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WSP12165
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Last modified
1/26/2010 3:20:05 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 5:25:19 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8210.470
Description
Pacific Southwest Interagency Committee
State
CO
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Water Division
5
Date
8/1/1963
Author
PSIAC
Title
Pacific Southwest Water Plan - Report - August 1963
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />002556 <br /> <br />New Mexico--Tl1€ Court accepted 9. Net., Hexico~Arizona compromise <br />settlement by which New Mexico agreed to limit the acreage to be <br />irrigated and the water from the Gila River and its tributaries to <br />be put to beneficial consumptive use. <br /> <br />Utah--Utahls only use of water within the Lower Basin is from <br />tributaries the right to which the Court did not adjudicate. <br />Accordingly, Utah's right to expand its present Lower Basin <br />tributary uses is not limited by the Court's decision. <br /> <br />United States--The Court held the United States to be entitled <br />to the beneficial consumptive use of waters of the Colorado River <br />and its tributaries on five Indian Reservations, two Wildlife <br />Refuges, a National Forest, and a National Recreational Area. <br />Consumptive uses of mainstream Colorado River water by the United <br />States are to be charged against the States in which such uses <br />occur. <br /> <br />Sumrnary--The final decree of the Supreme Court will remove <br />that uncertainty which 11as prevented Congressional consideration <br />of Lower Basin development since 1951. But there is not sufficient <br />water in the Lower Colorado River to provide for the needs of the <br />area it serves. Maximum conservation and utilization of available <br />water is imperative, and there is a compelling necessity to provide <br />additional water from new sources of supply. <br /> <br />The Present Situation <br /> <br />Throughout most of the Pacific Southwest, water supplies which <br />have been inadequate to sustain the acreage developed for irrigation <br />for a number of years have been further burdened by rapidly expand- <br />ing urban populations. As outlined previously) dependable surface- <br />water sources have been fully developed~ often overcommitted, and <br />the ground-water supply has been increasingly utilized beyond its <br />perennial capability. <br /> <br />Southern California--Irrigated areas dependent on the Colorado <br />River in the State of California include the Palo Verde diversions, <br />a portion of the Yuma Project) the All-American Canal diversions to <br />the Coachella and Imperial Valleys, and unauthorized diversions <br />along the main stream. All of [hese developments are and have been <br />supplied with adequate quantities of water by diversions from the <br />Colorado River. <br /> <br />The coastal valleys of southern California have been supplied <br />with water from local developments, the Owens River Aqueduct of <br />the city of Los Angeles, and the Colorado River diversions made <br />through the facilities of the Metropolitan Water District of <br />Southern CaLifornia. In recent years southern California has been <br />diverting from the Colorado River in excess of 5,500,000 acre-feet <br /> <br />11-7 <br />
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