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Proposed Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes and Montana Compact and Ordinance. November 8, 2012 Proposal for Public Review and Comments . Proposed Water Rights Settlement. CSKT, Montana, and U.S. have negotiated a proposed Compact and Ordinance.
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Proposed Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes and Montana Compact and Ordinance November 8, 2012 Proposal for Public Review and Comments
Proposed Water Rights Settlement • CSKT, Montana, and U.S. have negotiated a proposed Compact and Ordinance. • Quantifies CSKT water rights on and off the Reservation. • Provides for the administration of water rights on the Reservation. • Seeking public review and comment.
Why Do We Need a Settlement? • Status quo is not an option for the future. • The Montana General Stream Adjudication requires the resolution of all pre-1973 claims to water rights in Montana. • The Adjudication will determine water rights, including CSKT water rights. • In the absence of a settlement, long and costly litigation is likely.
Settlement Components • Compact • Unitary Administration Ordinance • FIIP Water Use Agreement • State, Tribal, and Federal legislation • Montana Water Court decree
Proposed Settlement would • Protect valid existing uses as decreed by the Water Court or permitted by the DNRC prior to 1996. • Protect existing Tribal uses, including traditional Tribal cultural and religious uses. • Establish a process to permit new uses such as domestic, stock, wetlands, municipal, hydropower, industrial, commercial, and agricultural uses. • Provide legal protection for post-1996 domestic wells and permits that are currently in limbo.
Proposed Settlement would • Recognize CSKT instream flow rights on and off the Reservation. • Establish modern, science-based irrigation water allocation for the FIIP. • Provide funding for improved water measurement and water supply forecasting. • Provide additional water resources for the Reservation from the Flathead River.
Proposed Settlement would • Provide funding for fish habitat and FIIP improvements. • Provide process for changes to existing water uses. • Provide more local control than litigation, and other benefits with significantly lower expenditures of time, money and social disruption.
Protections for Water Users • The proposed Compact would protect valid existing uses of water as decreed by the Water Court or permitted by DNRC prior to 1996. • Provides a mechanism to protect existing wells for domestic and stockwater use. • Provides expedited process for new domestic and stockwater wells and replacement wells. • There is NO metering requirement for new wells serving less than three homes or business.
Protecting Existing Water Uses • The Tribes and the United States would agree to relinquish their right to exercise the Tribal water right to make a call against: • any non-irrigation water right, • groundwater irrigators that use less than 100 gallons per minute, and • all water rights upstream of the Reservation, • except for irrigation rights sourced from the mainstem of the Flathead River, including Flathead Lake, or the North, South, or Middle Forks of the Flathead River.
Administration of Water Rights • Proposed Settlement provides the framework for the administration of water rights on the Reservation. • Describes the process to • Register existing uses of water; • Change water rights; and • Provide for new water development • Establishes Water Management Board • To administer Compact and Ordinance on the Reservation • Board’s jurisdiction does not extend off the Reservation
Water Management Board • Compact and Ordinance describe powers and duties. • Five voting members: • Two selected by governor after consultation with water users on the Reservation; • Two selected by CSKT; • One selected by other four members. • Sixth non-voting member appointed by Department of the Interior.
Unitary Management Ordinance • Unitary administration of water • Tribal and non-tribal water uses are intermingled • Separate administration would have required expensive, duplicative infrastructure • Describes in detail • how water would be administered • Process for permitting new uses of water • Would be adopted into Montana and CSKT Law • Cannot be changed by one party without agreement of the other
Registration • Water users do not need to register if they: • have already filed a claim in the adjudication, or • have received a permit or certificate of water right from the DNRC, or • are served by the FIIP. • The following water users would need to register their water uses with the Board: • People with pre-1973 domestic or stock uses who did not have to and did not file a claim for those uses in the adjudication. • People with post-1973 domestic or stock uses who did not file completion forms with the DNRC or did not receive a certificate of water right from DNRC. • Tribal members and allottees using a portion of the Tribal water right.
Wells • Existing Domestic Wells • Domestic wells that have received a permit or certificate from the DNRC or register under the provisions of the Ordinance would be fully protected. • New and Replacement Domestic Wells • The proposed Ordinance provides an expedited process for domestic allowances for new and replacement wells. • basic application form • strict time frames for approval • No mitigation requirements for domestic allowances.
Individual Domestic Allowances • Up to a maximum of 35 gallons per minute and 2.4 acre-feet per year, and • Irrigation of no more than 0.7 acres (irrigation limit identified by reference to fire safety standards) • NO metering requirement
Shared Domestic Allowances • Shared well agreement serving 2 or 3 users • Up to a maximum of 35 gallons per minute and 2.4 acre-feet per year, and • Irrigation of no more than 0.5 acres total for 2 users and 0.75 acres total for 3 users • NO metering requirement
Development Domestic Allowances • Up to a maximum of 35 gallons per minute and 10 acre-feet per year, and • Individual irrigation of no more than 0.25 acres per plot • YES metering requirement “ Development” means contiguous or closely grouped parcels of land under the same or affiliated ownership, including, but not limited to, housing subdivisions and/or any combination of business and residential units.
