Chattanooga Times Free Press

Water war between Georgia and Florida takes center stage

- BY MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday appeared to be looking for a way to side with Florida in its complaint that Georgia uses too much water and leaves too little for its southern neighbor.

The justices heard arguments in the long-running dispute between the two states. The fight is over Georgia’s use of water from the Chattahooc­hee and Flint rivers that serve booming metro Atlanta and Georgia’s powerful agricultur­al industry.

Florida says too little is left by the time those rivers form the Apalachico­la river that flows into Apalachico­la Bay and the nearby Gulf of Mexico.

A special master appointed by the justices recommende­d they side with Georgia and reject Florida’s call for limiting water consumptio­n from the Flint river.

But during the hourlong argument, several justices suggested that special master Ralph Lancaster might have been unfair to Florida. Low river flows on the Apalachico­la have harmed the environmen­t and fisheries dependent on fresh water entering the area, including a huge drop in the oyster harvest in the bay.

“Can we agree that a cap at the very least would prevent the situation in Florida from getting worse?” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said.

Craig Primis, Georgia’s lawyer at the high court, said Ginsburg was wrong and Florida had presented no evidence that forcing Georgia to cut its water use would benefit Florida.

Primis’ answer gave rise to questions about physics and common sense, both of which Justice Elena Kagan said seemed to indicate that more water would flow into Florida if Georgia used less.

“It seems as though it should be true,” Kagan said.

But Primis told the justices that there is “nothing common sense” about the operation of the complex river system, with its five dams run by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The Corps controls the water flow on the Chattahooc­hee to serve several purposes, including hydropower, flood control, protecting endangered species and storing water for release during droughts, Justice Department lawyer Edwin Kneedler said.

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