Double Trouble: Water and Workers in California’s Imperial County

By SETH SANDRONSKY

California’s Imperial Valley, which harvests two-thirds of the winter vegetables (e.g., lettuce, celery, cilantro, spinach, cabbage, broccoli, carrots) available across the US, faces double trouble. The region’s agricultural bounty that depends on a single supply of water from the Colorado River is at-risk. Consequently, the potential impact on the area’s workforce whose unemployment rate is four-fold higher than average in the Golden State is fraught.

Imperial County is located on the southeast border of the Golden State on the US-Mexico border, with about 180,000 residents who reside in seven cities. The climate is arid, with the recent series of California’s storms an exception to this weather.

Against this backdrop, the main driver of Imperial County’s water woes is competition for this precious resource from the Colorado River. The competitive interests vying for a dangerously dwindling supply of Colorado River water range from seven US states to Mexico. Interpretation of water rights is a site of struggle for these interests, given multiple interstate water compacts, federal laws and court decisions. Whiskey is for drinking, but water is for fighting, as the old saw goes.

In the meantime, Imperial County can ill afford rising unemployment and falling economic output. It is worth noting that unemployment data for Imperial County does count workers without citizenship papers, according to Professor Emeritus Phillip Martin of the University of California at Davis. Migrant labor is in fact a central part of wealth production.

According to Robert Schettler, public information officer for the Imperial Irrigation District, one in every six jobs in Imperial County connects with agriculture. “So if we cut back on farming, there is a negative effect,” he said. “Ag is the backbone of the economy for California’s Imperial Valley.”

In terms of Imperial County diversifying economic development away from the current centrality of agriculture, the nearby Salton Sea is a potential bright spot due its status as a source of lithium. Lithium is a key chemical to batteries powering cell phones and electric vehicles, the latter of which is part of the necessary clean energy transformation away from the current reliance on fossil fuels warming the planet dangerously with each passing day. The top three producers of lithium are Australia, Chile and China, respectively.

“We’re building a hub for global innovation while ensuring this transformation benefits communities right here in Imperial Valley,” said Gov. Gavin Newson in a statement on a recent visit to the Salton Sea. “California is poised to become the world’s largest source of batteries, and it couldn’t come at a more crucial moment in our efforts to move away from fossil fuels. The future happens here first—and Lithium Valley is fast-tracking the world’s clean energy future.”

Time will tell if this outcome materializes. Much hangs in the balance in California, the nation and planet.

Seth Sandronsky is a Sacramento-based journalist and member of the Pacific Media Workers Guild. Email him at sethsandronsky@ gmail.com.

From The Progressive Populist, May 15, 2023


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