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<br />Never-built reservoirs could have captured runoff <br /> <br />Page 1 of2 <br /> <br />000111 <br /> <br />azcentral.com <br /> <br />ill, <br /> <br />Email this article <br />Print this article <br />Most popular pages <br /> <br />Click to send <br />Click to print <br />Today I This Week <br /> <br />Never-built reservoirs could have <br />captured runoff <br /> <br />Shaun McKinnon <br />The Arizona Republic <br />Jan. 4, 2005 12:00 AM <br /> <br />Some of the storm runoff flowing down the Salt River this week will seep into the <br />ground, filling aquifers with water that can be pumped out later, but much of it will <br />wind up at a federal flood control project near Gila Bend, beyond the reach of Valley <br />homes and businesses. <br /> <br />The flow will likely continue for weeks and, if the wet weather patterns settle in <br />through the winter, for months, as the Salt River Project works to protect its swollen <br />Verde River reservoirs and make room for potential snowmelt in the spring. <br /> <br />Water is already beginning to collect behind Painted Rock Dam south of Phoenix, <br />where it will stay and either sink into the ground, evaporate or continue down the <br />Gila River toward Yuma. The SRP was forced to release water into the normally dry <br />Salt River last week after a powerful Pacific storm filled Horseshoe and Bartlett <br />reservoirs. <br /> <br />SRP officials say they would prefer not to lose water, especially after nine years of <br />drought conditions, but they simply ran out of room to store water, limited by the size <br />and location of their reservoirs. <br /> <br />Two never-built reservoirs on the lower Verde could have captured the storm runoff, <br />storing for future use the billions of gallons of water now flowing down the Salt, but <br />public opposition killed the proposed reservoirs in the 1970s and 1980s. <br /> <br />That left the Verde with so little storage capacity that the two reservoirs that were <br />built, Horseshoe and Bartlett, fill quickly and leave the SRP with no alternative than <br />spilling water down the normally dry Salt River. <br /> <br />"We wouldn't want to release water we could potentially store," said Charlie Ester, <br />the SRP's water resource operations manager. "We're certainly doing this with <br />utmost caution with regard to our water supply. There's simply more water coming <br />into our reservoirs than we can store." <br /> <br />The SRP maintained a steady release of water Monday from the Granite Reef <br />diversion dam on the Valley's far east side. With more storms lined up off the Pacific <br />Coast, Ester said the Salt will flow with excess runoff through this week and into <br />next. <br /> <br />Water is flowing through Tempe Town Lake at about 17,000 cubic feet per second, <br />Tempe spokeswoman Kris Baxter said. At that rate, the lake will be emptying and <br />refilling roughly every three hours. <br /> <br />Ester said the storms pushing through Arizona this week could produce more runoff <br />on the Salt River watershed, which would be good news. Roosevelt Lake, the <br />uppermost reservoir on the Salt, is only about 33 percent full and could hold more <br />than 1 million acre-feet of water. <br /> <br />The two Verde River reservoirs hold only 287,000 acre-feet combined, which is why <br />water is being lost down the lower Salt this week. An acre-foot is 325,851 gallons, <br /> <br />http://www . azcentra1.comlphp-binl clicktracklprint. php ?referer=http://www.azcentra1.coml...1/24/2005 <br />