November-December 2007

Going With the Flow

Improvements along the Platte River Basin are designed to maintain habitats and promote water conservation.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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As the program moves into the implementation stage, a new governance committee is being formed, consisting of a representative each from the US Bureau of Reclamation and the US Fish and Wildlife Service, three water-user representatives from the Platte River Basin at large, two environmental conservation representatives, and a delegate from each state’s governor. “That in itself—from a collaborative process—is quite a coup,” notes Lawson. “What a neat process to show as an example of how such a diversity of interests can get together and formulate a plan that’s acceptable to all of us.”

The program is expected to cost $317 million in cash and cash equivalents to implement. The federal government is expected to provide half the funding; the other half will be contributed by the three states through non-federal funds, water, and lands.

Three key methods in improving the habitat include:

  • . Retiming river flows to improve habitat conditions in the spring, summer, and early fall to reduce shortages to the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s recommended target flows in the Central Platte River by 130,000 to 150,000 acre-feet on an average annual basis
  • . Testing the assumption that managing flow in the central Platte River also improves habitat for the pallid sturgeon in the lower Platte River
  • . Leasing or acquiring land from willing sellers in the central Platte habitat area to restore habitat, with a focus on wet meadow areas and other areas of wide unvegetated river channel

In the Beginning … Nebraska
It all started with the whooping crane in the ’70s. The whooping crane was placed on the endangered species list, and its critical habitat was designated in 100 miles of river in the central Platte River valley from Lexington, NE, to Chapman, NE.

“Following that, when the impact of any new water project proposed in the basin—some have been proposed in Wyoming, some in Colorado, some in Nebraska—were evaluated on the whooping crane and its critical habitat, the US Fish and Wildlife Service concluded those actions would jeopardize the continued existence of the species,” says Curt Brown, who was the Platte River Environmental Impacts Statements study manager for the US Bureau of Reclamation.

“From that point forward,” he continues, “the Endangered Species Act issues related to the whooping crane and then also the pallid sturgeon—a listed large river fish that uses part of the Platte River—became that conflict between the further development of the Platte River and impacts on species in Nebraska.”

Joining the affected species was the endangered interior least tern and threatened piping plover. Federally funded or permitted water projects cannot increase the risk of extinction or threatened or endangered species or adversely affect their critical habitat. For the past two decades, the US Fish and Wildlife Service determined many water projects in the Platte River Basin that altered the river, and nearby habitat did just that in the central and lower Platte in Nebraska.

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Over the last 150 years, some 90% of the habitat used by the endangered or threatened bird species has been lost to water storage and diversion projects throughout the basin and land development along the river. That habitat was originally broad, shallow, sandy, and mostly without vegetation before the ’80s—conditions favored by the four targeted species. “Anything that takes nine years to negotiate is a very complicated process,” notes Brown. “Some fairly remarkable things had to take place in the basin.”

Nine years ago, Nebraska was one of the last states in the West that had no legal integration of groundwater and surface-water management, says Brown. “While surface-water rights in the Platte River were regulated by the state and administered by the state engineer so you couldn’t put a new diversion from the river because you’d be taking water from somebody who had a senior water right, what you could do is virtually drill a well in the river and pump an infinite amount of water, and you would not be in violation of anybody’s water rights,” he says. “This was a serious problem everybody recognized.” Next Page >

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