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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After a 1997 multigovernment agreement, the Platte River Recovery Implementation Program was created by the Platte River Governance Committee, a group comprising representatives from the states of Wyoming, Nebraska, and Colorado, along with the US Bureau of Reclamation, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and water users and environmental groups from the Platte River Basin. The committee formulated a detailed proposal to improve and maintain habitat as well as provide compliance with the Endangered Species Act for existing and future water uses in each state. After nine years, the process was completed in September 2006, with US Secretary of Interior Dirk Kempthorne signing the record of decision and the three participating states’ governors and the secretary signing the implementing agreement for the program in December 2006. The agreement enables water projects and activities in the Platte River Basin to continue while implementing offsetting measures. Done in unison among the three states, the measures would be less costly in terms of money and water resources.

For more than two decades, the Platte River—which runs through Nebraska, Wyoming, and Colorado—has been a stage for conflict between the need to sustain the lives of four threatened and endangered species and human water users. Several attempts and many negotiations were conducted throughout the years to address the issue, and in 1997 the three states and the US secretary of interior reached an agreement on the framework for a recovery program, which became the 1997 cooperative agreement on the Platte River. Finally—10 years after the agreement was signed in an effort to jointly pursue a basin-wide effort to improve and maintain habitat for those species—the program is now poised for implementation.

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“This recovery program is an outstanding collaborative effort among interest groups to cooperatively address the needs of endangered species and ensure that current uses of basin water can continue,” says Kempthorne in a statement to the media.

The ultimate goal in the first stage of implementation—anticipated to take 13 years—is to have 10,000 acres of habitat in the Central Platte region restored while also providing up to 130,000 to 150,000 acre-feet (an acre-foot is about 326,000 gallons) of water flow improvement to the target flows identified for the four species. According to John Lawson, the Wyoming-area manager for the US Bureau of Reclamation, after the administrative structure is in place, a budget of $13 million to $15 million annually is anticipated in order to start acquiring land and implementing water projects. He has been involved in the cooperative agreement process from the very beginning. Next Page >

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