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r <br />'. ti . •r- . <br />~- <br />.~~ ._, <br />co~,Q~ADa <br />EN~~~nrv~+~~~A~ <br />GOAL~TTflIu <br />toEarada's woi!re Ear <br />canurratie~ sincE t48i <br /> <br />• <br />X20+-22,x, <br />DENVER <br />1536 Wynkoop Street, 5C <br />Denver, CO 80202 <br />303.534.7066 <br />GRAND JUNCTION <br />546 Main Street, #402 <br />Grand Junction, CO 81501 <br />910.243.0002 <br />CRAIG <br />11 W. Victory Way, #208 <br />Craig, (0 81625 <br />970.824.5241 <br />November 9, 2007 <br />Colorado Water Conservation Board <br />1313 Sherman Street, Room 721 <br />Denver; Colorado 80203 <br />Re: Legislation Strengthening Colorado's Instream Flow <br />Program <br />Dear Board Members, <br />The undersigned organizations urge the Colorado Water Conservation Board <br />("CWCB") to support two pieces of legislation that would strengthen Colorado's <br />instream flow program. Your staff will be presenting the legislation to you at the <br />November meeting. <br />Flowing water is critical to Colorado's renowned environment, sustaining fish, <br />wildlife'~and healthy riparian corridors, as well as Colorado's burgeoning outdoor <br />recreation and tourism economies. Low stream flow, however, is a serious <br />problem! in semi-arid Colorado. As Colorado's population continues to skyrocket, <br />more and more water is diverted out of rivers and streams to satisfy human <br />demands, and today many of Colorado's waterways lack adequate flow to sustain <br />healthy fisheries and riparian habitats. The warming and drying climate that many <br />scientists predict for Colorado will only exacerbate the pressures on aquatic <br />environments. <br />The CWCB's instream flow program is an invaluable tool for protecting and <br />restoring flows in Colorado's rivers and streams. The CWCB can obtain instream <br />flow water rights either by making a new, junior appropriation ofwater or by <br />leasing, purchasing or receiving a donation ofwater from a willing water right <br />holder. The CWCB makes frequent use of its authority to appropriate junior <br />instream, flow water rights, but junior rights will not protect the ecological value of <br />streams where senior rights divert much or all of a river's water. On such heavily <br />used streams, the CWCB's authority to enter into voluntary transactions to acquire <br />existing water rights is the best tool for protecting or restoring the environment. <br />Unfortunately, the CWCB has made infrequent use of its water rights acquisition <br />authority!. <br />One of the reasons for the underutilization of the CWCB's water rights acquisition <br />program is that, as a result of a quirk in existing law, a party making along-term <br />loan or lease of water to the CWCB risks losing the consumptive use credit <br />associated with the water right. In effect, a loss of consumptive use credit would <br />undermine the water right holder's ability to sell or lease the water right after the <br />expiration of the agreement with the CWCB. Similarly, along-term loan or lease <br />w., <br />