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Collaborative Water Management Faces Tough Demands,
Scrutiny
Kirk Emerson, Director, U.S. Institute for Environmental
Conflict Resolution of the Morris K. Udall Foundation contributed this
Guest View
Over the past ten years, collaborative resource
management has spread like Buffelgrass throughout the Western United States.
Integrating stakeholder input and representation into natural resource
planning and management activities is becoming more and more common, particularly
for watershed and water resource issues.
Nowhere is this more apparent than in Arizona, where efforts to engage
public and private interests in water-related partnerships, consortia,
and advisory groups abound. (See text box) Collaborative water resource
management will become even more important as we face the uncertain but
increasingly evident challenges that climate change will bring. The current
12-year drought is a likely harbinger of tougher times ahead, making water
policy and planning decisions all the more difficult and the need for
adaptive management and public engagement even greater. Compounding these
challenges, of course, will be the future requirements of the growing
Arizona population that is expected to double by 2050.
Notable collaborative water resource activities in Arizona
• Glen Canyon Adaptive Management Work Group chartered
in 1997 by the U.S. Department of Interior to engage stakeholders
in advising on dam operations and downstream resource issues
• Lower Colorado River Multi-Species Conservation Program,
one of the largest and longest running river system habitat restoration
efforts with stakeholder engagement
• Sonoita Valley Planning Partnership focused on watershed-wide
planning, leading to the creation of Las Cienegas National Recreation
Area
• Upper San Pedro Partnership composed of 21 local,
state and federal agencies and organizations working together to assure
perennial river flows and long term groundwater supply
• Upper Verde River Adaptive Management Partnership
between the Prescott National Forest, permittees, community members
and researchers to address complex resource management issues along
the Upper Verde
• West Branch Restoration Project on the Santa Cruz
River near Tucson, led by landowners, the Arizona Open Land Trust
and others to improve riparian habitat. |
These increasingly stressful environmental and demographic conditions
will demand much more of collaborative water management in the future
than has been expected or delivered thus far. Increasing competition for
scarcer water resources will require tougher public choices, more timely
decision making, and more effective conflict management. Collaborative
processes will need to be more effectively institutionalized; stronger
legal and financial incentives put in place to engage public and private
interests in productive deliberations. Collaborative processes will require
the ongoing commitment of public and private leadership to turn stakeholder
dialogue into effective collaborative governance.
As our current experiences with collaborative resource management unfold,
researchers, managers, and decision makers are beginning to take a harder
look at collaboration and ask some important basic questions:
Is collaboration a good thing? The challenges we face in managing water
resources in Arizona and throughout the arid Southwest present strong
rationales for working together across divided watersheds, interests,
and jurisdictions. “Co-laboring” can lead to leveraging combined
financial, political and institutional resources to assure adequate water
supplies and distribution. All the sectoral interests in water do need
to be treated in an equitable and practical manner for the well-being
of our communities and our economies. And we need to assure the lifeblood
of our natural systems and wildlife habitats is secured in restored riparian
systems and adequate instream flows. Hence, collaboration, it would seem,
in any form, would enhance our water resource management practices.
Most people would consider collaboration, like motherhood and apple pie,
to have a positive value, on its face. To argue against engaging stakeholders
in public deliberations over our future water resources seems rather old-fashioned
today. Yet it is still legitimate to question the extent to which corporate
and non-governmental interests should influence public decision making
about water resources. It is still important to articulate the normative
value and limits of collaboration.
In part, this question raises the definitional problem. Some stretch the
term “collaboration” to describe a myriad of joint efforts,
to the point of having very little meaning at all. While others see it
laden with code for local control or decentralized federal authority.
Some suggest we may have conflated adaptive management with collaborative,
consensus decision making. With such instability in our terminology, it
is often not clear what to expect from collaborative resource management.
If indeed collaboration is generally a good thing, it may not always be
the right thing at the right time. Determining when to engage public and
private interests in what kind and degree of joint effort is critical.
The more practical questions become: what should the role of other governmental
and non-governmental stakeholders be in this collaborative effort and
how can we maximize the value of their engagement and reach the best informed
and practical management decisions?
Is collaboration working? This is an essential question and its answer
will guide future investment in collaborative resource management. There
are conceptual and methodological challenges that make answering this
important question difficult. But researchers are making headway and a
number of empirical studies are contributing to our understanding of how
collaborative management processes work. There is growing agreement on
multiple measures of successful collaborative outcomes, such as better,
more informed decisions and improved working relationships among parties.
How to measure collaboration itself — its essential attributes and
whether they were present and to what degree — remains very challenging
given the large variation in processes and contexts. This is important
because we need to measure both performance outcomes and those factors
that contribute to performance in order to make process improvements.
At the applied level, it can be most useful for public managers and the
engaged parties to set forth their expectations and measures of success
at the outset. Reaching agreement on the objectives of the collaborative
effort can not only make subsequent evaluations easier and more relevant,
but will focus the group on more effective deliberations in accordance
with shared expectations.
Is collaboration enough? Collaborative processes are sometimes viewed
as sufficient unto themselves: bring people together and they will be
able to work out their differences and reach win-win consensus agreements.
Our evaluation research at the U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict
Resolution suggests otherwise. There are important factors that indeed
influence outcomes when people are seeking agreement or resolution of
a dispute. Among these factors are having all the right parties at the
table and drawing on the skills of a trusted third-party.
But much more is at work in assuring successful collaborative resource
management. These are not isolated processes, producing self-implementing
solutions. None of this happens outside of existing legal, regulatory,
and political contexts. No existing authorities can be usurped or compromised.
Without regard for or integration with covering procedures or jurisdictions,
such as those required by the National Environmental Policy Act or a court
of law, any agreements reached have no guarantee of being acted on, monitored
and enforced. Without adequate financial or institutional incentives to
negotiate and work together, no one needs to come to or stay at the table.
Without skillful leadership from public decision makers as well as from
the represented interests, agreements are rarely forged.
The key challenge in practice is how to design effective engagement of
contending parties appropriate for a particular situation that is able
to produce more effective public decision making. This is particularly
important for long standing collaborative efforts that require careful
organizational frameworks, representational arrangements and decision
rules.
These and other questions are being asked of the first generation of collaborative
water resource management initiatives. This increased scrutiny will serve
us well as we learn from these collaborative experiments to meet the challenges
ahead in managing our water resources in Arizona together.
The opinions expressed are the author’s own and do not represent
the official view of the U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution
or the Morris K. Udall Foundation.
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