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Water Management Issues Surface as Virgin River Wends
its Way to the Colorado
Wheeling emerges as prominent issue
In Arizona, the Virgin River is not a high profile, big issue river like
the Colorado, Salt, Verde, and San Pedro rivers. With headwaters in Utah,
the Virgin River meanders across the thinly populated northwest corner
of Arizona, before flowing into Nevada and eventually into Lake Mead.
Arizonas noncelebrity rivers deserve attention. These rivers are
parts of the whole. To know them is to better understand the big picture,
that the states river systems consist of diverse flows and interconnections,
and that rivers, regardless of size, can raise issues of broad, statewide
significance. This is certainly true along the Virgin River.
In its perennial quest for additional water supplies, Nevada is raising
an issue about the management of the Virgin River and ultimately the Colorado
River. The state wants to wheel its supply of Virgin River water through
Lake Mead for delivery to Las Vegas. However the issue eventually plays
out will not affect the Virgin River flow within Arizona. That is not
at issue. Yet Nevadas actions could affect Arizonas Colorado
River supply and its management of instate Colorado River tributaries.
Another management issue likely to surface along the Virgin River is out-of-state
water transfers. Developments occurring in the area raise expectations
that an application will be filed to pipe water from Arizona to Nevada.
Not yet having addressed an out-of-state water transfer request, the Arizona
Department of Water Resources would be addressing an issue with broad
water management significance.
Using Virgin River water
Arizonas stake in the water resources of the Virgin River is not
high, compared to its neighboring states of Nevada and Utah. The Virgin
River flows through a relatively isolated area of Arizona, with no large,
rapidly growing instate population center thirsting for its waters. Littlefield,
population about 1,600, is the only Arizona settlement of any size along
the river. The US Bureau of Land Management has several instream flow
applications for wild and scenic river status in the area. Also, water
right applications for Virgin River water have been filed for some stock
watering and municipal uses.
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| The Virgin River |
The situation is much different in Utah and Nevada. Both Utah to the
north of Arizona and Nevada to its west have rapidly growing population
centers that look to the Virgin River as an important water supply.
Utah has nearly fully developed its water supplies of the Virgin River
and its tributaries. Some Virgin River water rights remain undeveloped,
however, including about 50,000 to 100,000 acre-feet. This amount is earmarked
for the St. George and southeast Utah area to support its long-term growth.
If diversion structures and storage facilities are able to be developed,
this last portion of the Virgin River in Utah will be diverted and used.
Downriver from Arizona, the Southern Nevada Water Authority holds surface
water rights for 113,000 acre-feet on the Virgin River, an amount granted
by state permit based on studies of the rivers capacity. Its strategies
to obtain the water includes a proposal that, if implemented, could bode
major changes in the management of the Lower Colorado River.
Wheeling the waters
In its effort to develop its Virgin River resources, Nevada confronts
a paradox that has plagued many efforts to develop the West: a water source
distant from its intended point of use. The strategy resorted to in such
situations is to pump the water directly from the source, in this case
the Virgin River, and pipe it overland to its intended use which would
be Las Vegas. SNWA is in fact considering such a strategy.
This would be a formidable undertaking. Cost of such a project, considered
to the areas most massive public works project since Hoover Dam,
is estimated to be about one billion dollars. This is an option SNWA would
prefer not to pursue, especially since a less expensive proposal would
seem to be at hand, if only troublesome legal complexities could be resolved.
The utilitys preferred solution, one that would save it from having
to build a costly pipeline, is to leave the water in the Virgin River
to flow into Lake Mead. Most of Nevadas 300,000 acre-feet of Colorado
River water is pumped from this reservoir. According to this scenario
Virgin River water would enter Lake Mead, to be retrieved downstream of
the reservoir through the Las Vegas water intakes, with Virgin River water
in and Virgin River water out. Whatever is needed to deliver the water
to Las Vegas would already be in place: the natural course of the river,
storage in Lake Mead and delivery via the citys intakes.
