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SWSI
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Colorado
Title
Comments 17
Date
11/13/2003
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<br />negotiate long-term water service agreements with Union Park type participants on <br />both sides of the Divide. The Bureau knows that Union Park's additional high storage <br />for Aspinall water rights will greatly increase clean watert power, and environmental <br />benefits throughout Colorado .and the Southwestern Region, including the Upper <br />Gunnison Basin of origin.. <br /> <br />- , <br /> <br />7w Local. State, and federal involvement with Union Park oversiaht NEeD f[rst <br />offered to sell its 1982 Union Park hydropower rights and statewide drought protection <br />project to Colorado Springs, Aurora, Denver~ City of Gunnison and the Colorado Water <br />Resources and Power Development Authority (CWRPDA) during 1986. Colorado <br />Springs and Aurora declined to consider Union Park, because it competed with their <br />Homestake II and CoUegate Range proposals, which do not include compensatory <br />storage for the west slope. Denver also declined, because of a relentless <br />determination to develop excessive Two Forks rights, which overdeplete Colorado <br />River Mainstream tributaries~ The City of Gunnison wisely contracted for a small <br />interest in Union Park, because of major water and power benefits. ~CWRPDA <br />recognized Union Park's statewide potential, but voted to first study the concept in its <br />Upper Gunnison-Uncompahgre Basin Study of transmountain storage alternatives. <br /> <br />Unfortunately, CWRPDA's harf completed study was abruptly terminated by Colorado's <br />Director of Natural Resourcest without any public explanation or justification~ As a <br />result, the Bureau had to reallocate one million dollars in its FY 1990 budget, that was <br />programmed to help Colorado develop its grow.ing Gunnison Basin runoff losses to <br />California. In spite of this setback, the Bureau did provide valuable cost estimates for <br />Union Park and several other Gunnison transmountain alternatives. State officials <br />have curiously refused to evaluate the Bureau's cost data and available Union Park <br />reconnaissance .studies by Ebasco1 Black and Veatch 1 and WRC Engineering. <br /> <br />8.. Union Park vs Two Forks During the Two Forks EIS1 Corps of Engineers computer <br />studies confirmed that 601000 acre-feet from Union Park could increase the safe annual <br />yield of Denver's existing reservoirs by 111 ,000 acre-feet Union Park's overall water <br />and power benefits for murtiple basins were never quantified. Regrettably, Union Park <br />was subsequently dropped form the Two Forks EIS for unjustified "institutional <br />reasonsu. EPA subsequently vetoed Two Forks, because usuperior alternatives were <br />improperly screened from the detailed environmental studies". Chips Barry (Colorado's <br />Natural Resources Director) and Dave Miller (NECO President) were the onry outsiders <br />invited to the environmental communityJs Two Forks Victory Party. Environmental <br />leaders knew we had key, but different, roles in EPA's veto process. Since Two Forks" <br />Union Park and Colorado's vast untapped Gunnison Basin water losses have been <br />intentionally uoverlooked" by state water officials. . <br /> <br />9. Colorado's "Not one drop Gunnison Policy" After Two ForksJ ColoradoJs Natural <br />Resources Department Directors have quietly implemented an unauthorized, but de <br />facto, "not one drop from the Gunnison policyu. This self-defeating state policy was <br />recently reffected in a telephone carl from a Colorado Water Conservation Board <br />member to a Bureau of Reclamation m~nager, indicating Bureau representatives were <br />not welcome at ewes's Statewide Water Supply Initiative (SWSI) scoping meetings, if <br />they support Gunnison transmountain storage aJternatives. Such covert behavior by a <br />state official is a clear violation of his oath as a governor appointee to protect state <br />water entitlements for all Coloradans. His calf also seriously conflicts with the intent of <br />NEPA, and damages free enterprise rights and innovation efforts~ <br />3 <br />
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