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<br />..' <br /> <br />001101 <br /> <br />The Radesevich and Rutz report, cited extensively above, provides a concise <br />summary ef the tangle ef conflicting interests Which cenfeund'the water <br />situatien in the Valley and also explains the Rio Grande Compact abeut as <br />clearly as that complex decument can be explained. These who are interested in <br />these complicated subjects are referred to that report. <br /> <br />Without intending to oversimplify the San Luis Valley's water situatien, it is <br />not an uncemmon sort of problem. A critical resource (water) is available in <br />limited supply. It is in every individual's interest to secure as much of that <br />valuable resource as he can fer himself. Thus, it follows that it is in no <br />individual's interest to restrain his demands. The small centribution they can <br />make will not be noticed or weuld be consumed by their neighbers in any case. <br />As every individual maximizes use of the resource, a critical strain is put on <br />it, often to everyone's loss. <br /> <br />After a long series of dry years near the end of the 19th century, farmers along <br />the entire length of the Rio Grande Valley found that the river Which had ade- <br />quately met their needs for centuries no longer provided enough water. They <br />looked north to the river's San Luis Valley headwaters. They saw the valley- <br />wide system of irrigation canals which industrieus Celorado pioneers had just <br />cempleted. They cemplained (not without justice). The complaints of the <br />'.' Republic of Mexico. were the first to receive attention. In 1896, the Department <br />of the Interior stopped granting rights-of~way acress Federal lands for the <br />construction of reservoirs. In 1906, a treaty providing for the delivery of <br />60,000 acre-feet per year of Rio Grande water to the Republic of Mexico was <br />signed. A major reason for the 1916 construction of Elephant Butte Reservoir in <br />New Mexico was so that this commitment could be met. <br /> <br />_ The Federal Government's injunction on right-of-way grants was a response to. a <br />__ problem with international ramifications Which ,could not be solved very quickly <br />.~ (if at all) on the local level. The injunction, When combined with threatened <br />,~lawsuits from downstream water users, hampered, the development of reservoirs <br />needed to serve the San Luis Valley. In spite of this, the Valley managed to <br />privately fund and construct five reservoirs between 1910 and 1913 (Rio Grande/ <br />Farmer's Union, Santa Maria, Centinental, La Jara, and Terrace Reservoirs). <br />During the same general period, eight major irrigation drains were constructed to <br />reclaim seme 90,000 acres ef land which were being ruined by becoming waterlogged. <br />Similar attempts were made to save the east central Valley but this proved <br />beyond the means of the private sector. Continued diversion of irrigation water <br />into this area turned much of the soil into adobe and caused alkalai to build up <br />on the surface. Agriculture in the Valley has moved centinually west since <br />then. Thousands of acres which were once hailed as the best Wheatland in <br />Colorado and perhaps the world, became a barren salt waste. <br /> <br />Discussions between the States of Texas, New Mexico, <br />of their respective Rio Grande water rights began in <br />century. A temporary compact was agreed to. in 1928. <br />ratified by the States' legislatures in 1939. <br /> <br />and Colorado on the subject <br />the early part ef the <br />The fermal Compact was <br /> <br />2 <br /> <br />