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A modern approach ` <br />to old water disputes <br />he Colorado Water Conserva- <br />tion Board — the last redoubt <br />of the state's traditional "wa- <br />ter buffaloes" - may be moving to <br />embrace list century economic and <br />environmental values. . <br />Gov. Bill Ritter named Jennifer <br />Gimbel as the board's new director <br />Tuesday. She served io years in the <br />water and natural resources sections <br />of the Colorado Attorney General's <br />office before joining the U.S. Bureau <br />of Reclamation in 20oi. Gimbel is ex- <br />pected to be more open to recreation- <br />al water uses than the man she re- <br />places, recently retired director Rod <br />Kuharich, who often led the board in <br />opposing proposals for recreational <br />uses such as kayak parks. Another <br />board member who scoffed at recre- <br />ational uses, rancher Tom Sharp, has <br />been replaced by Geoff Blakeslee, <br />the Yampa River project director for <br />The Nature Conservancy. <br />Water use in Colorado rests on the <br />rule, "First in time, first in right." <br />Essentially, the first person to put <br />river water to `beneficial use" gains <br />the perpetual right to use that water <br />before later claimants. In times of <br />shortage, such "senior" water users <br />are allowed to use all their allot- <br />ments while "junior" users get none. <br />That rule won't change but the <br />definition of "beneficial use" has <br />been evolving. Originally, it meant to <br />use the water up by irrigating an al- <br />falfa field or a suburban lawn. When <br />environmentalists began saying that <br />minimum stream flows that protect- <br />ed fish and wildlife were themselves <br />a beneficial use, the water, buffaloes <br />only harrumphed. Then tourist <br />towns learned they could prosper by <br />luring fishermen, rafters, and other <br />recreational users to vibrant streams. <br />That discovery pitted new economic <br />interests against traditional users <br />and recreational and environmental <br />values are now recognized by law. <br />Kayakers and anglers don't con- <br />sume the water they enjoy, so the <br />conflict between uses can sometimes <br />be resolved by regulating when and <br />how water is released before its final <br />consumption. The fact that the Wa- <br />ter Conservation Board may make <br />more sophisticated tradeoffs of our <br />liquid gold's uses bodes well for our <br />economy and environment alike. <br />The members of The Post editorial.board are William Dean <br />DENVER <br />Ken <br />Singleton, chairman and publisher; Dan Haley, editorial <br />Chi( <br />page editor; Bob.Ewegen, deputy editorial page editor; <br />NEWSPAPER <br />tior <br />Alicia. Caldwell and Julia Martinez, editorial writers; <br />AGENCY LLP <br />Gre <br />Mike Keefe, cartoonist; Barbara Ellis, news editor; and <br />nio <br />Cohen Peart, letters editor. <br />established 2001 <br />ngr <br />