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Last modified
7/14/2009 5:02:36 PM
Creation date
5/22/2009 6:17:51 PM
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UCREFRP
UCREFRP Catalog Number
9570
Author
U.S. Department of the Interior.
Title
Preliminary Analysis
USFW Year
2000.
USFW - Doc Type
Wayne N. Aspinall Unit Operations and the Federal Water Right Claim, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park.
Copyright Material
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drainage area is roughly 8,000 square miles; average annual flows are approximately 2,600 cfs, <br />and extremes ranged from 106 cfs to over 35,000 cfs prior to the Unit. <br /> <br />Water Rights <br />Gunnison River Basin water use began in the 19th century with the establishment of numerous <br />irrigation water rights by individuals, organizations, and government agencies. There are more <br />than 5,000 water rights for direct flow diversions presently in use on the river and its tributaries <br />for irrigation, recreation, and municipal and industrial uses. The adjudication dates for these <br />rights are varied, with many rights junior to the National Park reserved right. <br />Significant senior diversion rights established prior to 1910 include the Gunnison Tunnel of the <br />Uncompahgre Project (1,300 cfs) and the Redlands Diversion (750 cfs), located on the Lower <br />Gunnison River 2 miles upstream from the Colorado River confluence. The Federal reserved <br />right for the National Park (1933) that is senior to the Unit's water rights (1957) is currently <br />unquantified. <br />In addition to water rights for direct diversions and instream flows, there are significant storage <br />rights in place on the Gunnison River. The largest single perfected storage right is for the <br />952,000 acre-foot decree for Blue Mesa Reservoir. There are also numerous small reservoirs and <br />several larger Reclamation project reservoirs on tributaries with storage rights: Taylor Park <br />Reservoir on the Taylor River, Silver Jack Reservoir on Cimarron Creek, Crawford Reservoir on <br />the Smith Fork, Paonia Reservoir on the North Fork, and Ridgway Reservoir on the <br />Uncompahgre. The storage rights for all of these projects are junior to the National Park <br />reserved right; Taylor Park and Silver Jack are upstream from the National Park. <br />Because of the relative senior date of the unquantified National Park water right, there is the <br />potential for significant conflicts with private and public water uses for irrigation, recreation, <br />hydropower, municipal uses, and fish and wildlife uses, including those of the Aspinall Unit, that <br />have been established since 1933. The State of Colorado also is concerned that the state's ability <br />to use their Compact apportionment not be detrimentally affected by the reserved right or other <br />Federal actions. <br />Reservoir Operations <br />Reclamation operates the Unit within certain sideboards including annual hydrologic conditions <br />(snowpack levels and runoff patterns), senior water rights, minimum flow water rights, power <br />plant and outlet capacities, reservoir elevation goals, fishery management recommendations, and <br />others. Certain sideboards can be considered mandates such as meeting senior water rights and <br />flood control, while others such as reservoir elevation criteria to reduce landslides are given a <br />high priority. Within these sideboards there is flexibility in planning operations. Since 1993, <br />Reclamation has held meetings three times a year with affected individuals and federal, <br />state, local, and private organizations to gather input for the annual operation plan. This <br />coordination has been successful in educating participants about each other's resource needs and <br />Unit purposes. <br />A-4
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