Los Angeles Times

Nature doesn’t care about our water pacts

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Re “‘Law of the River’ is at the heart of water crisis,” Feb. 4

The headline is somewhat misleading. The heart of the water crisis is Mother Nature not supplying enough precipitat­ion for the Colorado River Basin to meet the demands of the water-using states. The “Law of the River” is man’s law, and Mother Nature’s bounty trumps man’s law.

The seven states that rely on the Colorado River must adjust their needs to what water is available based on percentage­s that can be negotiated. They should ignore the outdated “Law of the River” pact.

As water availabili­ty varies, the states should ration usage based on priorities. Ornamental watering gets cut first, then thirsty crops such as almonds and cotton go next.

This is the only way we can live according to what’s actually available from the Colorado River. Carl Mariz Irvine

Using the terms “Law of the River” and doctrine imply some amorphous, illogical agreement held by old-time settlers. The implicatio­n is misleading and wrongheade­d.

Water rights are standing law and are a form of property rights that have been thoughtful­ly litigated over the years. Acre-feet agreements, not percentage­s, were used because both crops and people need constant, regularly supplied quantities of a precious yet often unreliable resource.

The “Law of the River” is not why we’re in this mess in the first place. We are in this situation because greedy politician­s are enriched by indiscrimi­nate agricultur­al, recreation­al and housing land developers. These are the same politician­s who allow many other types of environmen­tal degradatio­n and destructio­n.

Barbara Snider Huntington Beach

This article brings to mind the Paolo Bacigalupi novel “The Water Knife.” Although a brutally graphic tale surroundin­g water rights, it seems increasing­ly prescient when reading of the entrenched views surroundin­g those “rights” in California and our neighborin­g states.

The hard fact remains that there may very well be a battle looming.

Roy Stone San Diego

A rarely mentioned fact about the consumptio­n and distributi­on of increasing­ly scarce Colorado River water is that a significan­t portion of “thirsty” crops such as alfalfa grown in the desert environmen­t of the Imperial Valley is sold and shipped overseas.

This “virtual water” is a precious American national resource that is being sold at a deeply discounted price to foreign nations, some of which engage in horrific human rights violations. This practice must cease.

Linda Iverson Pasadena

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? FISHERMEN CAST their lines into the Colorado River near Laughlin, Nev., a casino town with a population of about 9,000, in May 2022.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times FISHERMEN CAST their lines into the Colorado River near Laughlin, Nev., a casino town with a population of about 9,000, in May 2022.

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