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League of Women Voters of California Education Fund
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Brian Andrew Schmidt
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The questions were prepared by the Leagues of Women Voters of Santa Clara County and asked of all candidates for this office.
Read the answers from all candidates (who have responded).Questions & Answers
1. What are the three top issues facing the Water District, and what are some of the solutions you believe will address the problems?
The Water District has a crisis in confidence at the top level of its Board. I will propose evening meetings so the public can attend them and even serve on the Board. I will oppose the restrictions that currently restrain the citizen advisory/oversight committees from doing a better job. I support reasonable term limits that count terms served by current Directors, so democracy has a real chance of operating at the District.The District must do a better job of protecting water resources and managing flooding. I support ramped-up use of water recycling and greater education about water conservation. Removing impervious surfaces can reduce flooding and increase groundwater recharge. We must handle mercury contamination of water bodies and local fish through continuation of current efforts and by championing state-level efforts to require mercury producers to clean up mercury.
The Water District needs to control its budget. For example, Board Director compensation should be reduced to levels similar to City Council Members, and I have spoken and written to the Board to advocate for this change. I will also oppose wasteful means of accomplishing goals when cheaper ones are available. I will also closely and carefully scrutinize efforts to get the Water District to spend money dredging and maintaining a deepwater channel through miles of the Bay to Alviso. This scrutiny can keep the District from spending ratepayer and taxpayer money unnecessarily.
2. What experience and training do you have which would help the Water District meet its goals?
I have been involved in water use and civic issues for nearly 15 years since I moved to this area to study environmental law at Stanford. I've written for legal academia on water rights and co-authored two books on environmental regulation relevant to the Water District (one on the Endangered Species Act, the other on local wetlands regulation). With a grant I won from the Water District five years ago, I wrote a white paper on how the land use planning process could be improved to reduce impervious surfaces and improve groundwater percolation.For over seven years I've been the Santa Clara County Advocate for Committee for Green Foothills, working with and sometimes against a wide variety of governmental agencies and officials in our County for the purpose of protecting our natural resources, natural habitats, and working farmlands. Treating people I've dealt with fairly and respectfully even when we disagreed gives me the ability to get agreements, and can be seen in the widespread levels of endorsements on my endorsement list.
I've been involved with the Water District since 2004, as member, vice-chair, and chair of the Environmental Advisory Committee. This committee was called the most effective of any in the last three or four years by a District Board member, covering the period when I was the chair. I know how to get results both at the District and also when working with other levels of government.
3. How will you balance your constituents needs and interests with residential, agricultural and business needs of entire county while safeguarding the environment?
The constituents of the Water District - the residents, farmers, and businesses - need and want a safeguarded environment, so we already have the political will to balance our interests. Nobody here wants to waste water the way that Las Vegas did or waste land the way that Los Angeles did.The Water District's role of providing technical information to other agencies and education to the public will balance its role of flood protection and water supply. I will help it use natural flood protection, keeping development away from streams instead of lining streams with concrete, balances our interests. Increasing water conservation also increases water supply, and I will support District efforts that do this.
4. What is your evaluation of the financial condition of the Water District and how would you ensure that maintenance of infrastructures remains a priority?
The District is in much better condition than other agencies but still faces significant challenges. I will carefully avoid unnecessary expenditures like examples of given for a ballot measure or for dredging that's not proven necessary.The District should also seize opportunities - the one good aspect of the bad economy is that contractors will bid far lower now than in the past, so the ratepayers can save money.
A current lawsuit against the District could eliminate about 20% of the budget if it goes poorly. I believe the District should have a contingency plan to react, quickly, to a definitive loss in court.
Responses to questions asked of each candidate are reproduced as submitted to the League. Candidates' responses are not edited or corrected by the League. Answers must not refer directly or indirectly to another candidate.Read the answers from all candidates (who have responded).
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Created from information supplied by the candidate: October 24, 2010 21:39
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