The Arizona Republic

Tigers, water, and economic investment in Arizona About this story

- Bret Jaspers

At the exotic Out of Africa animal park in Camp Verde, visitors can behold a menagerie that includes a rhino, king cobra and a bevy of wild cats. The marquee attraction at the park is the tiger splash, where staff play with tigers around a swimming pool, trying to get them into the water.

The park gets 150,000 to 200,000 visitors each year, according to co-owner Bill Jump. It would like a lot more.

Out of Africa wants to expand to add a hotel, a conference center and possibly a water park. For the water park in particular, investors would want assurances the site had a defined water source and buy-in from the community. But Jump said at the moment, they wouldn’t be able to present a long-term This story was produced by KJZZ and appears here through a collaborat­ion between The Arizona Republic/azcentral.com and KJZZ. To hear the original story, go to kjzz.org. water plan for something so substantia­l as a water park.

“Right now, we’re at the risk of a longterm solution being the courts,” he said. “Coming in and making a maybe irrational decision as to how they’re going to allocate water for the whole state.”

The “growth” industry fuels Arizona’s economy — growth in houses, offices and places to have fun. Consistent

growth has been possible — in part — because of prudent water management that covers the center of the state.

Outside the population hubs, however, some water rights are still undecided. A judge in the Superior Court is overseeing a lawsuit called the Gila River General Adjudicati­on. Through the adjudicati­on process, the judge will decide on claims to water from various Arizona rivers — or water pumped from wells close to the rivers.

The adjudicati­on has been going on a long time. The legal process started in the 1970s.

“We think we’re at the point where the adjudicati­on is beginning to impact the ability of these communitie­s to grow in the way they aspire to, and also to sustainabl­y manage water,” said Sarah Porter, director of the Kyl Center for Water Policy at Arizona State University.

Porter recently surveyed a few dozen developers and corporate site selectors for the report “The Price of Uncertaint­y” and found concern about water is intensifyi­ng. She also found that uncertaint­y about water often immediatel­y disqualifi­es a site from considerat­ion for investment.

“They will simply move to a place where that uncertaint­y doesn’t exist,” she said. “They don’t bother with places where there’s uncertaint­y about water rights.”

Steve Ayres, economic developmen­t director for Camp Verde, said a better solution than a court decree would be for the various claimants to come to their own deal, creating a system where water rights can be bought, sold or leased.

“So when the adjudicati­on court comes here, those parties won’t be objecting to one another’s use. They’ll actually have a deal worked out,” he said. “The court would be foolish not to accept a resolution that is acceptable to both parties.”

And there are some glimmers of this kind of solution. Out of Africa, for instance, is paying another company to use less water through a local water credit program called the Verde River Exchange. That way, the park can offset the 815,000 gallons it uses in the Tiger Splash and otter habitat.

Sarah Porter thinks local programs like these are promising, but there are over 50,000 water rights claims in the Gila River watershed, which includes the Verde and San Pedro Rivers, among others.

“To actually make a settlement work, you have to get enough parties to agree to the settlement. That means compromise on all sides,” she said.

Porter added that a settlement could require state legislatio­n, and there’s already a list of other water issues that need the legislatur­e’s attention.

Ayres thinks some water users don’t want the adjudicati­on completed, because they’ll be told to stop pumping water to which they’re not entitled. So if a settlement doesn’t happen, water users will have to wait — as they have for decades.

“Is it ever going to get adjudicate­d? I don’t know,” Ayres said. “I’m 63. I doubt seriously it’ll happen in my lifetime.”

 ?? BRET JASPERS/KJZZ ?? Chalet the tiger parades before a small crowd at Out of Africa Wildlife Park in Camp Verde.
BRET JASPERS/KJZZ Chalet the tiger parades before a small crowd at Out of Africa Wildlife Park in Camp Verde.

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