Posted on 10/13/2002 3:30:20 PM PDT by Willie Green
For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 The Bush administration has opened the way for Western states to gain control over enormous volumes of water previously claimed by the federal government. That would shift the balance in a long battle over control of a scarce resource.
The policies cede to Western states important water rights that the Clinton administration had claimed. Bush administration officials describe the new approach as an antidote to past federal excess.
Environmentalists said the policies would give the states more latitude to transfer water to their cities and away from national parks, forests, wildlife refuges and other federal lands.
Among the affected areas is a national park in Colorado, where the government is loosening its claim to river water that federal officials have called vital to the park's beauty and environmental health. The State of Colorado and other users, including farmers, have argued that large quantities of water stored in a federal reservoir upstream from the park should be made available to them.
The dispute between Washington and the states has been mostly off the public stage. But with most Western states searching to stake out new supplies, experts said, any loosening of federal claims could carry great significance.
"Virtually every drop of water in the Western rivers running through these federal lands is at stake," said David H. Getches, a professor of law at the University of Colorado who has been a Colorado state official responsible for water resources.
Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton repeatedly challenged federal claims when she was attorney general in Colorado. In her confirmation hearings last year, Ms. Norton signaled a more flexible position, saying, "The issue of reserved water rights for wilderness areas and for other important public lands is not an all-or-nothing issue."
The dispute over the park, the Black Canyon of the Gunnison, is before a water court in Colorado. The court ruled in 1978 that the federal government had the right to an unspecified quantity of Gunnison River water to protect what was a national monument.
Seeking to quantify that claim, the Clinton administration argued early last year that the federal rights extended to the full volume of water, including large seasonal surges, that a National Park Service study said was necessary to preserve the ecology and beauty of the park.
In outlining its position, the Bush administration on Sept. 30 took a major step from the Clinton position, signaling a willingness to reach a settlement that would give the federal government considerably less water.
Environmentalists reacted angrily.
"If they're not going to protect the river, then they're not protecting the park," said Melinda Kassen, who directs the Colorado Water Project for Trout Unlimited, a conservation group.
In defending the policy, the associate solicitor of the Interior Department, Robert D. Comer, said the administration was committed to giving the park the water it needs from the Gunnison River, a tributary of the Colorado River.
In a telephone interview, Mr. Comer said that based on a reassessment the total might fall short of what park officials identified last year as necessary. He also said that in contrast to the Clinton administration the Bush administration would claim a right significantly less than the park's needs. As part of any accord, he said, the government would seek to make up the difference by acquiring water from other sources, which could mean having to buy it from the state, in contests open to bidding by cities, farmers and other water users.
"If you look at all the available water sources," Mr. Comer said, "you have a way of satisfying the park's needs without being overreaching."
In a telephone interview, Rod Kuharich, executive director of the Colorado Water Conservation Board, said the state would welcome any new federal flexibility.
"There is undeveloped water in the Colorado Basin," Mr. Kuharich said. "And we don't want to see the federal government come in and lay claim to water that could be used for the benefit of people in the state of Colorado."
The administration's stance in the Colorado case is consistent with lower-profile decisions on water rights made since the administration entered office. In the most significant, the administration last year abandoned a claim to rights over Snake River water that surrounded a national wildlife refuge. Washington allowed a state court decision in Idaho to stand unchallenged.
At least five Western states have begun broad efforts to sort out competing water claims. Experts said those proceedings would invite the administration to declare its position in dozens of cases.
In general, the law gives the states rather than Washington the authority to allocate water rights. But when the federal government sets aside land for a particular purpose like a national monument or an Indian reservation, the law has been interpreted as giving the government the implicit right to reserve enough water for it.
In interviews recently, officials from the Justice and Interior Departments were guarded in characterizing the administration's position on water rights, citing the negotiations in the Colorado case.
Environmentalists were less reticent. Bruce Driver, executive director of the Land and Water Fund of the Rockies, an environmental group, said he would regard any scaling back of the water claims as a surrendering of authority.
"The West is being developed at a record pace right now," he said. "We have a drought in place, and what streams and waterways that still exist are being bled of all of their water. We're in a race within the environmental community to save what we have left. And there are plenty of other ways for Colorado to meet all its water needs without the federal government giving this right up."
In a letter sent on Sept. 30 to parties in the Colorado dispute by David W. Gehlert, an assistant United States attorney, the government outlined some terms of a proposed pact but did not specify the terms of any federal water claim.
Mr. Comer of the Interior Department was more explicit, saying in a telephone interview on Sept. 30 that the Bush administration was "re-examining" the Clinton administration claim.
"We probably don't agree with the basis," he said.
But he added: "The administration is dedicated to getting the amount of flow the park needs and to maintain it. What we want to do is to explore with the community and the affected interests the best way to provide water for the park.
"It sounds kind of hokey, but it's real," he said. "It means getting out there with the people who are affected, the users and preservationists, and finding the common ground, rather than have people in Washington, D.C., or judges in black robes decide the issue."
The extremist opinions of fringe environmentalists are wholly without merit and unfit for publication in a major newspaper.
Alternately, if eco-extremists are allowed to opine on the major policy issues of the day, then other opinions of equal merit must be included as well. Let's start with analysis from the Flat Earth Society and the International Center for UFO Abduction Research.
Thanks for the post and the ping!
I pray to God that he realizes that the enviro-frauds are not, and will never be his or our friends. I further pray that he will pass this wisdom on to his brother who has knowingly or unknowingly unleashed a scourge on my community in particular and in South Florida in general.
"If they're not going to protect the river, then they're not protecting the park," said Melinda Kassen, who directs the Colorado Water Project for Trout Unlimited, a conservation group."
Hey Grampa, I can't recall for sure, but wasn't this a group you used to support? Maybe not, but I know you got upset with Ducks Unlimited, didn't you?
"Kudos to Dubya."
Gotta give credit when credit is due.
But the "jobs lost" articles have picked-up in frequency in the past couple weeks.
While this relaxation of the federal shackles may help somewhat,
I am concerened that it may be too little, too late.
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