Santa Fe New Mexican

States agree on plan to manage Colorado River

- By Dan Elliott

DENVER — Seven Southweste­rn states that depend on the overtaxed Colorado River have reached landmark agreements on how to manage the waterway amid an unpreceden­ted drought, including a commitment by California to bear part of the burden before it is legally required to do so, officials said Tuesday.

The agreements are tentative and must be approved by multiple states and agencies as well as the U.S. government. But they are seen as a milestone in the effort to preserve the river, which supports 40 million people and 6,300 square miles of farmland in the U.S. and Mexico.

“I think it’s a critical step,” said Pat Mulroy, former manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, which serves Las Vegas, Nev., and other cities, and now a senior fellow at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas law school.

The agreements create a collection of drought contingenc­y plans designed to manage and minimize the effects of declining flows in the Colorado and its tributarie­s. Some plans were made public Tuesday. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n, which manages major reservoirs across the West, is expected to release others Wednesday.

A nearly two-decade drought has drained the river’s two largest reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, to alarmingly low levels. The Bureau of Reclamatio­n says the chances of a shortfall in Lake Mead are 57 percent by 2020. If that happens, mandatory cutbacks would hit Arizona, Nevada and Mexico first.

The reservoir never has fallen low enough to trigger a shortage.

California agreed to soften the blow by voluntaril­y reducing its Colorado River use by about 6 percent if conditions are bad enough, said Jeffrey

Kightlinge­r, general manager of the Metropolit­an Water District of Southern California, a wholesaler serving 19 million people.

Kightlinge­r said California wanted to avoid having Congress or the U.S. Department of Interior step in and dictate a solution.

Even with the plans in place, the impacts will be painful for some.

“We’ve been letting farms know they are undoubtedl­y going to have to change their irrigation practices,” said Paul Orme, an attorney who represents four Arizona irrigation districts in that state’s internal discussion­s on drought planning. “Irrigate less land with less water.”

Orme said farmers in the districts fear

they will be affected disproport­ionately.

“Everyone recognizes something additional needs to be done,” he said. “It’s just how we get there internally is what we’re trying to work out.”

The two major components of the plans cover the Upper Basin, where most of the water originates as Rocky Mountain snowfall, and the Lower Basin, which consumes more of the water because it has more people and farms.

Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming are in the Upper Basin. Arizona, California and Nevada are in the Lower Basin.

It will likely be next year before all seven states and the U.S. government approve the plans, said Karen Kwon, Colorado’s assistant attorney general.

Mexico agreed last year to participat­e in drought planning.

Reaching the agreements was a complex and delicate task because the river is not controlled by a single agency. Instead, it is

governed by interstate compacts, internatio­nal treaties and court rulings, known collective­ly as the law of the river.

Water managers have warned for months that a shortage could have catastroph­ic effects on agricultur­e and the economy of the Southwest.

“This is the way things should be done,” said Ted Kowalski, who heads the Colorado River Program for the Walton Family Foundation, which has funded river restoratio­n projects in the U.S. and Mexico.

“It’s a much preferred method of solving water management decisions than litigation or politics,” he said.

The Colorado River faces shortfalls for the foreseeabl­e future because of what is called a structural deficit — the users along the river and its tributarie­s are legally entitled to more water than the river actually carries. That’s because the original allocation­s, made in 1922, were based on water flows that were abnormally high.

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