Porterville Recorder

Water Rights act introduced in House of Representa­tives

- Recorder@portervill­erecorder.com

The Water Rights Protection Act, introduced in the House last week, could bring U.S. ranchers much-needed relief from ongoing efforts by the federal government to extort privately held water rights from law-abiding citizens, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation.

“It’s time to put a stop to federal strong-arming of ranchers by a government that owns the majority of the land for grazing west of the Mississipp­i,” AFBF President Zippy Duvall said. “Water is the most valuable resource for every farmer and rancher. Unfortunat­ely, the federal tactics we’ve seen in recent years have little to do with conservati­on and everything to do with big government and control.”

In recent years, federal land managers in the West have demanded increasing­ly that the ranchers who work the land surrender their water rights to the government or leave. Public lands are meant to be enjoyed and shared by our citizens, and America’s ranchers play a critical role in caring for these lands. The government’s treatment of these ranchers is not only unfair, but unconstitu­tional, AFBF said.

For America’s farmers and ranchers to continue to provide the food, fuel and fiber for the nation and the world, they simply must have access to water. This is especially crucial in the West. All citizens have a right to expect that their lawfully acquired water rights will be respected by the federal government.

If passed, the Water Rights Protection Act (H.R. 2939) would bar the federal government from seizing state-granted water rights from ranchers and restore basic property rights to them. According to AFBF, the act echoes policy changes President Trump set forth in his executive order on Promoting Agricultur­e and Rural Prosperity in America, which further supports the protection of ranchers’ water rights.

The legislatio­n would also:

Prohibit agencies from demanding transfer of privately held water rights to the federal government in exchange for federal land use permits or other things;

Maintain federal deference to state water law; and

Maintain environmen­tal safeguards already in place.

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