Although portions of this report are used on occasion in Colorado Central Magazine, we do not publish the full report there, as we do on this website. It is prepared by Steve Glazer of Crested Butte and is distributed early each month via an email list. To subscribe to that list, email to <listserv@lists.sierraclub.org> with SUBSCRIBE RMC-CONS-WATER as the message.
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The Interior Department's decision not to appeal a federal court ruling that overturned a 2003 deal that governed the amount of water flowing through Black Canyon National Park means work can now begin on finding how much water the river needs through the canyon to sustain wildlife and other uses. Denver Rocky Mountain News (AP); Jan. 4 article
Trout Unlimited is asking the Colorado Water Quality Control Commission to quickly institute new water temperature regulations for the state's trout streams and lakes to protect aquatic species. Aspen Times; Jan. 5 article
Two new regulations -- one temporary and one permanent -- that aim to keep Colorado streams cool enough to harbor healthy fish populations were approved by the Colorado Water Quality Control Commission after officials worked on new plans for a couple of years. Denver Post; 1/10 article
The Colorado Water Conservation Board said it supports a plan to work with local basin roundtables while studying a proposal to send water from the Western Slope to the Front Range. Grand Junction Sentinel; Jan. 25 article
A coalition of conservation groups sponsored by a local utility will create the first comprehensive watershed plan for the Roaring Fork Valley, starting off by looking at the watershed's current condition. Aspen Times; Jan. 10 article
Aurora gets most of its drinking water from snow runoff, but has a plan to build a $754 million project to recycle water from below the Denver Metro Wastewater Reclamation District's plant on the South Platte River, increasing the Colorado city's water supply by 20 percent. The river water will be sent through sand and charcoal filters, treated with chemicals and zapped with ultraviolet light. Denver Post; Jan. 23 article
Snowpack averages near Colorado Springs are well above average for this time of year, but there are still a few months of winter left, and without the normal snow of late winter, the region could still end up with shortages. Colorado Springs Gazette; Jan. 26 article
Water managers and city officials in Colorado are showing concern following scientific studies that show global warming could reduce the amount of water available from spring runoff in the state, and they are looking for other ways to secure needed water. Vail Daily News; Jan. 23
In April of last year, ranchers in Wyoming were cautiously optimistic that deep snowpack and healthy water levels in reservoirs meant the drought that began in 2001 was over, but 2006 was more of the same, and with some reservoirs more than 75 percent empty, they're hoping things will change in 2007. Casper Star-Tribune; Jan. 5 article
The Bridger- Teton National Forest is taking public comment on a proposed five- year study to be conducted by the National Center for Atmospheric Research to seed clouds in that Wyoming national forest to boost snowfall, an experiment conservation groups oppose because they said it could affect plant and animal ecosystems and pull moisture away from other locations. Jackson Hole News & Guide; Jan. 4 article
Montana filed a lawsuit in the U.S. Supreme Court against Wyoming, alleging that Wyoming's overuse of water in the Tongue and Powder rivers has left Montana high and dry. Billings Gazette; Feb. 2 article
Richard Armijo, a snow surveyor for the Natural Resources Conservation Service, said early snowpack in New Mexico's Sangre de Cristo Mountains from Santa Fe to Taos to Las Vegas, N.M., means more water in reservoirs this summer. Santa Fe New Mexican; Jan. 5 article
New Mexico's state engineer said three decades of explosive population growth, along with a recent drought, made state officials realize that they were way behind in putting processes in place to manage the state's water resources. Santa Fe New Mexican; Jan. 8 article
In the Middle Rio Grande region of New Mexico water planning is taking on a significant character that is open and inclusive. The Interstate Stream Commission approved the 50-year plan =85 by the Middle Rio Grande Water Assembly. OpEdNews, 1/5 article
Thousands of homes and businesses are now under permanent water restrictions and a new water rate plan. Water Technology Online, 1/2 article
Santa Fe and other local communities in New Mexico are installing water-saving devices and programs to help ease water supply issues, and they are hoping the state Legislature will provide some funding for them. Santa Fe New Mexican; 1/14 article
