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Last modified
7/14/2009 5:02:36 PM
Creation date
5/22/2009 5:55:07 PM
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UCREFRP
UCREFRP Catalog Number
9567
Author
Colorado River Water Conservation District.
Title
River of Shortages
USFW Year
2006.
USFW - Doc Type
Drought, Demand and Consensus on the Colorado River - 2006 Colorado River District Annual Water Seminar.
Copyright Material
NO
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DRAFT <br />286 U.S. 494 (1922). See Hinderlider v. La Plata River & Cherry Creek <br />Ditch Co., 304 U.S. 92 (1938). In signing this Agreement, the State Engineer <br />intends that this Agreement be mutually and equally binding between the <br />Parties. <br />B. Back round <br />1. Federal law and practice (including Section 602(b) of the 1968 Colorado River <br />Basin Project Act, 43 U.S.C. § 1552(b), and the Criteria for Coordinated Long-Range <br />Operation of Colorado River Reservoirs Pursuant to the Colorado River Basin Project <br />Act), contemplate that in the operation of Lakes Powell and Mead, the Secretary of the <br />Interior consults with the States through Governors' Representatives, who represent the <br />Governors and their respective States. Through this law and practice, the Governors' <br />Representatives have in the past reached agreements among themselves and with the <br />Secretary on various aspects of Colorado River reservoir operation. This Agreement is <br />entered into in furtherance of this law and practice. <br />2. On January 16, 2001, the Secretary adopted Colorado River Interim Surplus <br />Guidelines (ISG) based on an alternative prepared by the Colorado River Basin States, <br />for the purposes of determining annually the conditions under which the Secretary would <br />declare the availability of surplus water for use within the states of Arizona, California <br />and Nevada in accordance with and under the authority of the Boulder Canyon Project <br />Act of 1928 (45 Stat. 1057) and the Decree of the United States Supreme Court in <br />Arizona v. California, 376 U.S. 340 (1964). The ISG are effective through calendar year <br />2015 (through preparation of the 2016 Annual Operating Plan). <br />3. In the years following the adoption of the ISG, drought conditions in the <br />Colorado River Basin caused a significant reduction in storage levels in Lakes Powell <br />and Mead, and precipitated discussions by and among the Parties, and between the <br />Parties and the United States through the Department of the Interior and the Bureau of <br />Reclamation. The Parties recognize that the Upper Division States have not yet <br />developed their full apportionment under the Colorado River Compact. Although the <br />Secretary has not imposed any shortage in the Lower Basin, the Parties also recognize <br />that with additional Upper Basin development and in drought conditions, the Lower <br />Division States may be required to suffer shortages in deliveries of water from Lake <br />Mead. Therefore, these discussions focused on ways to improve the management of <br />water in Lakes Powell and Mead so as to enhance the protection afforded to the Upper <br />Basin by Lake Powell, and to delay the onset and minimize the extent and duration of <br />shortages in the Lower Basin. <br />4. Shortages in the Lower Basin will also trigger shortages in the delivery of <br />water to Mexico pursuant to the Mexican Water Treaty of 1944, February 3, 1944, U.S.- <br />Mex., 59 Stat. 1219, T.S. 994,3 U.N.T.S. 313. <br />4
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