This is called wheeling, with Virgin River water wheeled through
Lake Mead for delivery to Las Vegas. Seemingly straight forward and logical,
the plan raises troublesome issues and runs aground on formidable legal
complexities.
Wheeling is controversial
ADWR Colorado River Section Manager Tom Carr explains some of the complications.
He says wheeling would provide Nevada an unfair advantage to waters of
the Colorado River. This is because Nevada would not have to build the
storage and pumping facilities needed if water were directly pumped from
the Virgin River. Under typical appropriative water rights laws, including
Nevadas, a water right is not approved until water is physically
diverted and put to use. Allowing water from the Virgin River to flow
to Lake Mead is not actually an appropriation of Virgin River water. Wheeling
in effect enables a state to claim water flowing into the Colorado River
as a separate state water right distinct from all other water in the Colorado
River. But Colorado River water is apportioned by the Secretary of the
Interior and the Boulder Canyon Project Act, and there is no provision
for recognizing state appropriative rights to tributary inflows under
the Law of the River.
Carr says, Wheeling would make it much easier for someone to put
together nothing more than a paper water right for Colorado River water.
... What would happen is that someone would be given the benefit of a
Colorado River water supply that other folks are now using without requiring
them to make any sort of financial or physical commitment to divert that
water within the state of origin.
Other problems also arise. According to a 1964 U.S. Supreme Court decree
states can develop their Colorado River tributaries for use within the
state. Arizona, for example, pumps water from the Little Colorado and
the Bill Williams rivers. Whatever water is removed from the tributaries
does not count against a states Colorado River allocation.
Once the tributaries flow reaches the mainstem of the Colorado River,
however, its legal status changes. In mingling with the waters of the
Colorado River the tributary flow becomes interstate water controlled
by the U.S., subject to the 1922 Colorado River Compact and subsequent
acts and agreements dividing the rivers resources. In other words,
the Law of the River rules rather than state law, with the water now available
for diversion by the Lower Basin States and for meeting the water obligation
to Mexico.
Carr says that allowing SNWA wheeling rights, sets a precedent for
other folks to do the same thing ... to use wheeling to develop rights
to tributary waters to the Colorado River of the lower basin. What is
good for Las Vegas then is good for anybody, on the Little Colorado, the
Paria or the Bill Williams. Water supplies that would be reaching the
river for apportionment under the compact could be more readily claimed
as part of the deliveries within the states.
This ultimately could affect Arizonas Colorado River supplies. Herb
Dishlip, former ADWR assistant director for planning, says, The
Lower Basin States are obliged to provide half the Colorado River water
owed by treaty to Mexico. The water to meet the Mexican obligation comes
from inflow below Lake Powell. If we start using all that inflow, the
only way we are going to be able to make up our half of the obligation
to Mexico is to take it out of our share. And that causes shortages, and
that means shortages to CAP.
Changing the Law of the River to accommodate Nevadas water needs
would be a controversial undertaking, at least outside the state of Nevada.
Even within the state, the success of the proposal is doubted, if a recent
Las Vegas Review-Journal editorial is any indication. The editorial espoused
the wheeling cause, at the same time sarcastically shrugging off what
it considered to be its inevitable result. The editorial headline read,
Wheeling the water, with a subhead stating, It makes
good sense, so it will never happen, of course.
Arizona and California, the other lower basin states, are decidedly against
Colorado River wheeling, even though Arizona could stand to gain if wheeling
were an allowable option. To allow wheeling, however, the Colorado River
Compact would have to be changed or modified. States using Colorado River
water generally fear this would be done at high cost, that the compact
as written ensures that river waters are appropriately allocated among
various interests. In the rough and tumble of water politics, the compacts
inflexibility is viewed as a virtue, ensuring that exceptions do not undermine
its main purpose.
Arizona stands to gain
With no Colorado River tributaries California has little to gain from
wheeling and much to lose if Colorado River flow is diminished or reduced.
