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- <text id=91TT1644>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: The Colorado:A Fight over Liquid Gold
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- COVER STORY
- A Fight over Liquid Gold
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a huge portion of the parched West, life would be impossible
- without the Colorado River. Now the very prosperity that its
- waters created threatens the river's survival.
- </p>
- <p>By Paul Gray--Reported by Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles and
- Richard Woodbury/Denver
- </p>
- <p> The Colorado River begins high above the tree lines, amid
- the glaciers and snowpack on the western slope of the Rocky
- Mountains. Icy rivulets collect and drip into streams, trickling
- and then plunging downward. In the peaks of eastern Utah, where
- the Green River hurtles south from Wyoming to meet the Upper
- Colorado, the water starts getting serious. It wants to reach
- sea level--in this case the Gulf of California, some thousand
- miles to the southwest--and nothing natural has ever managed
- to stand in its way. In its slashing, headlong rush, the
- Colorado gouged out a pretty impressive piece of sculpture known
- as the Grand Canyon. The river has been running in this rut for
- 5 million or 6 million years.
- </p>
- <p> In the past half-century this mountain-moving,
- gorge-cutting force of nature has been tamed by a spectacular
- system of dams and reservoirs. Today the domesticated Colorado
- dispenses water for 20 million people in seven states and for
- 2 million acres of farmland. The river's urgent yen for the sea,
- held in check by 10 major dams, generates 12 million kW of
- electricity a year. Stretches of the river remain as they once
- were and provide habitats for fish, birds and wildlife,
- including a number of endangered species. People come here to
- play. Six national parks and recreation areas along the
- Colorado's shores support a multimillion-dollar recreation
- industry of boating, hiking, fishing and whitewater rafting.
- </p>
- <p> Life in much of the American West would be unimaginable in
- its present form without the Colorado. Those cascading
- fountains adorning Las Vegas casinos? Take away the river's
- largesse, and there would be tumbleweed blowing along an
- abandoned Strip. San Diego could turn into a very thirsty place
- should something go wrong with the river: almost 70% of the
- water its citizens use every day is piped in from the Colorado.
- And what of California's Imperial Valley, which grows a major
- portion of the nation's vegetables? Goodbye Colorado River,
- hello cactus and mesquite.
- </p>
- <p> But while the West has bloomed on the river's bounty,
- exploding populations and a prolonged drought have had an
- ominous effect on the Colorado itself. The river that used to
- surge into the Gulf of California, depositing ruddy-colored silt
- that fanned out into a broad delta of new land at its mouth,
- hardly ever makes it to the sea anymore. The once mighty
- Colorado fizzles into a trickle, its last traces evaporating in
- the heat of the Mexican desert.
- </p>
- <p> "The Colorado is not in good shape," says Norris Hundley
- Jr., a historian at UCLA. "It essentially exists in a
- straitjacket." Last April the Arizona stretch of the Colorado
- was named "the most endangered river of 1991" by American
- Rivers, a Washington-based conservation group. A prolonged
- drought in the U.S. Southwest, now in its fifth year, has dealt
- the Colorado a double whammy. Less snow to melt at its sources
- means less water coursing downriver; reduced rainfall elsewhere
- means even greater demands on the diminished flow.
- </p>
- <p> The recognition that the river is a finite resource has
- been slow to dawn in the West, where rugged individualists have
- traditionally cocked a snoot at natural restrictions, rolled up
- their sleeves and hacked or drilled the world of their dreams
- out of the wilderness. Something in the Western temperament
- strives mightily to deny that much of the region is a desert--witness the tropical extravagance of Beverly Hills, the emerald
- golf courses of Palm Springs, the ubiquitous swimming pools
- throughout the West.
- </p>
- <p> The Colorado has always been a source of contention, but
- the current problems surrounding it are prompting more alarm
- than ever before. Plans are being made for an unprecedented
- summit conference in November of the Governors from the seven
- states served by the Colorado. And almost certain to come up,
- whether or not it is on the official agenda, is the 1922
- Colorado River Compact, the agreement that divvied up the water
- among the Upper Basin states--Utah, Wyoming, Colorado and New
- Mexico--and those in the Lower Basin--California, Nevada and
- Arizona.
