Advertisement

California lawmakers in stalemate over state water plan

Share via

State legislative leaders remained stalemated Saturday over proposals to improve California’s water supply, leaving little more than 24 hours to strike a deal that would convince Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger not to carry out his threat to veto many of the 704 unrelated bills on his desk.

Democratic and Republican leaders emerged from a three-hour meeting with the governor and acknowledged that they remain divided on issues including the size of a water bond measure, protections for existing water rights and proposals to force water conservation. They plan to resume the closed-door negotiations this morning.

“Sadly, there was little in the way of progress,” said Assembly Minority Leader Sam Blakeslee (R-San Luis Obispo). “We as Senate and Assembly Republicans put forward a number of alternative proposals, solutions to deal with defects in what is frankly a very bad bill right now. At this time none of them have been accepted.”

Advertisement

Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) acknowledged that “there may not be this big handshake” deal before the midnight deadline to veto bills.

--

patrick.mcgreevy@latimes.com

Advertisement