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<br />,.~i?f~ <br /> <br />THE MEXICAN WATER TREATY <br />(From Aqueduct, a publication of the <br />Metropolitan Water District of Southern California) <br /> <br />A new chapter is being written on the often strained relations <br />between the United States and Mexico over water from the Colorado River. <br /> <br />On its way to Congress soon will be a so-called "permanent, defini- <br />tive" solution to Mexico's complaints about the salt content of water <br />delivered in the past 12 years. The dispute has resulted primarily <br />from highly saline irrigation return flow water from the Well ton-Mohawk <br />Irrigation District near Yuma, Arizona. <br /> <br />The price tag on the solution: at least $115 million in works to <br />be built by the United States, including the world's largest desalting <br />plant on the Well ton-Mohawk drain at a cost of $67 million. <br /> <br />"It was a political settlement on the part of former U. S, Attorney <br />General Herbert Brownell, said Ray Rummonds, chairman of the Colorado <br />River Board of California. "He had to work amid conflicting interests <br />of the United States and Mexico as well as those of the water-short <br />seven Colorado River Basin States..' <br /> <br />Brownell was appointed by President Nixon, with the rank of ambas- <br />sador, to study the salinity problems and corne up with a settlement. <br /> <br />Mexico, under a new interpretation of the 1944 treaty with the <br />United States, will be provided water that is very comparable in quality <br />to that being diverted for irrigation in Imperial Valley in Southern <br />California. Specifically, it is to be only 115 parts per million higher <br />in salt content than that at Imperial Darn. It's currently 850 ppm at <br />Imperial Darn, the last major diversion point on this side of the border. <br /> <br />"Congress will now have to authorize the works and appropriate the <br />necessary funds on a timely basis to carry out the settlement in good <br />faith," Rummonds said. <br /> <br />.' It is clearly a national obligation - one which should be borne <br />at federal expense without adverse impact on water and power users of <br />the seven states." <br /> <br />At a press conference at the Western White House in San Clemente, <br />Brownell announced the signing of both countries of a new agreement <br />specifying the quality of 1.5 million acre-feet annually that must be <br />delivered under the treaty, which is administered by the International <br />Water and Boundary Commission. <br /> <br />,. It was part of the treaty after construction of Hoover Darn that <br />Mexico would take water that included irrigation return flow, , Rummonds <br />said. <br />