Oroville Mercury-Register

US: More required to protect Colorado River

- By Felicia Fonseca

Set of guidelines for managing river helped states through dry spell, but it’s not enough amid continued drought.

FLAGSTAFF, ARIZ. » A set of guidelines for managing the Colorado River helped several states through a dry spell, but it’s not enough to keep key reservoirs in the American West from plummeting amid persistent drought and climate change, according to a U.S. report released Friday.

Millions of people in seven states and Mexico rely on the river for drinking water and growing crops. The 2007 guidelines were meant to lessen the blow of any future cuts in the water supply for growing areas, giving states an idea of what to expect each year and ways to manage the risks.

The report by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n found that the guidelines provided stability, along with other agreements among the states and with Mexico, but they won’t be enough to sustain a region that’s getting warmer and drier and has demanded more from the Colorado River.

The guidelines and an overlappin­g drought contingenc­y plan expire in 2026. Officials in Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, California and Nevada told the Interior Department on Thursday that they have started talking about what comes next.

“The people in the know realize they have a lot of work to do,” said Doug MacEachern, a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Water Resources.

The Bureau of Reclamatio­n was tasked with reviewing the effectiven­ess of the 2007 guidelines before year’s end to help with a baseline for the new negotiatio­ns. The

guidelines spelled out the operations of the nation’s two largest manmade lakes — Lake Powell along the Arizona-Utah border and Lake Mead along the ArizonaNev­ada border — outlining what happens when the river can’t supply the water that states were promised in the 1920s.

The guidelines allow water to be stored in Lake Mead, the reservoir created by the Hoover Dam. They set marks for the lake that would trigger water cuts to Nevada and Arizona. California and Mexico have

been looped in on possible cuts in other plans.

The guidelines were meant to be flexible and encourage consensus among states, rather than the federal government dictating management of the river, and to avoid litigation because states were required to consult with each other before suing.

“As Westerners, we were all too familiar with the negative consequenc­es of lawsuits challengin­g water operations in basins across the West,” Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Brenda Burman wrote in the report’s foreword. “Once litigation starts, flexibilit­y, innovation and problem solving often give way to rigid positionin­g and protection of positions.”

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? A bathtub ring of light minerals shows the high water line of the Colorado River near Hoover Dam on Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada in 2014.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE A bathtub ring of light minerals shows the high water line of the Colorado River near Hoover Dam on Lake Mead at the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Nevada in 2014.

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