Arizona on the other hand does have Colorado River tributaries. What water
Arizona currently pumps from its tributaries is mainly for use close to
the point of diversion, with little transport required. There is, however,
a situation in Arizona in which a city could benefit from wheeling a water
supply through the Colorado River.
Scottsdale owns Planet Ranch and its 14,000 acre-feet of Bill Williams
River water. With the ranch located nearly 200 miles from the City of
Scottsdale, the water would need to be transported a great distance from
its point of diversion to point of use. The city has identified several
alternatives for transporting the water. One option is to build a 172-mile
pipeline from the ranch to Scottsdale at a cost of about $175 million,
not counting the cost of acquiring rights of way and operation and maintenance
expenses. Another option is to build a 16-mile overland pipeline to discharge
Bill Williams river water directly into the CAP canal for delivery to
Scottsdale. This would be at a cost of about $22 million, not counting
charges for using the canal.
A more direct and certainly a less expensive plan of action would be to
leave Planet Ranch water in the Bill Williams River to flow directly into
the Colorado River. The Bill Williams empties into the river just above
the CAP intake. Scottsdales Bill Williams River allocation could
then be pumped from the river into the canal for delivery to the city.
Such a plan also would pay an environmental dividend, with Bill Williams
River water benefitting a wildlife refuge downstream from what would be
the point of diversion if a pipeline were built.
Such a plan seemingly offers efficiency and cost savings yet it is not
a realistic option. State officials consider that whatever advantages
Scottsdale may gain from the plan are more than offset by the legal problems
likely to arise if the Law of the River were modified to allow wheeling.
Scottsdale officials readily admit that wheeling is not an option. Beth
Miller, the citys water resource advisor, says, We want to
work within the Law of the River. ... It would obviously be less expensive
for us if we were able to discharge to the river, but we understand and
agree with the states concerns.
Out-of-state water transfers
The northwest corner of Arizona is a land of few people and little water
demand. In the area, across the state border, the town of Mesquite, Nevada
is growing in leaps and bounds. The scene is set for a possible role for
out-of-state water transfers.
Taking unlawful advantage of such transfers may already be the stuff,
if not of legend then certainly of rumor. Mike Pearce, former ADWR chief
legal council, says, I have heard allegations many times during
the years that water was actually crossing state lines up there, but it
was never documented or proven to my satisfaction.
The first legal request came in 1990 when the Mesquite Farmstead Water
Association submitted an application to ADWR to pipe Arizona water over
the state line for use in Nevada. High quality aquifers, both alluvial
and deep, are located along Beaver Dam Wash, a tributary of the Virgin
River. The Mesquite utility hoped that for the cost of a relatively short
pipeline it could gain access to good quality groundwater.
The request attracted opposition. Bruce Babbitt who represented an interest
in the area went so far as to propose that the Beaver Dam Wash area become
an active management area to restrict groundwater pumping. The vigorous
opposition from residents in the Littlefield area, however, carried the
day, and the application was never acted upon.
Arizona officials anticipate the issue to arise again, with either the
Virgin Valley Water District in Mesquite requesting water transfers from
Arizona or an entity within Arizona applying to sell water to the Nevada
utility. Either way ADWR would have to address the issue of out-of-state
water transfers. The agency has not yet approved any out-of-state water
transfer applications, and any actions now taken could set a legal precedent
in other areas of the state and possibly along the Mexican border.
Carr says the application to transfer water would need to meet a variety
of different tests. Factors ADWR would consider include the availability
of water in other states to meet the need; the adequacy of Arizonas
water supply to meet the need; and the potential of conflict with existing
and future Arizona water right holders. Also, a hearing would have to
be held in the area of origin.
Carr says, There is quite a burden on the ADWR to take a very hard
look at any transfer request.
Would a transfer at this point of time stand a better chance than the
1990 application? Carr says, I really cant say. It all depends
on the circumstances.
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