- </p>
- <p> This crucial document facilitated both the astonishing
- development of the West and the problems that followed as a
- result. Originally the compact looked like simplicity itself.
- The Upper and Lower Basins would each receive 7.5 million
- acre-feet annually. (An acre-foot is the amount of water needed
- to cover an acre of land to a depth of 12 in., approximately
- 325,000 gal. That is enough to fulfill the needs of a family of
- four or five people for one year.) A 1944 treaty guaranteed an
- additional 1.5 million acre-feet to Mexico. All fine and dandy,
- except for one thing: the Colorado's output was grossly
- overestimated. Instead of the 16.9 million acre-feet estimated
- to be there for the dividing, the river has been flowing at a
- rate of only 14.9 million; during the present drought, that
- figure has dropped to about 9 million acre-feet a year.
- </p>
- <p> Even the possibility that the 1922 compact might be
- revised raises hackles in all seven states. Already, fierce
- controversies over the Colorado are swirling in courts and
- legislatures. When there is no longer enough of a vital resource
- to go around, who is entitled to what portion and why? Says
- California Congressman George Miller: "The heart of the West is
- water. It's about winners and losers, the future and the past.
- It's about economics. It will be the most important commodity
- in dictating the future. It's the most serious confrontation
- that the West has engaged in 100 years."
- </p>
- <p> The combatants in this latest version of the West's long
- tug-of-war over water are more numerous and clamorous than ever.
- The four Upper Basin states have always regarded the three in
- the Lower Basin with a gimlet eye. The upper states have never
- used all the water allotted to them; the surplus could be, and
- often was, picked up by the lower states--mostly California.
- No one minded as long as the river seemed inexhaustible; now
- the upper states fret that the lower states have grown
- accustomed to--and have prospered on--more than their fair
- share. Across the region and within each state, powerful
- interests have staked out claims to the river's overallocated
- waters:
- </p>
- <p> FARMERS. Agriculture has traditionally been the biggest
- beneficiary of the Colorado's water, receiving some 80% of the
- river's allocated yield. This is chiefly because the farmers and
- ranchers got there first. A central tenet of Western water law--a fiendishly complex body of statutes and precedents--is
- the concept of "first in time, first in right." Whoever was
- initially granted a legal claim to water tended to keep it and,
- all other things being equal, to pass it down to descendants.
- </p>
- <p> Furthermore, farmers have been favored not only in how
- much water they get but also in how much they pay for it. Much
- of the water available from the Colorado has been produced by
- federal reclamation projects such as the Hoover Dam, and the
- government, to encourage agricultural development, has made this
- supply available to farmers at low cost. This practice has led
- to wild pricing disparities; some farmers in Colorado get their
- water for $400 an acre-foot, one-twentieth the amount it costs
- neighboring municipalities.
- </p>
- <p> This generosity in a time of shortage is now under attack.
- On the one hand, critics are pointing out the often wasteful
- uses of water employed by Western farmers: the practice of
- irrigating fields by flooding them, thus allowing much of the
- water to run off the fields or bake off in the heat; the
- production of "thirsty" crops like rice and cotton in areas only
- inches of water away from being desert.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, some farmers, especially in the Upper
- Basin, and some ranchers have succumbed to the repeated
- temptations to sell some or all of their water rights to parched
- urban areas. Whether similar water marketing should be permitted
- across state lines is a matter of fierce debate. Some experts
- estimate that Colorado could reap $140 million in new revenues
- if the deal goes through. But the sale of agricultural water
- rights could cause many farming communities to dry up and
- vanish.
- </p>
- <p> If large-scale transfers of Colorado River water rights
- become a reality, the experience of Crowley County in eastern
- Colorado could become a somber indicator of the future. Starting
- in the 1970s, farmers along the Arkansas River, a separate
- system from the Colorado, began selling their water rights to
- the mushrooming cities of Colorado Springs and Aurora. Prices
- soon soared to more than $700 an acre-foot. Now what used to be
- 70,000 acres of irrigated land has shrunk to 5,000 acres, and
- the closing of dozens of farms has wrecked the local tax base.
