RIO VISTA – The endangered delta smelt is on its way to having a new wetland home. On Wednesday, the California Department of Water Resources held a levee breaching ceremony to celebrate the completion of the Lookout Slough Tidal Habitat Restoration and Flood Improvement Project in Solano County.
The State of California is required to offset impacts to species, including delta smelt, that become endangered by the operation of the State Water Project in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. The water project is one of the largest in the world, serving 27 million people and 750,000 acres of farmland, according to state officials.
Kris Tjernell, (former) California Department of Water Resources (DWR) Deputy Director of Integrated Watershed Management kayaks through a levee breach. The levee will be breached in nine places, creating an open water habitat for fish and wildlife in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Sept. 18, 2024. Andrew Nixon / California Department of Water Resources
Wednesday’s event, attended by state and local officials, involved an excavator removing the last segment of a levee about five miles north of Rio Vista, flooding 3,400 acres of restored habitat.
“More intense droughts and floods require these solutions,” said DWR Director Karla Nemeth, who was joined by DWR’s Tribal Affairs Executive Manager Anecita Agustinez and Director Wade Crowfoot.
A project of environmental restoration firm Ecosystem Investment Partners, it is designed to support fish and wildlife species and provide new flood capacity in Solano County.