Over the past four years, Santa Fe County has been buying or drilling wells to supplement its water supply, and now the county is asking the New Mexico State Engineer's office to transfer water rights to 19 existing and proposed wells to augment county water supplies, but private well owners are opposing the plan. Santa Fe New Mexican; Jan. 24 article
A small mountain village in southern New Mexico is building a $3 million water reuse project that will treat wastewater to bottled water quality, the first such project in the state. Albuquerque Journal; Jan. 7 article
Many tribes in New Mexico have the oldest water rights in the state, but no guarantee of exactly how much water they are entitled to, and three of the largest tribal water rights cases in New Mexico have been dragging on for years, and state lawmakers are reviewing a plan by Gov. Bill Richardson to set aside $12 million as a down payment for those settlements. Santa Fe New Mexican; Jan. 16 article
Cynthia G. Abeyta worked for the United States Geological Survey for 22 years testing groundwater along the Rio Grande in New Mexico and now works for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service coordinating management of the Middle Rio Grande, acting as a scientist, diplomat and project coordinator. A profile. Santa Fe New Mexican; Jan. 29 article
El Nino years normally bring in extra moisture to the mountains of Utah, but this year's weather patterns have left all of Utah's six major river basins with much less snow than normal, which is hurting ski area business as well as water prospects for the warmer months. Salt Lake Tribune; Jan. 25 article
The Utah Senate Natural Resources committee approved a measure that would allow private entities to purchase water rights to protect in-stream flows for fish, and allows private water rights holders to lease the water to groups such as Trout Unlimited for the same reason. Deseret News; Jan. 25 article
Mike Styler, the executive director of the Utah Department of Natural Resources said talks with Nevada about Southern Nevada Water Authority's plan to pump groundwater from an area on the Utah-Nevada border were once again under way, and Styler said he was optimistic the states would come to some sort of an agreement that would protect Utah's water rights. Reno Gazette-Journal (AP); Jan. 10 article
Utah Rep. Richard Wheeler, R-Ephraim, conceded that his resolution to urge Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. to wait until scientific studies on water supplies on the Utah-Nevada border are done before signing off on any water agreement with Nevada passed by the House Natural Resources, Agriculture and Environment Committee doesn't have the rule of law. Salt Lake Tribune; Jan. 18 article
The Arizona Office of Administrative Hearings anticipates hundreds of people will attend a series of public hearings on a proposed water transfer from northwest Arizona for development in Mesquite, Nev. Las Vegas Review- Journal; Jan. 23 article
Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons has asked the Desert Research Institute to provide estimates of the value of water rights that underlie the state's roads so the state can sell those water rights to fund transportation projects. Las Vegas Review-Journal; Jan. 11 article article
The Colorado Water Conservation Board recommended the state sign off on a new Colorado River management plan that would rely on Lake Powell water during times of drought instead of curbing use, but that plan also requires downstream states to better live within their means. Grand Junction Sentinel; Jan. 25 article
The seven states that share Colorado River water crafted an agreement that lays out new rules on how the river's water should be managed during long dry spells, an agreement that the Southern Nevada Water Authority approved on Thursday, and now the matter is under review by the U.S. Department of Interior. Las Vegas Review-Journal; Jan. 19 article
If a drought causes a water shortage for states along the lower Colorado Rover, Nevada has agreed to join Arizona in giving up some of its allotted share, and would also pay Arizona $8 million to help secure other water sources, all of which is part of a larger Colorado River multi-state deal. Arizona Republic; Jan. 24 article
Arizona's snowpack is at 38 percent, which is still better that this time last year, and the snow that hit Colorado last week mostly fell on the eastern side of the mountains, not in the headwaters of the Colorado River, all of which continues to concern authorities in the Southwest. Arizona Republic; Jan. 5 article
The Statewide Water Advisory Group is sending proposals to the Legislature that seek to create a loan fund for rural water improvements and allow local governments to deny subdivisions without adequate water supplies. Prescott Daily Courier, 1/14 article