- "We're drifting back to dry-land desert," says farmer Orville
- Tomky, who has farmed in the county for 40 years. "Everything
- is slowly drying up. The cities have bought nearly all the water
- in the county. Maybe we'll just default and be taken over by the
- state."
- </p>
- <p> CITIES. Like the rest of the nation, the Southwest has
- been growing increasingly urban. What were only recently
- one-horse outposts now exfoliate for miles into the blazing
- environs, their citizens housed in air-conditioned comfort and
- assuming plentiful water as a God-given right. Among the seven
- states served by the Colorado River, California has become the
- 800-lb. gorilla at all negotiations, its cities expanding, their
- thirst apparently unquenchable. The Old West here comes into
- direct conflict with the New: the leathery rancher in Wyoming
- with his herd to water vs. the condo-dwelling Sybarite in
- Laguna Beach with a Porsche to wash and two hot tubs to keep
- filled. The Metropolitan Water District, responsible for finding
- water for the cities of Southern California, is widely regarded
- by competing parties with fear and suspicion. Says Jerry
- Zimmerman, executive director of the Colorado River Board of
- California: "California is being accused of utilizing other
- states' water and attempting to continue to use water that other
- states may need at some future time."
- </p>
- <p> The battle over the Colorado's waters has grown even more
- frenzied because of the five-year drought. So far, California
- has been able to cope with water shortages, which have been
- exacerbated even further by its booming population, by siphoning
- off the unused portion of the Upper Basin states' allocation
- from the river and encouraging conservation.
- </p>
- <p> But the time when such halfway measures will no longer
- suffice is rapidly approaching. For the first time last year,
- Arizona started taking much of its share of river water for
- fast-growing Phoenix and Tucson, leaving its larger neighbor to
- face the possibility of a short supply. Within California,
- farmers have become alarmed at the possibility that the water
- they need for irrigation may be diverted to the cities. Says
- John Pierre Menvielle, a third-generation farmer in Calexico,
- on the southern edge of the Imperial Valley: "People in Los
- Angeles and the coastal plain say, `You guys are wasting water.
- We ought to get it from you.' They're overbuilding, they're out
- of control. They want us to put limits on what we're doing.
- Where's their limits?"
- </p>
- <p> UTILITIES. The era of stringing huge dams along the
- Colorado peaked during the '30s and '40s and is long gone. And
- the relatively cheap hydroelectricity--and handsome profits--generated by existing facilities is now being weighed, and
- found wanting, in the light of other concerns. One long-running
- dispute concerns the Western Area Power Administration's
- operations at the Glen Canyon Dam in Arizona, just above the
- Grand Canyon. The agency releases huge amounts of water through
- giant turbines to meet peak power demands in places as far away
- as Phoenix. These dramatic surges of water create artificial
- "tides" that, environmentalists complain, erode the sandy shoals
- along the river's banks and damage breeding grounds for fish and
- waterfowl.
- </p>
- <p> ENVIRONMENTALISTS AND RECREATIONALISTS. Both groups were
- in shorter supply when the Colorado was being harnessed than
- they are today, and their concerns often diverge. A
- recreationalist's dream--a motorboat rally on Lake Havasu,
- with plenty of beer--is a nature lover's nightmare. But some
- vacationers come to the river merely to hike or look at
- wildlife, and they are as likely to be disturbed by the
- encroachments of civilization and mechanized control as are the
- environmentalists. Says Darrell Knuffke, the Central Rockies
- regional director of the Wilderness Society: "As the river has
- been divided, subdivided, ditched, dammed and diverted,
- everyone's interests except the land's have been considered."
- How can a river nourish a vast area and still remain true to its
- pristine past?
