Albuquerque Journal

Navajo sign water rights settlement

It is one of 16 such settlement­s to which $1.7B is being devoted

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MONUMENT VALLEY, Utah — Federal officials signed an agreement with leaders of the Navajo Nation on Friday that provides funding for clean drinking water infrastruc­ture for reservatio­n residents, and resolves questions about longstandi­ng Navajo claims to water rights in the drought-stricken U.S. West.

The signing formalizes the Utah Navajo Water Rights Settlement, which became law in 2020 as part of President Joe Biden’s bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill. As part of the agreement, the federal government will pay the Navajo Nation $210 million for drinking water infrastruc­ture in San Juan County — the part of the 27,00-square-mile reservatio­n that lies in Utah.

Many Navajo homes lack running water. Residents often fill containers at public taps or rely on water deliveries from volunteer organizati­ons.

“As we seek to strengthen Indigenous communitie­s and support tribal self-governance, today’s action and all of these investment­s will help provide the Navajo Nation with autonomy and flexibilit­y to design and build appropriat­e water projects that will address current and future water needs,” U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland said at a signing ceremony on the Navajo Nation.

Utah, which was also party to the agreement, will pay the Navajo $8 million as part of the settlement.

“We had two real problems in our state. One was the Navajo Nation had claims to the Colorado (River) that would impair Utah’s water rights,” U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney told The Salt Lake Tribune. “The other concern we had was that about half the Navajo Nation residents (in Utah) didn’t have running water.”

The settlement also quantifies the Navajo Nation’s water rights, quelling Utah’s anxieties about its longstandi­ng claims to a share of water, including from the Colorado River.

A 1908 court decision said tribes had rights to as much water as was needed to establish permanent homelands. Though they possess senior rights, the Navajo were left out when seven western states divided up shares as part of the Colorado River Compact a century ago.

The subsequent uncertaint­y and potential legal battles have emerged as an urgent issue as the region reckons with a hotter, drier future with less Colorado River water to be shared.

The settlement recognizes the Navajo’s right to 81,500 acre-feet of Utah water and allows them to draw the water from aquifers, rivers or Lake Powell, if they choose. The agreement also allows the Navajo to lease unused water to entities off the reservatio­n and guarantees they won’t lose water rights not put to use.

It’s one of 16 tribal water rights settlement­s, to which the Biden administra­tion is devoting $1.7 billion from the recently enacted federal infrastruc­ture bill.

“The hard work, however, must continue until all homes across the Navajo Nation have clean water running in faucets for all Navajo families,” Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez told the newspaper.

 ?? RICK EGAN/THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE ?? Utah Gov. Spencer J. Cox, left, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, center, and Jonathan Nez, president of the Navajo Nation gather to sign the water rights agreement.
RICK EGAN/THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE Utah Gov. Spencer J. Cox, left, U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, center, and Jonathan Nez, president of the Navajo Nation gather to sign the water rights agreement.

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