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<br />/ <br />/ <br /> <br />/ <br /> <br />I. SUMMARY <br /> <br />This USDA salinity control study was carried out under Public Law <br />93-320, the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act (88 Stat. 266), dated <br />June 24, 1974. Section 201(c) of the Act directs the Secretary of the <br />Interior, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, and the <br />Secretary of Agriculture to cooperate and coordinate their activities <br />effectively to carry out objectives of Title II of the Act as the basin <br />states continue developing their compact apportioned water. The Me Elmo <br />Creek Unit, known locally as the Montezuma Valley, is one of five diffuse <br />source control units designated in the Act for expeditious completion of a <br />planning report as a means to implement the salinity control policy adopted <br />for the Colorado River. <br /> <br />The USDA has two primary purposes in the McElmo Creek study: <br />determine the contribution of salt loading from the irrigated farm <br />(2) to determine the opportunity for reducing salt loading through <br />improvements in irrigation systems and practices. <br /> <br />(I) to <br />land; and <br /> <br />The scope of the study was limited to inventorying and analyzing <br />current irrigation systems and practices on a sample of the irrigated land <br />and off-farm group ditch. Results of these analyses were expanded to be <br />representative of the approximately 29,100 acres of irrigated land and about <br />235 miles of off-farm group ditchs in the Montezuma Valley. Canals in the <br />Montezuma Valley Irrigation (MVI) Company's distribution system are being <br />evaluated by the Bureau of Reclamation and were not studied by USDA. <br />Results of investigations were discussed at joint meetings throughout the <br />study where areas of common concern were identified and issues were <br />resolved. <br /> <br />Coordination of study activities leading to analysis of the salt <br />loading problem in the McElmo Creek Unit was accomplished through a <br />Multi-Objective Planning Team under leadership of the Bureau of Reclamation. <br />Participants in this team effort included personnel from the Bureau of <br />Reclamation, Soil Conservation Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. <br />Geological Survey, Colorado Division of Wildlife, Colorado Water <br />Conservation Board, Colorado Department of Health and the Dolores Soil <br />Conservation District. <br /> <br />The McElmo Creek contributes about 115,000 tons of salt annually to the <br />Colorado River. About 54,000 (present condition) tons are attributed to the <br />onfarm portion of current irrigated agriculture. Additional water from the <br />Dolores Project will increase thia salt loading to about 60,000 tons (future <br />without condition). Most of the salt is leached from the soil and <br />underlying Mancos shale and carried to the river by deep percolation from <br />irrigation and by seepage from unlined earthen ditches. <br /> <br />Improved management of irrigation water, including devices for measur- <br />ing water onto the fields and lining or piping onfarm and off-farm group <br />ditches, and/or sprinklers has the potential for reducing the river's salt <br />load by as much as 38,000 tons, reducing salinity concentration of the <br />Colorado River at Imperial Dam by 3.9 milligrams per liter. These impacts <br />are based on the assumption that improvements will be made on about 70 per- <br />cent of the irril'tated area. 0 r ...... 47 <br />I-I 1~",,1 <br />