A Tuolumne County judge has thrown out a lawsuit seeking to drain San Francisco's Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, the linchpin of a system that supplies drinking water to 2.5 million people in the Bay Area.
In a ruling delivered Thursday, Superior Court Judge Kevin Seibert sided with San Francisco officials who have objected to emptying the reservoir, situated in Yosemite National Park, and restoring the valley it now occupies. (Seibert's decision is embedded below.)
Restore Hetch Hetchy, the group that sued to shut down Hetch Hetchy, had argued that the dam and reservoir violate Article X, Section 2 of the California Constitution.
That provision, adopted in 1928, requires "that the water resources of the State be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, and that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented."
But Seibert ruled in favor of the city of San Francisco, which argued that the Raker Act, the 1913 federal law that authorized the dam and reservoir at Hetch Hetchy, pre-empted the later requirements of state law. Seibert also found the statute of limitations governing the alleged violations of law in the case had expired.