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Water rights may get clearer for kayak parks Page 1 of 2 <br />Published on PoliticsWest ( http: / /www.politicswest.com <br />Water rights may get clearer for kayak parks <br />By: Steve Lipsher, The Denver Post <br />Created 11/29/2007 - 6:23am <br />Kayak parks and other recreational water uses will be considered "more fairly" after political changes <br />on the Colorado Water Conservation Board, state water officials said Wednesday. <br />The appointment this week of a new agency director and the replacement of a board member known for <br />his antipathy toward "non- consumptive uses" marks a turning point in how those proposals will be <br />viewed under Gov. Bill Ritter, according to water officials and advocates. <br />"We're looking to dramatically change our position," Alexandra Davis, assistant water director for the <br />Division of Natural Resources, told the Northwest Colorado Council of Governments' influential Water <br />Quality and Quantity Committee. <br />The recreational water rights — first created by state water courts in 1992 and established in law a <br />decade later are part of the state's seniority -based priority system and require that upstream users <br />allow sufficient amounts of water to flow past. <br />Under recently retired director Rod Kuharich, the 11- member appointed board often opposed proposals <br />for attractions such as kayak parks sought by more than a dozen towns, ranging from Steamboat <br />Springs to Pueblo. <br />"Our sense is the last director burned a lot of bridges on the Western Slope, with the environmental <br />community and with the conservation community," Davis said. <br />Charged with "building those bridges back," Davis said, is Jennifer Gimbel, a water -law expert who <br />was named as the board's new director Tuesday. <br />Geoff Blakeslee, the Yampa River project director for the Nature Conservancy, took the seat formerly <br />held by rancher Tom Sharp, an outspoken critic of setting aside water for recreation rather than <br />traditional uses, such as agriculture and municipal supplies. <br />"I think the board lost a lot of credibility in its almost obstinate opposition to the idea that recreational <br />use is a legitimate use of water," said board chairman John Redifer. <br />Drew Peternell, director of the Colorado Water Project for Trout Unlimited, said the water - conservation <br />board has appeared philosophically reluctant to approve recreational rights in a state where demand <br />exceeds supply. <br />"The CWCB guards very jealously that authority and historically has gone to great lengths to prevent <br />those from being recognized," he said. "My impression is that things are going to be more friendly." <br />Summit County Commissioner Tom Long, a water rights authority and fourth- generation rancher, <br />brushed off the suggestion that recreational uses have gotten short shrift from the old guard, noting that <br />procuring any new water right is difficult. <br />"It does represent a change. I won't deny that," Long said. "But most of the communities over here got <br />(recreational water rights) in spite of the CWCB." <br />http: / /www.politicswest.com/node /14215 /print 11/30/2007 <br />