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Jerry Meral, the state Natural Resources Agency's deputy secretary in charge of the plan, said the proposals will be winnowed down to one option, which should be out in June. Construction could begin in 2017 and the new system could be operational by 2024. Water users would finance the project through higher rates. Delta farmers fear diverting water would further damage the estuary and increase salinity, making farming impossible. About 600,000 acres are cultivated in the delta, but farmers there said they already stopped growing some crops because of a rise in salinity, which they attribute to pumping that allows more ocean water to flow in. "If they take the majority of the Sacramento River and divert it, it won't be coming through to flush out the salt," Robinson said. State officials countered that computer modeling showed a new project wouldn't increase salinity in most of the delta. Farmers also worry about changing the river's elevation, disrupting the system of pumps and siphons they rely on for irrigation and drainage. But Meral said the goal would be to capture and store excess flows during high water years. The current proposal calls for pumping up to 15,000 cubic feet per second, but that much water only would be diverted for a few days every few years, Meral said. South of the delta, the ability to pump more is "critical," said farmer Sarah Woolf. "From a farming perspective, it's very difficult to invest in land or capital investments when you don't have reliable water deliveries," she said. Woolf, whose family farms 1,000 acres of cotton, onions and tomatoes west of Fresno, said pumping restrictions meant her family couldn't plant on some of their land and had to lease land with better water access. In recent years, farms in the area received about 65 percent on average of the contracted water. But the farms received only 10 percent of contracts in 2009. "Most farmers plan for not getting enough water," Woolf said, "but there is a difference in getting less water and not getting any water at all." Delta farmers counter that the state should improve the current system and create hundreds of smaller projects that recycle and store water. Planning should take into account all farmland, said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, executive director of Restore the Delta, which represents delta farmers. "You can't help one farming region by destroying another," she said.
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