Mono Lake 20 Symposium – Nov. 17, 2014

Mono Lake 20

Image: Windsor Riley


Speakers & Panelists Who We Are Sponsors MCLE Resources Video

Mono Lake at 20: Past, Present and Future
A Berkeley Law Symposium 


Byron Sher Auditorium, CalEPA Headquarters Sacramento, CA
November 17, 2014

7:30 am-5:30 pm, with reception to follow

2014 marks the 20th anniversary of the State Water Resources Control Board’s (SWRCB) landmark Decision 1631 to amend the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s water rights to protect Mono Lake and its tributary creeks. The decision was the first in the state’s history to integrate the Water Code, Fish and Game Code, and the common law of public trust, to achieve such a result.

UC Berkeley’s Wheeler Institute for Water Law and Policy, joined by stakeholders in the Mono Lake Cases, are convening this symposium on November 17, 2014 to address several fundamental questions on this twentieth anniversary of D-1631.  What are the actual results of implementation of D-1631?  What does the decision mean for other water rights, as the State Water Board seeks to determine how best to protect public trust uses of the Delta and Central Valley rivers consistent with maintaining reliable water supplies?

We will seek to move from problem definition towards solutions statements, building on previous events at UC Davis in 1980 and 2011. The symposium will do so by bringing together panelists from multiple perspectives to distill lessons learned from twenty years of concerted effort to implement the Mono Lake decisions, and from efforts elsewhere to implement environmental flows by regulators who are confronting public trust issues. The speakers will ground their discussion in the context of institutional, fiscal, and biophysical realities.

JOSEPH SAX AND THE PUBLIC TRUST

We will honor Professor Joe Sax, whose scholarship contributed greatly to the development of the public trust doctrine.
 
Full Program [download pdf]
Session 1.  Retrospective on Mono Lake Cases
Session 2.  Outlook for Mono Lake and its Creeks
Session 3.  Implications of Changes since 1994 in California’s Water Rights System
Session 4.  Applications at Greater Scale and Complexity
 
WHAT IS INCLUDED IN YOUR REGISTRATION
Conference admission, conference program and materials, opening and closing plenary sessions, continental breakfast, coffee service, lunch, evening reception.CLE credit will be available.