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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Brown says Nebraska’s hundreds of thousands of groundwater wells place the state second to Texas in the amount of groundwater used.

“Early in the negotiations, the idea came forth that Wyoming, Colorado, and Nebraska would all contribute water to go to the species habitat,” says Brown. “People were saying that wouldn’t happen because Nebraska pumps so much right next to the river that all that water is basically being sucked out of the river. The cooperative agreement of 1997 required Nebraska to figure out a way to deal with that.”

The prevailing hope was that the cooperative agreement would only take about three years to formulate, but there were challenges at hand that stymied the process. “Part of the reason it took nine years was Nebraska had to go through a legal revolution in the way it manages its water,” Brown says.

That changed three years ago with Nebraska’s legislators passing a set of laws that integrated groundwater and surface-water management in a process Brown describes as “contentious.” “They also put in place studies and regulations that basically indicated which of Nebraska’s basins were underutilized, fully appropriated, or over-appropriated, and where they are fully appropriated, new development would not be permitted unless it is offset by reducing historic use of the water,” he says. “Where it is over-appropriated, the water use was going to be reduced.”

Nebraska continues to struggle with the issue, Brown notes. “If I had to put my finger on the biggest institutional and political change that occurred that allowed this [habitat restoration] program to be put in place, that is what it is. It took a number of very courageous people to do that,” he adds.

Nebraska is the same as Wyoming, says Brown, “but what makes Nebraska interesting is that groundwater use for agriculture far outstrips surface water, although in the Platte River Basin there’s a lot of surface irrigation, too. People are using both of those sources, and that is why integration was so important. That use is fairly stable; there’s not an increasing demand.”

Brown finds it interesting that most of the major cities in Nebraska are located along the Platte River and use Platte River water or groundwater, “and they’ve had to rely more on the Platte as there have been contamination problems with well fields further away from the river, largely from agricultural runoff and chemicals. They have moved their well fields closer into the river, and it’s become more of a critical resource for them.”

The Lake McConaughy Environmental Account is taking a small percent of the inflows into Lake McConaughy and putting them into an account that holds up to about 100,000 acre-feet that would be used to move water downstream. “Those are the three big pieces, and then the governance committee would put together a water action plan that has smaller pieces, and they all together improve the flows to the central Platte by roughly 150,000 acres,” says Brown.

In Colorado, Urban Demand Dominates
Water usage varies from state to state, Brown notes. Each state will contribute a different project to the program. Of the up to 150,000-acre flow improvement for the targeted habitats desired, some 80,000 of it are being contributed by three projects by the participating states. The remaining 50,000 to 70,000 would come from other projects the program would develop over the first incremental stage.

“Colorado is a bit of the anomaly,” says Brown. “While there is a lot of irrigated agriculture down the South Platte River in Colorado, the growing demand in Colorado is for urban water use. That makes it different than Wyoming and Nebraska, because there’s a major sector that is growing and will probably accelerate in growth.”

Colorado will provide the Tamarack project, retiming 10,000 acre-feet of flows in the South Platte near the Tamarack Ranch State Wildlife Refuge to help improve flow timings in the habitat area in Nebraska to create a more beneficial environment for the species. Colorado had to find a way to characterize how changing patterns of water use in the South Platte Basin were affecting the flow of the South Platte, says Brown. Next Page >

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