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ADWR Director Rejects AZ Water Transfer to
Nevada
A proposal that would have allowed a company to
pump water from rural northwestern Arizona to Nevada was rejected by the
director of Arizona Department of Water Resource. ADWR Director Herb Guenther’s
action was the latest move in an ongoing controversy that has raised the
issue whether Arizona law is effective at prohibiting the interstate transfer
of water. It is a situation with broad implications.
Guenther’s decision was in accord with the recommendation of an
administrative law judge who conducted a three-day hearing on the issue
in March.
The next move could be up to the applicant Wind River Resource whether
to seek a rehearing, file a new application or challenge the denial in
court.
The controversy is being played out in a remote, rugged and sparsely populated
corner of Arizona, in the far northwest part of the state, an area where
Arizona, Nevada and Utah lie in close proximity. Sides in the controversy
are drawn along the Arizona-Nevada border, with the Arizona Strip communities
of Beaver Dam, Littlefield and Scenic on one side. Population in that
area is estimated to be between 4,000 and 5,000, mostly retirees and ranchers.
On the other side of the dispute, ten miles away and across the stateline,
is the rapidly growing town of Mesquite, Nevada.
At issue is whether WRR, a Nevada-based Arizona limited liability company,
can export groundwater from Beaver Dam Wash in the Littlefield area across
the stateline to Mesquite, Nevada. The broader issue has to do with Arizona’s
ability to prevent other such incidents occurring, not only along its
border with Nevada, but also along borders shared with the neighboring
states of California, Utah and New Mexico.
Opposing the application are mostly residents in the Beaver Dam or Littlefield
areas, owners of the area’s businesses, houses and land. They fear
for their water supplies. Favoring the application are developers in Mesquite,
Nevada, and Scenic, Arizona
Whatever legal action Arizona takes must abide by a U.S. Supreme Court
ruling that held that groundwater is an article of interstate commerce
subject to congressional regulation. States, therefore, cannot regulate
it in a manner that interferes with the Commerce Clause. Passed seven
years after the Supreme Court decision, an Arizona law sets conditions
allowing water to be transported out of Arizona.
Arizona Revised Statutes § 45-292 states, “A person may withdraw,
or divert, and transport water from this state for a reasonable and beneficial
use in another state if approved by the director pursuant to this article.”
According to statute, the ADWR director decides whether to approve the
application after considering such matters as potential harm to the public
welfare of Arizona citizens; Arizona’s water supplies and its current
and future demands statewide and in particular the proposed source area;
and the availability of alternative sources of water in the other state.
On November 1, Thomas Shedden, the administrative judge who conducted
the three-day hearing, issued his recommendation that the Wind River application
be denied. He said the company was deficient in updating key aspects and
in submitting hydrological studies showing the pumping’s likely
impact on the Mormon Wells area. He also said the company provided inaccurate
information.
Shedden said that as a result ADWR lacked sufficient information to determine
whether Wind River had in fact complied with Arizona’s law determining
whether exported water would be used for a “reasonable and beneficial”
use in another state. Further, Shedden dismissed as premature Wind River’s
argument that the Arizona law requiring the state to grant permission
to export water is unconstitutional.
Shedden submitted his recommendation to Guenther who then decided whether
or not to approve the application. He essentially accepted the recommendation
with few changes.
In response to the situation Republican Rep. Trish Groe of Lake Havasu
City proposed earlier this year legislation making it more difficult to
transfer water outside of Arizona. The bill did not pass.
WRRC Has Role in Newly Funded Transboundary Aquifer
Assessment
The passage of the FY 08 omnibus appropriations
bill will enable the University of Arizona’s Water Resources Research
Center, along with the water institutes in New Mexico and Texas, to begin
work on the new United States-Mexico Transboundary Aquifer Assessment
Program. The bill includes $500,000 in the U. S. Geological Survey budget
for start-up funding for the program. Authorized in Public Law 109-448
at the end of 2006, the transboundary program directs the USGS and the
designated state water institute programs to develop and carry out a systematic
assessment of priority transboundary aquifers, in collaboration with Mexican
partners.
The program is authorized for a total of 10 years and $50 million. Arizona’s
priority transboundary aquifers are the Santa Cruz River Valley and the
San Pedro aquifers; both underlie Arizona and Sonora, Mexico. To ensure
effective use of the federal dollars, the WRRC is coordinating bi-national
discussions to plan an integrated scientific approach to assess the priority
aquifers.

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