Stock Water Allowances • Generally similar process as for obtaining Domestic Allowances: • Flow Rate/Volume/Acreage caps (as applicable) for eligibility • Basic application form with strict time frames for action by Engineer NO mitigation requirement for Stock Water Allowances
The CSKT’s Water Rights • Reserved and aboriginal water rights are created and governed by federal law, not state law. • Aboriginal water rights have a "time immemorial" priority date. • Reserved water rights have a July 16, 1855 priority date, the date of the Hellgate Treaty creating the Flathead Indian Reservation.
The CSKT’s Water Rights • Article III of the Hellgate Treaty guarantees the Tribes the right to hunt, fish and gather both on and off of the Reservation. • Courts have upheld, and the Compact recognizes, instream flows to satisfy such treaty guarantees. • Courts have upheld, and the Compact recognizes, that the Treaty also guarantees the Tribes sufficient water to satisfy all the purposes for which the Reservation was created.
CSKT On-Reservation Water Right • The Compact would quantify the Tribes’ aboriginal and reserved water rights, including: • Flathead Indian Irrigation Project • FIIP Water Use agreement addresses the CSKT instream flow water rights and the water rights for the FIIP • Minimum pool elevations for FIIP reservoirs • Instream flow and existing uses by the Tribes, tribal members, and allottees, including religious and cultural uses • Wetlands
CSKT Water Rights • Also quantifies CSKT Water Rights for • High mountain lakes, • Flathead Lake, • Boulder and Hellroaring hydroelectric projects • The Compact and Ordinance also address the Tribes’ instream flow water rights for streams outside the FIIP. • The Tribes would defer the enforcement of these rights until enforceable flow schedules have been established. • Flow schedules would protect existing users on those streams. • Process for developing flow schedules is set forth in the Ordinance.
Flathead System Compact Water • Water from Flathead River and water stored in Hungry Horse Reservoir: • Total of 229,383 acre-feet of water • 90,000 acre-feet is from storage in Hungry Horse Reservoir • Total consumptive use would be 128,158 acre-feet • This water to meet CSKT instream flow and consumptive use needs on the Reservation. • CSKT can lease water for use on or off the Reservation. • Provides 11,000 acre-feet for leases to mitigate for certain water development off the Reservation.
CSKT Off-Reservation Water Rights • CSKT Treaty includes right to take fish in usual and accustomed locations. • Courts have confirmed this right to use water outside the reservation to maintain fisheries flows • Fishery flows are instream, non-consumptive uses • The proposed Compact includes instream water rights in: • Kootenai River, • Consistent with fish operations at Libby Dam • Swan River, and • Lower Clark Fork River.
CSKT Off-Reservation Water Rights • Provides CSKT co-ownership with Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks of water rights in: • Clark Fork Basin, • Bitterroot Basin, • Kootenai Basin, and • upper Flathead Basin • Proposed Compact would make CSKT co-owner of a water right formerly associated with the Milltown Dam. • The Compact would provide the Tribes with a beneficial interest in three contracts in the Bitterroot Basin for the delivery of water from: • Painted Rocks Reservoir • Lake Como
Next Steps • The Parties are seeking public comment on the proposed Compact and Ordinance. • Public meetings to explain the proposed Compact and Ordinance, answer questions, and take public comment. • The Parties will consider revisions based on the public comment. • The Montana Reserved Water Rights Compact Commission will meet on December 19, 2012 to decide whether to submit the Compact and Ordinance to the Legislature for approval.
Next Steps • The final Compact and Ordinance would be submitted to the 2013 session of the Montana Legislature for ratification through the enactment of State legislation. • Both the US Congress and the Tribes would need to approve the settlement for it to be effective. • After the three Parties act to approve the settlement, it would be submitted to the Water Court for final approval.
Send Written Comments To: Mr. Chris Tweeten, Chair, MT RWRCC, 2705 Spurgin Road, Building C, Missoula, MT 59804 or email to dnrrwrcc@mt.gov. Comments will be shared with all parties.
For More Information • For copies of the proposed Compact and Ordinance and more information visit (these addresses are on the Summary): Montana:http://www.dnrc.mt.gov/rwrcc/Compacts/CSKT/Default.asp CSKT:http://www.cskt.org/tr/nrd_waternegotiations.htm or • Contact • Rob McDonald, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (406) 675-2700 ext. 1222, or • Bill Schultz, Montana Reserved Water Rights Compact Commission (406) 542-5880.