Basin. This agreement provided an alternative to resources agencies prescribing fish passage at DWR’s Oroville Facilities Project and for 2 PG&E projects located in the Feather River System.
As part of this agreement, DWR and PG&E produced a Habitat Expansion Plan (HEP), which was submitted to NMFS in 2010. The Final HEP described a suite of actions in the Lower Yuba River including:
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Expansion of spawning habitat at Sinoro Bar in the Englebright Dam Reach above the Deer Creek confluence
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Expansion of spawning habitat at Narrows Gateway in the Narrows Reach below the Deer Creek confluence
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The option of planning for and installing a seasonally operated segregation weir on the Yuba River below the outlet of the Narrows Pool to segregate spring-run and fall-run Chinook salmon, if deemed necessary by the resource agencies (NMFS, USFWS, and DFG)
Publications & Reports:
- Habitat Expansion Agreement (HEA)
- Habitat Expansion Agreement (Amendment)
DWR, CDFW, Reclamation, and the Suisun Resource Conservation District executed the Suisun Marsh Preservation Agreement (SMPA) in 1987 in effort to mitigate water quality impacts (such as increased salinity) in the Suisun Marsh that occurred as a result of the SWP, the Central Valley Project (CVP), and other upstream diversions.
The objectives of the SMPA include:
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To assure that DWR and Reclamation maintain a water supply of adequate quantity and quality for managed wetlands (i.e., duck hunting clubs) within the Marsh.
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To improve managed wetland habitat and provide high quality foods for wintering waterfowl with the goal of maintaining wintering waterfowl carrying capacity as required by the 1974 Suisun Marsh Preservation Act.
In 2014, Reclamation and USFWS, in partnership with the CDFW and DWR, finalized the Suisun Marsh Habitat Management, Preservation, and Restoration Plan Environmental Impact Statement/Report (EIS/EIR). The goal of the plan is to achieve an acceptable multi-stakeholder approach to the restoration of tidal wetlands and the enhancement of managed wetlands and provide a regulatory framework for operations and maintenance activities on private and public land. The plan calls for 5,000 to 7,000 acres of tidal restoration and 40,000 to 50,000 acres of managed wetland enhancement to benefit wintering and breeding waterfowl.
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Bradmoor Island Tidal Habitat Restoration Project (USFWS BO, CDFW ITP, SMP)
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Arnold Slough Tidal Habitat Restoration Project (USFWS BO, CDFW ITP, SMP)
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Wings Landing Tidal Habitat Restoration Project (USFWS BO, CDFW ITP, SMP)
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Tule Red Habitat Restoration Project (USFWS BO, CDFW ITP) (Not tiering off of SMP EIR/EIS, but may still count towards acres)
The Department of Water Resources (DWR) and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) established the Yolo Bypass Habitat Restoration (YBHR) Program in 2013 to implement the Yolo Bypass Salmonid Habitat Restoration and Fish Passage (YBSHRFP) Project. Originally, the YBSHRFP Project included a suite of restoration actions to achieve compliance with the 2009 National Marine Fisheries Service Biological Opinion (NMFS BO).
The restoration actions were developed to carry out the Reasonable and Prudent Alternative (RPA) Actions specific to the Yolo Bypass (e.g., RPA Actions 1.6.1, 1.6.3, 1.6.4, and 1.7) as described in the 2009 NMFS BO and in the 2012 Yolo Bypass Salmonid Habitat Restoration and Fish Passage Implementation Plan.
The YBHR Program identifies, evaluates, and implements Yolo Bypass restoration actions that aim to improve floodplain habitat and remove barriers to anadromous fish migration, primarily Chinook salmon and sturgeon.
In 2015, six separate Yolo Bypass BO projects were identified from the original YBSHRFP suite of projects and were included in California EcoRestore. These projects include the following:
- Yolo Bypass Salmonid Habitat Restoration and Fish Passage (YBSHRFP) Project,
- Fremont Weir Adult Fish Passage Modification Project,
- Wallace Weir Fish Rescue Facility Project,
- Agricultural Crossing 4 Modification Project
- Lower Putah Creek Restoration Project, and
- Lisbon Weir Fish Passage Project.
Under the purview of California EcoRestore, all of these projects were given specific accelerated construction timelines, except for the YBSHRFP Project.
Resources
Contact Information
If you have any questions email your name and inquiry to des@water.ca.gov