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<br />Water Project Construction Program - Project Data <br /> <br />Applicant: Colorado Water Conservation Board and Division of Water Resources <br />Project Name: CWCB Gaging program for Project Type: Stream Gaging <br />monitoring and data collection projects and the <br />DWR Satellite Linked Monitoring System <br />County: Statewide Drainage Basin: Water Source: N/A <br /> Statewide Drainage Basins <br />Total Study Cost: $563,000 Funding Sources: CWCB <br />CWCB Investment: Interest Rate: N/A Term: N/A <br />$563,000 <br /> <br />This project entails the development and implementation of a statewide gaging program to <br />address the gaging needs ofthe Colorado Water Conservation Board and the Division of Water <br />Resources (DWR). <br /> <br />As the state's water planning agency, the CWCB relies upon gages operated by the DWR, <br />United States Geological Survey (USGS) and private entities in order to meet the needs of its <br />mission critical program areas including Compact Protection, Decision Support System <br />Development, Floodplain Management and Stream and Lake Protection. However, CWCB <br />gaging needs are often different from those of the DWR and USGS. Although many existing <br />gages provide needed data, the DWR's mission is to administer the state's water rights, while the <br />USGS collects data for long-term scientific record purposes. As a result, stream gages are not <br />always located where the CWCB needs them, nor are they necessarily designed to fit CWCB <br />data collection parameters. This project will enable the CWCB to strengthen its cooperative <br />efforts with the DWR and USGS to expand, refurbish, redesign and create new gages as well as <br />develop new strategies to obtain data that will not only benefit the CWCB but statewide <br />stakeholder interests. Of the $563,000 requested, $210,000 will be utilized this year for the <br />implementation of specific CWCB gaging projects including new gaging methodology <br />development, low flow monitoring, regional regression GIS model for synthetic hydrology, the <br />development of new gages and refurbishment of existing gages. Another $50,000 will be used to <br />continue the joint CWCB/DWR flood-hardening program. <br /> <br />A key component of this program is the continued, long-term operational viability of the State <br />Satellite Linked Monitoring System, which is administered by the Division of Water Resources. <br />This system, which is comprised of over 300 satellite-gaging stations, requires continued <br />renovation of existing gages, replacement of outdated data collection platforms and upgrades to <br />transmission components. In addition, many existing gaging stations need to be modified to <br />provide critical stream flow data for flood warning and low flow monitoring. Changes in <br />tecImology, which will ultimately increase reliability and real time data transmission rates will <br />require the DWR to upgrade the system over a 1 O-year period. The costs associated with the <br />continued refurbishment and operational viability ofthe system is currently estimated at <br />approximately $303,000 per year. <br />