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~. <br />~2af22d <br />b <br />•COLO}6AD0 WATER TRUST 11430 LANIttER STREET, SUITE 300, DENVER, CO HOiOZ I TEl 72U.S7O.2897 FAX 303.99G.2O17 I WWW.COY_ORADOWATERTSLUST.ORG <br />November 13, 2007 <br />Colorado Water Conservation Board <br />1313 Sherman Street, Room 721 <br />Denver, Colorado 80203 <br />Re: Proposed Instream Flow Program Legislation <br />Dear Colorado Water Conservation Board members: <br />The State of Colorado has a long history of recognizing the importance of instream <br />water uses in addition to more traditional water uses. The placement of an instream flow <br />program in the hands of the Colorado Water Conservation Board ("CWCB") was the clearest <br />statement of that recognition. Si1ce the creation of the instream flow program, all of us in <br />Colorado who care about water have had the opportunity to see instream flow uses fall <br />comfortably-with well-defined, decreed, administrable, and defensible parameters-into place <br />in Colorado's prior appropriation system. Among numerous other benefits, the instream flow <br />• program has much to contribute to continuing Colorado's preeminence as the fishing and <br />recreation capital of the United States. <br />To accomplish the CWCB's mission to protect, maintail, and improve streamflows, the <br />instream flow program has two important arrows in its quiver: (1) new appropriations; and {2) <br />water right acquisitions. As most of you knonn~, nearly all of Colorado's river basins are over- <br />appropriated, leaving little room for the development of new, junior water rights. Those that <br />can be appropriated have water available to them infrequently and in inconsistent amounts. <br />Tlus is so for any new, junior water right ii over-appropriated stream systems, whether the <br />intended use is agricultural, municipal, industrial, or non-consumptive. When water is <br />available to these new, junior water rights, water, is generally available to most water rig~nts in <br />the system and, as a result, to the stream system itself. These times-the times of plenty--are <br />not the times of crisis. We all know that the times of crisis are the shortages. During times of <br />shortage, junior water rights aren't satisfied. Yet, times of shortage are the most critical times <br />for Colorado's riverine ecosystems. <br />With drought as an increasing linitation on the efficacy of new instream flow <br />appropriations, it has become critically important to focus on the second arrow in the CWCB's <br />- quiver: acquisitions. Acquisitions are an extremely important mechanism to allow the CWCB to <br />continue protecting, maintaining, and improving streamElows in critical areas of the state. The <br />acquisitions program has at least two benefits that are not available to the appropriations <br />program. First, the acquisitions program matc#~es willing sellers (the current water right <br />holder) with a willing buyer (the CWCB). As a result, it represents amarket-based approach to <br />protection of streamflow Ievels. Second, it provides the CWCB with access to more senior water <br />