- </p>
- <p> NATIVE AMERICANS. "The Indians are the giant `What if?' on
- the river," says Boulder lawyer John Musick, who specializes in
- water issues. "They have time and the law on their side. They
- have a solid case, and they're dead serious. It's like a huge
- bill finally coming due." Because of treaties and agreements
- between their tribes and the Federal Government, Native
- Americans living on reservations along the Colorado River have,
- in many instances, claims on water that date back to the
- mid-1800s. Thanks to the first-in-time concept, they are often
- the senior owners of river rights, and they have begun making
- their case vigorously in courtrooms. Combined, the Native
- American claims amount to a sizable chunk of the Colorado's
- annual flow. While few observers expect all these claims to be
- upheld, the lengthy period during which tribal rights were
- conveniently bypassed or ignored by the white settlers seems
- over for good.
- </p>
- <p> MEXICO. The Colorado has long been a prickly subject
- between the U.S. and its neighbor, and at the moment tempers
- south of the border are steaming again. The current flash point
- is Southern California's plan to line with concrete the
- All-American Canal, which carries water to the Imperial Valley,
- to save 106,000 acre-feet that seep uselessly into the ground
- beneath the canal each year. On the one hand, this is an
- ambitious project in water conservation; on the other, Mexican
- officials say the loss of seepage will deplete the underground
- water supply around Mexicali.
- </p>
- <p> To make up for this loss, some feel a fair exchange would
- be to compensate Mexico for the lost share of river water. So
- far, the U.S. insists it is living up to its legal obligations
- and that no increase is called for. But this attitude could
- affect U.S.-Mexican relations on other matters requiring
- cooperation, including curbing drug smuggling and illegal
- immigration as well as a proposed U.S.-Mexico free-trade treaty.
- Warns Al Utton, director of the International Transboundary
- Resource Center at the University of New Mexico: "It does not
- make sense at this point for the U.S. to stand on the letter of
- the law. If we think only of ourselves on this, we may encounter
- Mexico thinking only of itself on other issues."
- </p>
- <p> Further complicating these disputes is the changing
- attitude in Washington toward Western water. The federal Bureau
- of Reclamation was principally responsible for the development
- of the Colorado; it planned and engineered the big building
- projects, all funded by congressional appropriations. Critics
- say the bureau has become an anachronism, no longer able to
- manage the Colorado and its myriad problems. "They're a bunch
- of dam builders," says former Arizona Governor Bruce Babbitt,
- "and there aren't any dams to build. They have been unable to
- adjust to the new reality."
- </p>
- <p> In addition, legislators with an eye on the government's
- mounting deficit are taking stock of the huge federal subsidies--amounting to billions of dollars--flowing west to farmers
- for Colorado River water. Says California's Congressman Miller:
- "The drought and deficit have caused people from Pennsylvania,
- Massachusetts and New York to reassess supporting a bad habit."
- </p>
- <p> No longer are top seats on powerful congressional interior
- committees filled by "water buffaloes"--members of the Western
- water establishment willing to approve and support massive
- development projects. They have been supplanted by lawmakers
- like Bill Bradley of New Jersey, chairman of the Senate's Water
- and Power Subcommittee, who are both cost conscious and
- sensitive to environmental and ecological issues. Says David
- Getches, a law professor at the University of Colorado: "There's
- a revolution in the way the U.S. Congress looks at water."
- </p>
- <p> However this revolution is played out, both in Washington
- and along the Colorado, everyone who depends on the river is
- likely to feel some pain. Every adjustment made to please one
- group will inevitably have unpleasant consequences for the
- others. Farmers and city dwellers cannot possibly both be
- satisfied. Environmentalists and Native Americans, allies on
- many issues, split over the Colorado: the tribes want more
- development on their reservations, the environmentalists less.
- Water conservation that is good for California turns out to be
- bad for Mexico. Babbitt calls the development of the Colorado
- an "extraordinary achievement" but argues that the very success
- of this plan spawned the myth "that there is more water over the
- next hill. But there is no more water over the next hill."
- </p>
- <p> Behind all the arguments, the claims and counterclaims, is
- the river itself, a glistening thread winding through some of
- the most spectacular and forbidding terrain in North America.
- Nobody ever toted a barge or lifted a bale on the Colorado; it
- is not that kind of river. Its gift to its surroundings has been
- not transportation and commerce but life itself. There is no
- more urgent task for the West than ensuring that the Colorado
- survives.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-