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<br />Las Vegas SUN: Talks dry up at water meeting, leaving Norton to decide on Lake Mead s... Page 1 of2 <br />.~~ e e <br /> <br />Return to the referring page. <br /> <br />Las Vegas SUN <br /> <br />April 27, 2005 <br /> <br />Talks dry up at water meeting, leaving Norton to <br />decide on Lake Mead supply <br /> <br />By Jeff Donaldson <br />LAS VEGAS SUN <br /> <br />A key decision about Southern Nevada's water supply now rests entirely in the hands of a federal official <br />because a work group from lower and upper Colorado River basin states on Tuesday was unable to end <br />an impasse over how much water Lake Mead should get. <br /> <br />The upper basin states of Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming want to reduce the amount of <br />water released this year from Lake Powell into Lake Mead, which serves the lower basin states of <br />California, Arizona and Nevada. The 2005 Colorado River Annual Operating Plan calls for 8.23 million <br />acre-feet of water from Lake Powell. <br /> <br />Officials from the upper basin states say recent heavy rains and snowfalls have benefited from the lower <br />basin lake more, raising the level of Lake Mead to 60 percent of its capacity. Lake Powell sits at 34 <br />percent. <br /> <br />Tuesday's meeting was the last of two consultation sessions the Interior Department scheduled between <br />the states and federal representatives with the hope of reaching a unified recommendation on how much <br />water to release from Powell. Without a consensus, Interior Secretary Gale Norton is expected to set the <br />amount later this week. <br /> <br />"Everything will come into play" including the financial impact a reduction in the water amount would <br />have on each region, Interior Department spokesman Robert Walsh said. <br /> <br />Walsh and other Interior Department officials sidestepped questions about which way Norton is leaning <br />on the matter, but insisted Norton has followed the Colorado River basin water issue closely. <br /> <br />Norton has not requested specific feedback on the various proposals, Walsh said. <br /> <br />Upper basin states say the loss of water may require power companies to raise rates and could lead to as <br />much as $10 million in lost utility revenue for their region. Lower basin states worry that ongoing <br />drought conditions and their commitments to provide water to Mexico will limit the amount of water <br />available for local residents. <br /> <br />Bureau of Reclamation officials have looked at three different proposals, including reducing the amount <br />of water from Lake Powell to 8.03 million acre-feet and 7.73 million acre-feet. One acre-foot is about <br />326,000 gallons -- 100,000 acre-feet represents about a one-foot difference in the lake level. <br /> <br />http;/ /www.lasvegassun.comlsunbin/stories/text/2005/apr/27 /518669404.html <br /> <br />4/28/2005 <br /> <br /> <br />Officials from the lower basin states argued that relatively high flows into Lake Mead and "average" <br />