Hetch Hetchy Valley is in Yosemite National Park, and was the twin of Yosemite Valley. John Muir called it, "one of nature’s rarest and most precious mountain temples."
After creation of the park Congress approved a plan to dam it to provide water to San Francisco, flooding it under 300 feet of water.
This fall the people of San Francisco get to vote on removing the dam and restoring the valley to its pristine condition, which will cost a lot of money and create some potentially serious problems for San Francisco's water supply.
Republican politicians outside SF support removing the dam, Democrat politicians from SF, including Pelosi, oppose the removal plan. Everybody gets the benefits of a beautiful new valley, but only SF suffers the loss of the water, so it's not a partisan issue, it's a local one. Yet the entire world would get to visit the new valley, so one could think San Francisco is being pretty selfish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hetch_Hetchy_Valley
http://www.hetchhetchy.org/
http://seattletimes.com/html/travel/2018828150_webyosemite05.html
Try a Google image search on Hetch Hetchy. It was some amazing scenery and an extremely diverse ecosystem.
Of course for the first couple of years after draining the reservoir, the valley would look like a coal-mine disaster, just mud, concrete rubble, bulldozers, and dump trucks.
On top of that, San Francisco would probably have to dam up other valleys or create other artificial reservoirs which wouldn't be nearly as deep, thus requiring far more area to be submerged.
After creation of the park Congress approved a plan to dam it to provide water to San Francisco, flooding it under 300 feet of water.
This fall the people of San Francisco get to vote on removing the dam and restoring the valley to its pristine condition, which will cost a lot of money and create some potentially serious problems for San Francisco's water supply.
Republican politicians outside SF support removing the dam, Democrat politicians from SF, including Pelosi, oppose the removal plan. Everybody gets the benefits of a beautiful new valley, but only SF suffers the loss of the water, so it's not a partisan issue, it's a local one. Yet the entire world would get to visit the new valley, so one could think San Francisco is being pretty selfish.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hetch_Hetchy_Valley
http://www.hetchhetchy.org/
http://seattletimes.com/html/travel/2018828150_webyosemite05.html
Try a Google image search on Hetch Hetchy. It was some amazing scenery and an extremely diverse ecosystem.
Of course for the first couple of years after draining the reservoir, the valley would look like a coal-mine disaster, just mud, concrete rubble, bulldozers, and dump trucks.
On top of that, San Francisco would probably have to dam up other valleys or create other artificial reservoirs which wouldn't be nearly as deep, thus requiring far more area to be submerged.