A $250 million desalting plant west of Yuma that has sat idle since shortly after it was completed in the early 1990s is set to restart for a test run by June. AP, 1/8 article
Live quagga mussels were found in Lake Mead and two down-river reservoirs, Lake Mohave and Lake Havasu, all in the space of two weeks. article article
Divers discovered mussels clinging to the mouth of the Colorado River Aqueduct near Lake Havasu and at the system's pumping plant a mile into California but it was not known if they are the same aggressive species that has decimated the Great Lakes. State officials were awaiting visual confirmation by a federal wildlife expert to see if they are quagga mussels, which could devastate Southern California's water supplies and its lakes and rivers. Riverside Press-Enterprise 1/18 article article
An expert on Lake Mead's ecology told a panel of state, local and federal water officials that, based on the devastation caused by zebra and quagga mussels caused in the Great Lakes, Arizona, Nevada and California have about a year to prepare for a full-on invasion of the mussels, which clog water pumps and can cause dire effects on lake ecology. Las Vegas Review-Journal; Jan. 24 article
The Truckee-Carson Irrigation District will forgo diversions from the Truckee River in January in an effort to repay a water debt owed to the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe. Reno Gazette-Journal, 1/4 article
Under a new measure signed into law by President Bush, the U.S. Geological Survey will work with local governments on both sides of the U.S.- Mexico border to conduct an extensive assessment of groundwater supplies. Albuquerque Journal (AP); Jan. 9 article
Northern Plains Resource Council and Tongue River Water Users' Association members said before the state of Montana can issue a beneficial-use permit for water discharged during coalbed methane operations, the state must first determine who holds senior rights to that water. Billings Gazette; Jan. 18 article
Montana Sen. Max Baucus said he'll introduce legislation that sets minimum flows on the Bighorn River, a popular fishing river which flows from Wyoming to Montana, and that calls for the river system to be managed as one unit, requiring Wyoming be more creative in how it manages its portion. Billings Gazette; Jan. 15 article
U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., earned the support of his two Montana colleagues on a bill he introduced to require a minimum flow of water in the Big Horn River to protect trout fishing, but Wyoming's delegation said the bill would adversely affect reservoir levels in Wyoming and said they would work to revise the legislation. Casper Star-Tribune; Jan. 17 article
Cline Mining Corp. wants to mine coal from the headwaters of the Flathead River in Canada, and the company, as part of its environmental assessment, is seeking public comment from Montanans, and Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer and U.S. Sen. Max Baucus will attend the first of two public meetings. Missoulian; Jan. 15 article article
Sen. Lane Larson, D-Billings, told Montana lawmakers that Senate Bill 78 would address stream access issues as they apply to bridges, but the bill faces an uncertain future. NewWest.net; Jan. 19 article
The full Wyoming Senate has approved a bill that would allow temporary donations of water to keep water in streams for fish, and the House Agriculture Committee will take up a much broader version of a water rights bill that would allow temporary reassignment of a water right for a broad range of uses. Casper Star-Tribune; Feb. 1 article
Two years ago, the Montana Legislature decided to rev up the process to determine who owns what water rights in the state by imposing a modest fee to help fund adjudication proceedings, a fee that many Montanans and lawmakers apparently loathed, and are now seeking to repeal and refund, but no matter what the outcome of that fight, the work to determine water rights must continue. Missoulian; Jan. 23 article
Several Montana lawmakers are backing a bill to require that all groundwater users, even those whose wells pump 35 gallons-per-minute or less, have a permit from the state, which backers say is long overdue and will keep the issue out of court, but Realtor groups say the law would increase home prices and officials of one state agency says it would increase bureaucracy and paperwork. NewWest.net; Jan. 30 article
The Central Montana Water Authority has asked the Montana Legislature for $300,000 in the hope of capturing $400,000 in matching federal funds to help build a 225-mile-long pipeline to ship water to several small communities. Billings Gazette; Jan. 19 article
