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Dividing the Water. An Introduction to Western Water Rights and Resources by Charles M. Brendecke PhD PE September 12, 2008. The Hydrologic Cycle. Key Terms for Flow and Volume. CFS: cubic feet per second…Boulder Creek flow is now about 57 cfs (near tunnel)
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Dividing the Water An Introduction to Western Water Rights and Resources by Charles M. Brendecke PhD PESeptember 12, 2008
Key Terms for Flow and Volume • CFS: cubic feet per second…Boulder Creek flow is now about 57 cfs (near tunnel) • AF: acre-feet (1 acre 1 foot deep)…a football field one foot deep is about 1.1 af • 1 cfs for an entire year yields 724 af
Western Water Development • 19th Century: mining claims, small irrigation projects (private) • Early 20th Century: large projects by Federal government, and by some states and cities • Late 20th Century: environmental laws and policies, water right transfers between users
What is a water right? • A property right that can be sold • A right to use, but not to own or hoard • A way to allocate the supply when there’s not enough to go around • A way to define what can be bought, sold and transferred
Origins of Western Water Rights • Early “placer” mining activities used water to separate valuable metals • Competition between miners led to water allocation by date of claim • Water law still influenced heavily by mining law
Water Rights Overview • Each state has its own code of water laws • Two basic doctrines – Riparian and Prior Appropriation • Riparian Doctrine common in eastern states • Prior Appropriation Doctrine common in western states
Elements of a Water Right • Source • Priority Date • Amount • Type of use • Period of Use
Example of a Water Right • Boulder and White Rock Ditch • Source: Boulder Creek (in Central Park) • Priority Date: May 1, 1868 • Amount: 5.3 cfs • Period of Use: April 15 – October 15 • Type of Use: Irrigation
Water Right Administration 3rd Priority 2nd Priority 1st Priority
Water Right Administration • Applies to all connected stream systems • Literally 1000’s of water rights • 78 administrative Water Districts in Colorado (Boulder Creek is District 6) • 7 administrative Water Divisions • New rights and changes must be approved by Water Courts
Allocation Between States • Most rivers either define or cross state lines • Each state has its own water laws • How to allocate water between states? • Two basic methods – Compacts and Decrees
Interstate Water Compacts • Formal agreements between states • Ratified by state legislatures and U.S. Congress • Take many different forms • Enforced like contracts • Colorado is a party to 7 interstate compacts
Interstate Water Decrees • Disputes between states go to U.S. Supreme Court • Court appoints a Special Master to hear facts and make recommendations • Court issues Decree based on Master’s recommendations
Current and Looming Challenges in Water Allocation • Water quality • Habitat restoration • Impacts of ground water use • Climate change
Some Further Reading on Western Water and Natural Resources • “Cadillac Desert”, by Marc Reisner • “Beyond the 100th Meridian”, by Wallace Stegner • “Encounters with the Archdruid”, by John McPhee • “A Sand County Almanac”, by Aldo Leopold • “Desert Solitaire”, by Edward Abee