State Sen. Doug Whitsett is right to be suspicious
of a proposed voluntary tracking system for rural water.
He expressed his concerns after Senate Bill 731
passed the State Senate and moved to the state House of Representatives.
SB 731 sounds innocent enough. It would enact a
monitoring program for the state's water for those who want to take part.
Whitsett,
It wouldn't take much to turn it into something
requiring statewide metering, he said.
He's right. That is exactly what the bill's
original intent was.
The bill was introduced by the Senate Committee on
Environment and Land Use, and would have required "all water users to
measure amounts of water withdrawn or stored" and said "that all water
users shall install water measurement devices that provide for measurement of
the amount of water withdrawn or stored at the point of diversion and that allow
for the determination of the rate and duty of water appropriated."
So what's wrong with mandatory measuring of water
in the rural areas?
It puts a political weapon in the hands of city
residents who don't really understand much about life among their "country
cousins." If you're offended by the patronizing tone of that phrase, good.
It's an illustration of an attitude toward rural
Water in the countryside is allocated by
established water rights, which are based on when people began claiming water.
It's not a perfect system, but it is the system under which
As for SB 731, which has been changed to make water
monitoring voluntary, why bother unless it's intended as a step toward mandatory
metering for all water users, including agriculture?
Rural
Pat Bushey wrote today's editorial, which represents the view of the
Herald and News editorial board.
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