Idaho Gov. Butch Otter said that he'd rather look at ways of securing more water instead of ways to divide a scarce supply, and told the Idaho Water Users Association he's consider more and bigger dams and ways of recharging the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer. Idaho Statesman; Jan. 25 article
The Nez Perce Tribe in northern Idaho said it would begin increasing the number of steelhead it harvests from various reaches of the Snake River using gill nets because the number of fish moving in the river has increased. Idaho Statesman (AP); Jan. 14 article
Members of the Southwest Irrigation District told Cassia County commissioners that dairies in the Idaho county are threatening groundwater supplies near Burley Butte and in Raft River, and urged the commissioners to put a moratorium on any new dairies. Twin Falls Times-News; 1/4 article
University of Idaho Professor Rick Allen uses satellite images to track how much water is being used by Magic Valley irrigators each season, and he'll use that expertise to help NASA build its next image satellite. Twin Falls Times-News; Jan. 16 article
Gill nets kill all fish caught in them, but a Nez Perce wildlife official said the single gill net permit issued by the Idaho tribe should not pose a threat to the endangered wild Snake River steelhead. Idaho Statesman (AP); Jan. 19 article
The damming of Washington state's Lower Snake River has led to a rather odd juxtaposition: as wheat floats by on barges, a dwindling population of salmon hits the road in trucks. Fishers, fearing they'll become endangered, are lobbying for the dams' removal; farmers, equally concerned about livelihood, are fighting to maintain their shipping routes. To spur dialogue, author David James Duncan and green group Save Our Wild Salmon have created a photographic juxtaposition of their own: a crew of fisherfolk, casting their lines into amber waves of grain. article
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit struck down an attempt by Idaho Sen. Larry Craig to cut funding for the Portland-based Fish Passage Center, which has documented how the Snake River dams have helped push salmon to the brink of extinction in what Craig calls a biased manner. Washington Post; Jan. 25 article
Before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission will renew PacifiCorp's license to operate four hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River, the utility must build new fish ladders and provide other accommodations to ensure salmon can swim freely past those dams. Washington Post; Jan. 31 article
As the harried development around San Antonio continues, growth issues are becoming increasingly complex and difficult to resolve =85 This is especially true with a legislative proposal to raise pumping limits on the Edwards Aquifer a whopping 22%, from 450,000 acre-feet to 549,000 acre-feet. San Antonio Express, 1/4 article
Searching for water to provide for an exploding population base, the Tarrant Regional Water District wants to pump hundreds of millions of gallons of water out of Oklahoma creeks and streams into North Texas. Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 1/9 article
It may be remembered as the first shots fired in the state's water wars. Last week the Texas Water Development Board and the city of Dallas sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service =85 The Tarrant Regional Water District also filed suit against two water agencies in Oklahoma, contending a moratorium blocking out-of-state water sales violates interstate commerce laws. Fort Worth Star Telegram, 1/14 article
President George Bush signed a bill authored by U.S. Senator Pete Domenici, R-N.M., into law that will help rural communities obtain reliable water service, according to a press release from Washington. Alamogordo Daily News, 1/4
Understanding how water behaves in a semi-arid environment could lead to better water retention management for very dry conditions, a U.S. scientist says. ScienceDaily, 1/3 article
All 16 counties in the Southwest Florida Water Management District are experiencing a 'severely abnormal' drought, according to a district report. Charlotte Sun Herald, 1/10 article
In a new USGS publication, 'Streamflow of 2006 =85' changes in streamflow over the course of 2006 are examined relative to conditions over the past 75 years. USGS, 1/12 article
A University of Alberta study found 5,062 boreal chorus frogs, wood frogs and western toads at 54 beaver ponds over a two-year period in the boreal forests of west-central Alberta, while no frogs or toads were found along streams with no beaver dams. Edmonton Journal; Jan. 11 article
Australian Prime Minister John Howard announced plans to spend more than A$10 billion ($7 billion-US) to restore the nation's ailing rivers, making dwindling water supplies his priority in an election year. article
An Australian state plans to introduce recycled sewage to its drinking water as a record drought threatens water supplies around the nation. article
