Las Vegas Review-Journal

A group gathered Thursday to list demands for a new approach to managing the Colorado River.

Colorado River water has been managed poorly, coalition says

- By Blake Apgar

While the lower basin is going on a diet of cutting its water use, we should

waste.’ not let the upper basin go to an all-you-can-eat buffet of water

Zach Frankel

Executive director of the Utah Rivers Council

A group that included environmen­talists, elected leaders and officials from business and agricultur­e gathered Thursday morning to put forth a slate of demands for a new approach to managing the Colorado River.

“We’re here to say, ‘Damn the status quo. No more business as usual,’” Kyle Roerink, executive director of the Great Basin Water Network, said from a makeshift lectern in a parking lot just above Hoover Dam.

Management of the river, which feeds Lake Mead and serves 40 million people in seven states and Mexico, has failed and the approach must be revised, Roerink said.

The gathering, which included representa­tives from the Utah Rivers Council, the Progressiv­e Leadership Alliance of Nevada, Laughlin River Tours and the Imperial Irrigation District, came as Lake Mead has historical­ly low water levels and the reservoir nears its first federally declared water shortage.

Roerink said officials have numerous opportunit­ies to deal with how the vital water source is managed between Congress negotiatin­g an infrastruc­ture bill, states receiving COVID-19 stimulus money and the rules that govern the Colorado River coming up for renegotiat­ion before they expire in 2026.

He said the coalition is calling for a moratorium on what it considers wasteful diversion projects along the river, including a proposed pipeline from Lake Powell that would divert billions of gallons of river water to southwest Utah.

“This 140-mile-long, $3 billion water project represents the boondoggle of our past,” said Zach Frankel, executive director of the Utah Rivers Council. “It is a completely unnecessar­y water project.”

The project would carry water to Washington County, Utah, where St. George is. Proponents of the pipeline say Utah has a right to the additional water use.

But Frankel said Washington County is home to some of the most wasteful water users in the country.

“It is simply madness that as the Colorado River reaches its lowest levels in recorded history, that we would be proposing a new water diversion upstream,” Frankel said. “While the lower basin is going on a diet of cutting its water use, we should not let the upper basin go to an all-youcan-eat buffet of water waste.”

A federal water shortage declaratio­n would force a cut in Nevada’s allocation of water from Lake Mead next year.

Roerink said the coalition isn’t against new developmen­t, but said if growth does occur, the group wants sustainabl­e water supplies identified before building begins.

JB Hamby, vice president of the Imperial Irrigation District’s board of directors, said Lake Mead now serves as a symbol of “drought, uncertaint­y and unsustaina­bility.”

The Imperial Irrigation District is the Colorado River’s largest water user, serving crops in California’s Imperial Valley.

Reworking how the river is managed can be successful only if officials recognize what climate change means for the Colorado River Basin, he said.

Hamby said urban sprawl across the southwest, what he called a

“sort of suburban Manifest Destiny,” threatens the sustainabi­lity of the Colorado River and the communitie­s that rely on it.

“We support efforts to ensure an equitable management of the Colorado River system through the preservati­on of rights of rural communitie­s, the environmen­t, and for urban water users to be sustainabl­e, not unsustaina­ble, in their use,” he said.

 ?? Chitose Suzuki Las Vegas Review-journal @chitosepho­to ?? Eric Bonner of Michigan visits Hoover Dam on Thursday with his mother-in-law, Zina Ibragimova, left, and sister-in-law Gamar Ibragimova. Lake Mead is nearing its first federally declared water shortage as low water levels persist.
Chitose Suzuki Las Vegas Review-journal @chitosepho­to Eric Bonner of Michigan visits Hoover Dam on Thursday with his mother-in-law, Zina Ibragimova, left, and sister-in-law Gamar Ibragimova. Lake Mead is nearing its first federally declared water shortage as low water levels persist.
 ?? Chitose Suzuki Las Vegas Review-journal @chitosepho­to ?? Kyle Roerink of Great Basin Water Network, center, speaks during a news conference Thursday on the Arizona side of Hoover Dam.
Chitose Suzuki Las Vegas Review-journal @chitosepho­to Kyle Roerink of Great Basin Water Network, center, speaks during a news conference Thursday on the Arizona side of Hoover Dam.

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