The Sentinel-Record

US states to meet at deadline on Colorado River drought plan

- KEN RITTER

LAS VEGAS — With drought entering a second decade and reservoirs continuing to shrink, seven Southweste­rn U.S. states that depend on the overtaxed Colorado River for crop irrigation and drinking water had been expected to ink a crucial sharethe-pain contingenc­y plan by the end of 2018.

They’re not going to make it — at least not in time for upcoming meetings in Las Vegas involving representa­tives from Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming and the U.S. government, officials say.

Arizona has been the holdout, with farmers, cities, Indian tribes and lawmakers in the state set to be first to feel the pinch still negotiatin­g how to deal with water cutbacks when a shortage is declared, probably in 2020.

“There will be cuts. We all know the clock is ticking. That’s what a lot of the difficult negotiatio­ns have been around,” said Kim Mitchell, Western Resource Advocates water policy adviser and a delegate to ongoing meetings involving the Arizona Department of Water Resources, Central Arizona Project, agricultur­al, industrial and business interests, the governor, state lawmakers and cities including Tucson and Phoenix.

In Arizona, unlike other states, a final drought contingenc­y plan must pass the state Legislatur­e when it convenes in January.

Federal water managers wanted a deal to sign at the annual Colorado River Water Users Associatio­n conference beginning Wednesday in Las Vegas, and threatened earlier this year to impose unspecifie­d measures from Washington if a voluntary drought contingenc­y plan wasn’t reached.

However, Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Brenda Burman is signaling that the agency that controls the levers on the river is willing to wait. She is scheduled to talk to the conference on Thursday.

“Reclamatio­n remains cautiously optimistic that the parties will find a path forward,” the bureau said in a statement on Friday, “because finding a consensus deal recognizin­g the risks of continuing drought and the benefits of a drought contingenc­y plan is in each state’s best interest.”

Colorado River water supports about 40 million people and millions of acres of farmland in the U.S. and Mexico.

After 19 years of drought and increasing demand, federal water managers project a 52 percent chance that the river’s biggest reservoir, Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam, will fall low enough to trigger cutbacks under agreements governing the system.

The seven states saw this coming years ago, and used Colorado River Water Users Associatio­n meetings in December

2007 to sign a 20-year “guidelines” plan to share the burden of a shortage.

Contingenc­y agreements would update that pact, running through 2026. They call for voluntaril­y using less to keep more water in the system’s two main reservoirs, lakes Powell and Mead.

Lake Powell upstream from of the Grand Canyon is currently at

43 percent capacity; Lake Mead, downstream, is at 38 percent.

Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming, the river’s Upper Basin states, aim to keep the surface of Lake Powell above a target level to continue water deliveries to irrigation districts and cities and also keep hydroelect­ric turbines humming at Glen Canyon Dam.

The Lower Basin states of California, Arizona and Nevada aim to keep Lake Mead above a shortage declaratio­n trigger point by using less water than they’re legally entitled to.

If Lake Mead falls below that level, Arizona will face a 9 percent reduction in water supply, Nevada a 3 percent cut and California up to 8 percent. Mexico’s share of river water would also be reduced.

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