S-4417-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S2083)
Sponsored by Alex Padilla (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would make two technical corrections to the 2016 Pechanga Band of Luiseno Mission Indians Water Rights Settlement Act. First, it would clarify the legal definition of the Pechanga Reservation by listing the specific executive orders and dates on which land was added, and by explicitly including contiguous trust land and future trust acquisitions within the Santa Margarita River Watershed. Second, it would broaden the permitted uses of the Pechanga Water Quality Account from "groundwater desalination activities" to the wider category of "activities to address water quality issues" within the Wolf Valley Basin. The bill also directs the Secretary of the Interior to promptly update the underlying settlement agreement to match these changes, while explicitly preserving all existing water rights and the 2020 enforceability finding.
Who benefits
The Pechanga Band of Luiseno Mission Indians, whose reservation boundaries would be more precisely defined in federal law, reducing potential legal ambiguity. The tribe would also gain greater flexibility in how it uses Water Quality Account funds. Downstream water users and municipalities in the Santa Margarita River Watershed who benefit from a clearly settled and enforceable water rights framework. Federal and state water managers who would have clearer statutory guidance for administration.
Who is hurt
Other water rights holders in the Santa Margarita River Watershed could face marginally greater competition for water resources if the clarified reservation definition results in a broader land base eligible for tribal water rights. Local governments or private landowners adjacent to the reservation may have concerns about the inclusion of future trust acquisitions within the reservation definition. The bill's broadened Water Quality Account language could reduce specificity in how funds are spent, which may concern oversight-focused stakeholders.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that these are straightforward technical corrections needed to align the federal statute with the actual historical record of how the Pechanga Reservation was established — through multiple executive orders and land additions spanning over a century. They contend that the clarified Water Quality Account language gives the tribe necessary flexibility to address a range of water quality challenges in the Wolf Valley Basin beyond desalination alone, ensuring the settlement functions as the parties originally intended and as confirmed by the Secretary of the Interior's 2020 enforceability finding.
Opponents argue
Opponents could argue that expanding the reservation definition to include future trust acquisitions within the Santa Margarita River Watershed goes beyond a purely technical fix and could incrementally enlarge the tribe's water entitlement footprint over time. They might also contend that broadening the Water Quality Account's permitted uses from a specific activity (desalination) to a general category (any water quality activities) reduces accountability and could allow funds to be used in ways not contemplated by the original 2016 settlement negotiated among multiple parties.