Albuquerque Journal

Effort to bring water to eastern NM gets more funding

Feds add $5 million to Ute pipeline project

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

The U.S. government is funneling another $5 million to a pipeline project that is designed to one day bring billions of gallons of drinking water a year to parts of eastern New Mexico where supplies are rapidly declining.

The Ute pipeline project has been decades in the making to ease the strain on the Ogallala aquifer, a massive groundwate­r supply that underlies parts of New Mexico, Texas and several other states.

The latest report from federal scientists shows average water levels across the expansive aquifer dropped by less than a foot between 2013 and 2015. Declines have been more dramatic over the last half-century, topping 230 feet in some places.

While efforts to reduce pumping have slowed the rate of decline in recent years, officials in Clovis and other eastern New Mexico communitie­s say the need remains for a more sustainabl­e source of water for the estimated 70,000 people who depend on the aquifer.

One of six congressio­nally approved rural water projects underway nationwide, the pipeline would bring water from Ute Reservoir to Cannon Air Force Base, Clovis, Portales and other communitie­s along the Texas-New Mexico

border.

The communitie­s are praising the latest infusion of funding, which marks the largest financial award to date. Still, the federal dollars represent just a fraction of what will be needed to complete the project.

The price has ballooned to more than a half-billion dollars, and the Bureau of Reclamatio­n has acknowledg­ed it could end up costing $750 million.

In all, more than $46 million has been requested by the Trump administra­tion for rural water projects for the 2018 fiscal year. That’s more than what was set aside by the Obama administra­tion for spending in 2017 but less than previous years.

Pairing the federal money with state and local matching funds, the Eastern New Mexico Water Utility Authority now has about $14 million to begin the next phase, which officials say will be the backbone of the project.

“I think it is really exciting that the project has advanced this far,” said Gayla Brumfield, chairwoman of the water authority. She said the funding indicates the federal government believes in the project.

A piece of the project calls for a system of pipelines that would connect the Air Force base and other communitie­s to areas where the aquifer has the potential to produce more water to ensure none of the members runs dry before the pipeline from the reservoir is completed.

Design and constructi­on of that network is estimated at $88 million. The first bids are expected to go out this fall.

Ute Reservoir was completed in 1963, with the intention of storing water downstream communitie­s that rely on the Ogallala. It wasn’t until 2009 that Congress approved the pipeline project in the face of what eventually became an unpreceden­ted drought in New Mexico.

The initial phase — an intake facility at Ute Reservoir — was completed in April 2016.

In an effort to further slow the decline of the aquifer, Land Commission­er Aubrey Dunn is encouragin­g oil and natural gas companies in the region to consider using recycled water for their operations rather than pumping fresh groundwate­r. His office this year instituted a review policy for permitting any new pumping on state trust land.

Many companies are already moving in that direction, and city leaders say municipal conservati­on efforts will continue in order to stretch existing supplies.

 ??  ?? Gayla Brumfield
Gayla Brumfield
 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? A 2013 photo shows the constructi­on of an intake pump station near the deepest part of Ute Reservoir intended to one day supply water for a pipeline to communitie­s in Curry and Roosevelt counties.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL A 2013 photo shows the constructi­on of an intake pump station near the deepest part of Ute Reservoir intended to one day supply water for a pipeline to communitie­s in Curry and Roosevelt counties.

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