Yuma Sun

Ariz. backs Colorado River water transfer

The plan would allow the sale of water from farmland near the river to phoenix suburb Queen Creek

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PHOENIX – The Arizona Department of Water Resources endorsed a company’s proposal to sell water from farmland near the Colorado River to a a fast-growing Phoenix suburb despite complaints of possible negative effects for communitie­s along the river.

The state agency recommende­d approval of the water sale by GSC Farm LLC to the Queen Creek suburb, The Arizona Republic reported Saturday.

GSC Farm sought state approval last year to permanentl­y leave three quarters of a square mile (1.94 square kilometers) of farmland dry and sell its annual entitlemen­t of about 678 million gallons (2.56 billion litres) to Queen Creek for a one-time payment of $21 million.

The plan, which requires federal approval, has generated debate about whether transferri­ng water away from Cibola could harm the economy of the farming community about 175 miles (282 kilometers) west of Phoenix near the California border.

Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke approved the sale, but he recommende­d allowing the transfer of a little more than half the proposed amount.

Buschatzke said his department had to weigh factors including “the beneficial use of the water after the transfer and any potential impacts on the western

Arizona communitie­s who rely on the Colorado River.”

The department held a series of meetings to get public input on the proposed deal, which generated 872 written comments including 854 in opposition.

Town leaders in Queen Creek said the deal would reduce their reliance on groundwate­r and improve long-term water supplies to help support growth.

Republican state Rep. Regina Cobb, who represents Cibola and other communitie­s near the Colorado River, said her constituen­ts are concerned the water transfer clears the way for more deals in which farmland is bought and water is sold, causing economic harm.

“The biggest fear is that we are transferri­ng wealth from one area to another,” Cobb said. “And it’s not just affecting that one small area of Cibola. It is affecting everybody downstream below that.”

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