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<br />... <br /> <br />, (\1 <br />~') <br />,--I <br />..-! <br />;"::-) <br />c::> <br /> <br />the State Assembly established the Rio Grande ,Water Conservation District. <br />The District is a duly constituted entity of local government~ Its board <br />consists of members appointed by the commissioners of, each Colorado county which <br />contributes water to the Rio Grande (except for Costilla County which chose not <br />to participate). Its job is to promote water resource development within the' <br />San ~uis Valley, determine water policy, own water, coordinate legal and <br />engineering matters affecting the San Luis Valley, and assist in developing <br />projects with the Colorado Water Conservation Board and the Federal Government. <br /> <br /> <br />The District is the primary sponsor of the San Luis Valley Project - Closed Basin <br />Division (Closed Basin Project) which the Bureau is now in the process of <br />constructing. <br /> <br />The Bureau's involvement is not in the nature of a program imposed from "above" <br />by the Government. The Bureau acts as an engineering firm providing planning, <br />design, 'and construction expertise for water projects which would be difficult <br />or impossible for the private sector to accomplish by itself. Typically, Bureau <br />projects are sponsored by local organizations (irrigation districts and/or <br />municipalities). Most of the cost of a project is repaid directly to the <br />U.S. Treasury by the sponsors and beneficiaries through a long-term repayment <br />contract. However, Valley residents will not have to repay the costs of <br />building the Closed Basin Project directly. This is because one of the needs to <br />which the Project is a response is to provide water to meet a national <br />obligation (the Treaty with Mexico). <br /> <br />The District is the Project's local sponsor. The Project is a response to the <br />Valley's need to develop a reliable source of water which: (1) can serve to <br />keep the Valley unencumbered by downstream lawsuits and (2) be developed without <br />significantly disturbing the existing local pattern of water use. <br /> <br />The Project (which is described more fully in the following section) is designed <br />to achieve a delivery of about 104,000 acre-feet of water annually. The Project <br />is being builtin stages over the course of the next 10 years. Initialdeliveries <br />will be less than the above amount. Every drop of water delivered to the river <br />will help, however. Each drop will provide' the Valley with that much more <br />maneuvering room to develop a regular valley-wide system of water allocation <br />which is fair, recognizes established historic patterns of use, allows room for <br />growth, and gets the Valley out of the yearly scramble and uncertainty about <br />meeting the Compact. It is important to remember that all the Bureau is respon- <br />sible for is building the Project (subject to the constraints discussed below) <br />and putting the water in the river. What will be done with the water once it <br />gets there and what kind of a Valley-wide system of water allocation might be <br />developed as a result of the Valley having more water to work with are not deci- <br />sions the Bureau is eVen allowed to make. These decisions will be made by the <br />State of Colorado and local San Luis Valley organizations. <br /> <br /> <br />5 <br /> <br />.- <br />