Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pahrump ban on new wells gets revision

- By Henry Brean Las Vegas Review-journal

Pahrump property owners already in the process of developing their land have been exempted from a state ban on new domestic groundwate­r wells in Nye County’s largest town.

Nevada State Engineer Jason King has amended the unpreceden­ted ban he issued last year to effectivel­y grandfathe­r in certain property owners in the town of about 39,000 people 60 miles west of Las Vegas.

The change applies to anyone who can prove they applied before King’s Dec. 19 order for a Nye County zoning or building permit on a parcel that is eligible for a domestic well.

King’s amended order, issued July 12, would also allow 22 property owners who were denied well-drilling permits around the time his original order to file for reconsider­ation.

Joann Kittrell, spokeswoma­n for the Nevada Division of Water Resources, called the amendment a “good faith” effort by King to exempt people who had “already invested some time and money into their developmen­t plans.”

She said only a handful of Pahrump land owners are likely to be effected by the change.

In his original order, King said the ban on new wells was necessary because the groundwate­r basin that supplies Pahrump is already “severely over-appropriat­ed,” with water levels in steady decline despite numerous efforts by the state engineer to regulate pumping and stabilize the aquifer.

According to state estimates, approximat­ely 20,000 acre-feet of water a year can be pumped sustainabl­y from the ground beneath the town, but more than 59,000 acre-feet of water rights have been issued in the valley. That total does not include the more than 20,000 acre-feet of water that is allowed to be withdrawn annually from Pahrump’s roughly 11,000 existing domestic wells.

One acre-foot is enough water to supply two average Las Vegas Valley homes for a little more than a year.

State law generally allows property owners who live outside the service area of a water utility to sink a well and pump up to 2 acre-feet of water a year without a water right. In Pahrump, though, new domestic wells are allowed only if the property owner signs over to the state 2 acrefeet of existing water rights.

King’s order only applies to new domestic wells, not existing wells that need to be deepened, repaired or replaced.

A coalition of local residents and business owners has filed a court challenge seeking to block the well ban. That challenge is still pending.

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Jason King

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