Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. official declares drought plan finished for Colorado River

- By Felicia Fonseca

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — Seven states that rely on a major waterway in the U.S. West have finished a yearslong effort to create a plan to protect the Colorado River amid a prolonged drought, the federal government declared Tuesday.

U.S. Bureau of Reclamatio­n Commission­er Brenda Burman commended Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming for reaching a consensus on the Colorado River drought contingenc­y plan. Now the states are seeking approval from Congress to implement it.

“It is time for us to work with our congressio­nal delegation­s to move forward to make sure we can implement DCP this year,” Burman said on a call with reporters.

The Colorado River serves 40 million people and 7,812 square miles of farmland in the West. Under the drought plan, states voluntaril­y would give up water to keep Lake Mead on the Arizona-Nevada border and Lake Powell upstream on the Arizona-Utah border from crashing.

The push for federal legislatio­n comes after the Colorado River Board of California voted Monday to move ahead without a water agency that has the largest entitlemen­t to the river’s water.

The Imperial Irrigation District was

written out of California’s plan when another powerful water agency, the Metropolit­an Water District, pledged to contribute most of the state’s voluntary water cuts.

Imperial had said it would not commit to the drought plan unless it secured $200 million in federal funding to help restore a massive, briny lake southeast of Los Angeles known as the Salton Sea.

“IID has one agenda, to be part of a DCP that treats the Salton Sea with the dignity and due considerat­ion it deserves, not as its first casualty,” Imperial board President Erik Ortega said.

The Bureau of Reclamatio­n had given states until Tuesday to submit comments on what to do after California and Arizona failed to meet federal deadlines.

Burman said she will cancel the request now that all states are on board. Arizona says it doesn’t expect its remaining work to delay implementa­tion of the drought plan. The states’ plans are meant to supplement existing guidelines that dictate water deliveries to Arizona, Nevada and California. The Bureau of Reclamatio­n previously predicted a more than 50 percent chance that Arizona and Nevada would not get their full allocation­s of water in 2020.

The latest study shows a shortage might be averted because of above-average snowpack. In New Mexico, the basin that feeds the Rio Grande is about 135 percent above median levels.

But officials say one good year of snowpack won’t reduce long-term risks for the Rio Grande or the Colorado River.

The drought contingenc­y plan takes the states through 2026, when existing guidelines expire.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? What was once a marina sits high and dry due to Lake Mead receding in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Arizona. Seven Western states completed a plan to protect the resources of the Colorado River amid extended drought.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO What was once a marina sits high and dry due to Lake Mead receding in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area in Arizona. Seven Western states completed a plan to protect the resources of the Colorado River amid extended drought.

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