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This Website is Dedicated to
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January
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Western water rights come under new attack
Government officials renege on promises, use slippery approach
to laws
By BRANDON MIDDLETON and
DAMIEN SCHIFF
Klamath Falls Herald and
News
“ , , everywhere ...,”
begins a famous line by Coleridge.
Today, in the American West,
assaults on water rights can be seen practically everywhere.
Government regulators and
environmental activists lead the attacks, and farmers and
ranchers are the immediate targets. But the negative impact
threatens to ripple throughout the economy.
After all, economic
development in the West has always depended on respect for water
rights. Water is scarce in much of the region, so certainty in
water rights is a vital incentive to use this precious commodity
productively, for the greatest good.
More and more, however,
government officials are sowing uncertainty by reneging on
longstanding promises or taking a slippery approach to laws or
contracts that water users have relied on for generations.
For example, is the Obama
Administration suddenly downgrading how farms, ranches, and
urban communities are treated by federal reclamation projects?
Water agencies throughout the West are worried, after the Bureau
of Reclamation told an irrigation district in Grant County,
Wash., that its water fees will no longer purchase any rights in
the facilities that those fees help finance.
Historically, local water
agencies that contract with federal projects (such as the
Central Valley Project in California) have received ownership
interest, over time, in the reservoirs, canals, and other
infrastructure built on their dime. By backing away from this
principle, federal officials send a disturbing message: Water
contractors will be relegated to the role of tenants instead of
partners in reclamation programs. It’s the feds who will call
the shots — unilaterally and arbitrarily — on who gets water,
and how much.
The danger in giving
unchecked control to federal bureaucrats can be seen in
California’s San Joaquin Valley in recent years. In a
controversial strategy to rescue a tiny fish — the Delta smelt —
that is on the Endangered Species Act protected list, water for
farms and cities was cut dramatically, fallowing hundreds of
thousands of acres in one of the nation’s agricultural
heartlands.
These cutbacks, by federal
officials, started even before the new threat to water
contractors’ property interests. But they show how water flows
could be turned on or off, unpredictably, if local agencies are
squeezed out of any ownership role in federal reclamation
projects.
State officials in
California are also doing their part to dilute the rights of
water users. Twisting the Fish and Game Code in a radical new
way, the California Department of Fish and Game has begun to
require a cumbersome permit process for people who seek to use
their water rights in traditional ways.
Civil and criminal penalties
are threatened for farmers and ranchers if they don’t start
asking the state’s leave before using water — even when they are
drawing from rivers
or streams that have been
irrigating their acreage for a century or more in some cases.
Meanwhile, a new legal
campaign by environmentalist lawyers could end up sinking some
ranches and farms, financially, by curtailing use of
groundwater. The aim is to regulate groundwater under an archaic
theory called public trust.
The effect would be to rob
water users of their rights — declaring a public trust over
their water — without compensation. This is a breathtaking
stretch, legally, because the public trust concept has always
been associated with coastal waters and beaches, not inland
areas and certainly not groundwater. In a practical sense, it
amounts to a scorched earth campaign against many agricultural
operations.
Siskiyou County rancher Tom
Menne predicts that the public trust crusade could “devastate”
his ranch’s profitability, throwing its 25 employees out of
work.
All three of these threats
to water rights — from the Bureau of Reclamation, the State of
California, and overzealous environmentalists — are being
challenged in court. We’re proud to say that our organization —
Pacific Legal Foundation, a watchdog for property rights and
limited government — is in the thick of all the litigation to
defend water rights.
The cause should interest
everyone concerned about returning our region, and our country,
to economic health. The attack on the productive, job-creating
use of water calls to mind the second half of Coleridge’s famous
line:
“Water, water
everywhere, nor any drop to drink.”
Brandon Middleton and Damien Schiff are attorneys
with Pacific Legal Foundation. Headquartered in Sacramento, PLF
describes itself as a legal watchdog organization that litigates
nationwide for limited government, property rights and a
balanced approach to environmental regulation.
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those who have
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research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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