California court ruling could threaten key source of funding for disputed giant water tunnel project

FILE - A ship sails through the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta near Bethel Island, Calif., on March 12, 2008. Sacramento Superior Court Judge Kenneth C. Mennemeier ruled Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024, that the state does not have permission to borrow billions of dollars for a water project. The decision could threaten a key source of funding for a plan to build a tunnel to reroute the state's water supply from the Central Valley to the densely populated southern portion of the state. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A California judge says a nearly 65-year-old law does not give the state permission to borrow the billions of dollars it would need to build a large water project, a decision that could threaten a key source of funding for a controversial plan backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to build a massive underground tunnel that would reroute a big part of the state's supply.

The Department of Water Resources approved a resolution in 2020 to borrow money for an unspecified “Delta Program." The agency said it could borrow this money without asking for permission from the state Legislature because a law, last amended in 1959, says it can make changes to a portion of the State Water Project — a complex system of dams and canals that supplies water to about 27 million people.

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