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<br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />, <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br /> <br />THE AsSOCIATED PREss <br /> <br />'Friday,.January 30, .2004 <br /> <br />Colorado wrestles with water problems amid a drought year <br /> <br />By Ben Kieckhefer <br />The Associated Press <br /> <br />NO RTHG LENN, Colo. -- With another year of drought looming, officials charged with <br />Colorado's tight water supply met Thursday to find ways to share the increasingly rare <br />commodity, . . <br />Meeting at the' Colorado Water Congress' annual gathering in this Denver suburb are one- <br />time foes who have been forced to work together to find solutions to the state's water woes. <br />Compounding the below-average snowpack and already low rivers and reservoirs is the fact <br />Colorado voters this fall rejected a statewide referendum authorizing $2 billion in bonds for <br />water projects. <br />The fight over that referendum was expensive and nasty, with many western Colorado <br />fearing the unspecified projects would amount to nothing more than a water grab by the ever- <br />thirsty Front Range, the area east of the Continental Divide. Much of the Front Range water is <br />piped from the western part of the state. <br />'The people of Colorado spoke in Referendum A that you have to give us a proposal that <br />'. <br />works for everybody, not just one side," said T. W right Dickinson, chairman of Club 20, a <br />powerful lobbying group of Western Slope business and government leaders. <br />Now water experts are hoping that by working together they will be able to guide the state <br />through the drought and bring lasting solutions to pressures created by scarce water and the <br />demands from a growing population. <br />How that goal will be accomplished, however, is still open for debate. <br />'We have to build storage," said state agriculture Commissioner. Don Ament. "Granted, <br />Referendum A obviously wasn't the answer, but we have to find a way to store the water <br />Colorado has rights to under all these compacts." <br />Increased storage would provide additional water to the Front Range, ensure farmers and <br />ranchers across the state have the water they need to survive and replenish drying aquifers, <br />Ament said. <br />He said a number of storage projects could start within a year, including several along the <br />South Platte River Basin, which is currently at just 62 percent of average snowpack. <br />Melting snow contributes about 80 percent of the water in the state's rivers, streams, lakes <br />and reservoirs. Eight major C olorado r~ver systems also provide water to 10 Western states. <br />Ament said capturing excess water in the good times would help deal with dry times. <br />"I really feel a need to get going on this," Ament said. "It's just a waste of some precious <br />time." <br />But water storage is just one part of an equation that also includes conservation and <br />developing new sources of water for the areas that are most in need, said Peter Binney, <br />director of utilities in the fast-growing suburb of Aurora. <br />