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The news came on the last day of the two-day October symposium on issues facing the Salton Sea. Leaders from Imperial County, in California鈥檚 southeast corner and at the southern end of the Sea, were preparing to formalize what all gathered at the symposium already knew: the Salton Sea represents a for surrounding communities.
鈥淭he Salton Sea is really collapsing,鈥 said Tina Shields of the Imperial Water District had remarked a day earlier, 鈥渁nd the air quality problems will just get worse if we don鈥檛 get a handle on it now. We need to get a handle on it now.鈥
A comprehensive solution has thus far eluded those who are seeing to avert the slow-motion collapse of the Salton Sea.
At somewhere around 350 square miles, the Salton Sea is by far California鈥檚 largest lake, yet one of its least known. The lake fills the Salton Sink, an intermittent wetland and part of the Colorado River floodplain that has filled and dried many times over the millennia. For much of the 20th century, the lake thrived as an important stop for birds migrating along the Pacific Flyway and a booming tourist destination in the 1950s and 60s. In the last few decades, threatened by pollution, climate change and reduced inflow from changing water-use patterns, the Sea is shrinking rapidly, killing the fish on which various migratory birds depend and exposing airborne dust from the dry lakebed that endangers the health of the 650,000 residents who live in the immediate area.
鈥淭here's already money available,鈥 said Frank Ruiz, Director of 糖心传媒's Salton Sea program, 鈥渂ut we need the plan that the state of California has adopted to be implemented to be able to begin construction of wetlands, that will have multiple benefits. One of them is to cover the erosion of dust that can worsen conditions like asthma and other chronic respiratory illnesses, and also provide habitat for migratory birds.鈥
In 2016, the state approved a 10-year management plan for the Sea, and millions of dollars are in place to begin projects to restore habitat and to mitigate the health effects of airborne contaminants, but progress has been painfully slow.
鈥淢ake no mistake, the state is behind as it relates to our annual targets for our 10-year management plan,鈥 said Wade Crowfoot, secretary of the California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA). 鈥淥ur focus now is not making more targets or more promises but actually getting projects done on the ground.鈥
CNRA Undersecretary for Salton Sea Policy Arturo Delgado told an auditorium of some 250 experts, conservationists and public officials that construction would begin next year on the plan鈥檚 鈥渇irst major habitat鈥 project, with completion expected by 2023.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 wait,鈥 said Sahara Huazano of community advocacy organization Allianza. 鈥淲e need to be organized and we need a clear plan鈥hey鈥檝e voted so many times on different plans and funds were allocated, but now they want to see it happen. The overall message is 鈥榣et鈥檚 get to work.鈥欌
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