Las Vegas Review-Journal

Agency issues dire threat about Colorado River

Projection­s bleak amid record-low snowpack

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

The head the federal agency that oversees the Colorado River has a message for state water managers: The outlook is bleak, so quit squabbling and get back to work.

In a pointed message Wednesday, U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Brenda Burman said drought and low flows continue on the Colorado with no end in sight, so it’s up to those who rely on the river to stave off a coming crisis.

“We need action and we need it now. We can’t afford to wait for a crisis before we implement drought contingenc­y plans,” Burman in a written statement. “I’m calling on the Colorado River basin states to put real — and effective — drought contingenc­y plans in place before the end of this year.”

The bureau’s latest projection­s call for the river to see just 42 percent of its average flow between now and July due to record-low snowpack that has already melted away in parts of the basin.

Federal forecaster­s now say there is a 52 percent chance that Lake Mead will decline into shortage conditions by 2020. That would force Nevada and Arizona to cut their river use for the first time under shortage rules adopted in 2007.

Nevada, Arizona and California have been working on a plan since 2015 to keep Lake Mead out of shortage by voluntaril­y leaving more water in the reservoir, but the talks have stalled in Arizona and California, where water users are arguing over how to share the necessary cuts.

Then last month, a war of words broke out among the seven states that share the Colorado after Arizona’s largest water utility revealed a controvers­ial strategy to keep water levels in Lake Mead high enough to avoid any reduction in its share but low enough to require upper-river users to send

more water downstream to the lake.

The Central Arizona Project, which supplies water to about 5 million people in Phoenix and Tucson, has since issued a statement saying it “regrets using language and representa­tions that were insensitiv­e” to other river users.

Officials for the utility promised “a more respectful and transparen­t dialogue in the future” and said they would do their part to finish the drought contingenc­y plan.

The surface of Lake Mead has dropped by more than 130 feet since 2000, when the current drought descended on the mountains that feed the Colorado. According to the bureau, the river basin is in the midst of the driest 19-year period on record and one of the worst drought cycles of the past 1,200 years.

“This ongoing drought is a serious situation, and Mother Nature does not care about our politics or our schedules,” said John Entsminger, the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s general manager and one of several top water officials who signed on to Burman’s call to action. “We have a duty to get back to the table and finish the drought contingenc­y plan to protect the people and the environmen­t that rely upon the Colorado River.”

Contact Henry Brean at hbrean@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0350. Follow @Refriedbre­an on Twitter. ▶ reviewjour­nal.com/lvshooting

working its way north to Stewart Avenue.

Even though the parade kicks off at 10 a.m., Fourth Street and sections of several cross-streets along the route will start closing at 6 a.m. The streets will reopen by 2 p.m.

This year’s parade has roughly 100 entries, including horse clubs, motorcycle clubs and dance groups. High school marching bands each receive $1,000 for participat­ing, and high school groups who enter a Western heritage or

Las Vegas-themed float receive $1,500.

Las Vegas residents with a May 15 birthday, which is also the anniversar­y of the city’s founding, were invited to march together as part of the “5/15” club.

The Helldorado Days event was first held in 1934, created by the Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks Lodge No. 1468, and has raised more than $4 million for children’s and veterans’ charities. The Commission for the Las Vegas Centennial sponsors the annual parade.

Contact Jamie Munks at jmunks@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0340. Follow @Journo_jamie_ on Twitter. Review-journal staff writer Art Marroquin contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Janna Karel ?? Las Vegas Review-journal The Colorado River near Willow Beach, Arizona.
Janna Karel Las Vegas Review-journal The Colorado River near Willow Beach, Arizona.

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