Britain is on a major flood alert after the Met Office issued a severe weather warning for the entire country. But the constant wet weather could bring one ray of hope -- an end at last to water restrictions caused by one of the worst droughts in 100 years. UK Express, 1/11 article
Israel controls water resources in the occupied West Bank and the Gaza Strip, and seeks to take over water reserves in the Golan Heights and southern Lebanon, according to an Arab League report. Aljazeera.com, 1/1 article
Households will be charged more for wasting water under a presidential decree that is being prepared by the government =85 The EU contends that more than 18,000 people in various parts of Greece are being forced to drink water that is contaminated. Kathimerini, 1/4 article
In a study conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency and Oregon State University, researchers who sampled more than 2,700 fish in 12 Western states found traces of mercury in every fish sampled, the highest in fish that eat other fish, and though not all fish had dangerous levels, the scientists still cautioned consumers. The Oregonian; Jan. 24 article
The club's lawsuit and a similar one by Thiebaut allege Colorado Springs has violated the federal Clean Water Act by repeatedly discharging raw sewage, excessive chlorine and nonpotable water into the creek for years. Pueblo Chieftain, 1/11 article
Wyoming coal-bed methane industry officials said that if the state Legislature and Gov. Dave Freudenthal approved proposed new rules regarding water discarded from drilling operations, the whole industry could collapse, but those who back the bill's goals say that won't happen. Casper Star-Tribune; Jan. 28 article
The Utah Department of Transportation wants to build a highway connecting I-80 with I-15 near the Salt Lake Airport and northwest Utah County, but the Sierra Club and other conservation groups say the plan would place the road through the northeastern portion of Utah Lake's wetlands. Deseret News; Jan. 11 article
Another report from the Montana Department of Environmental Quality says that even with cleaner sewer systems installed, growth could be limited along a 39-mile stretch of the Gallatin River between Bozeman and Yellowstone National Park if it is designated an Outstanding Resource Water. Billings Gazette (AP); Jan. 11 article
American Wildlands members said the group would end its quest to have a 38- mile stretch of the Gallatin River in Montana designated an Outstanding Resource Water, and would instead work with developers to find a way to protect the waters and allow development, too. Billings Gazette (AP); Jan. 24 article
Two scientists released a report last week stating that selenium leaching out of waste rock from phosphate mines in Southeast Idaho are threatening two of the West's largest remaining populations of Yellowstone cutthroat trout. Idaho Statesman (AP); Jan. 14 article
As more development occurs in Idaho and watersheds are fragmented, the increase of a class of chemicals called endocrine disruptor compounds are beginning to show reproductive reversals, and researchers and scientists say the public health issue of this increasing contamination could be especially significant in Idaho, where 95 percent of the population drink groundwater. Boise Weekly; Jan. 18 article
Scientists looking for fish tainted by mercury found them in every fish and every river they sampled across the West, suggesting that industrial pollution generated around the world is likely responsible for at least some of it. article
The National Center for Conservation Science & Policy has joined five other environmental groups in filing a lawsuit against the Environmental Protection Agency over a change in the Clean Water Act. Medford Mail- Tribune, 1/1 article
The USGS has been examining the relative toxicity to aquatic life from a variety of formulations used to remove or prevent dangerous ice buildup on aircraft. WaterWorld, 1/10 article
A detailed inspection of the "Comparison of Predicted and Actual Water Quality at Hardrock Mines" report released last month showed an interesting correlation between well-managed mining companies and the companies' ability to accurately assess their mines' impact on water quality. A perspective. NewWest.net; Jan. 4 article
The Brazilian cities of Mirai and Muriae south-west of Rio de Janeiro were buried in sludge as deep as a meter after a mine dam broke pouring out around 2 million litres of mud and water containing bauxite and aluminium sulphate remnants. Playfuls.com, 1/11 article
Dams, pollution and over-fishing have wiped out a third of the fish species in the Yellow river -- China's second longest waterway. Guardian Unlimited, 1/17 article
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