My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
South Platte - Lower South Platte Wetland Initiative Water Activity Summary Sheet
CWCB
>
WSRF Grant & Loan Information
>
Backfile
>
South Platte - Lower South Platte Wetland Initiative Water Activity Summary Sheet
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/28/2009 2:57:10 PM
Creation date
9/11/2007 1:13:58 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
WSRA Grant and Loan Information
Basin Roundtable
South Platte
Applicant
Ducks Unlimited, Inc.
Description
Lower South Platte Wetland Initiative Phase I
Account Source
Statewide
Board Meeting Date
9/19/2007
Contract/PO #
C150415
WSRA - Doc Type
Water Activity Summary Sheet - CWCB Evaluation/Approval Documents
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
4
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
<br />Water Supply Reserve Account – Grant and Loan Program <br />Water Activity Summary Sheet <br /> <br /> <br />Applicant: <br />Ducks Unlimited, Inc. <br />Water Activity Name: <br /> Lower South Platte Wetland Initiative Phase I <br />Water Activity Purpose: <br /> Feasibility Studies, technical assistance and structural/consumptive project <br />County: <br /> Sedgwick, Morgan and Logan <br />Drainage Basin: <br /> South Platte River <br />Water Source: <br /> South Platte River <br />Amount Requested: <br /> $278,476 (Statewide Account) <br />Matching Funds: <br />Yes, $500,255 <br /> <br />Water Activity Summary: <br />The objective of this project is to develop several wetland recharge projects along the lower South Platte <br />River in Morgan, Logan and Sedgwick Counties. The concept is to divert water into wetlands in the winter <br />months when it is legal available and allow the water to infiltrate into the alluvial aquifer and eventually <br />back to the river channel. Detailed analyses and modelling have been performed to assure that recharge <br />water returns to the river at the predicted time. Through these wetland recharge projects, less senior water <br />rights can operate out of priority without causing injury to senior right holders. River management under <br />this type of system has permitted several junior water rights holders to continue operating legally. Recharge <br />projects as part of a program to augment South Platte River flows through the alluvial aquifer have become a <br />widely accepted and dependable technique for meeting the demands of water users along the river. Without <br />river augmentation municipal, industrial, and agricultural operations would be severely and negatively <br />impacted. Aside from retiming the legal available flows in the river, these wetland recharge projects provide <br />significant benefit to migrating and wintering birds. The lower South Platte is an import flyway for <br />migratory birds and waterfowl. Recent studies conducted by the Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory <br />(RMBO) and the CDOW demonstrate that recharge wetlands are vital to migratory and winteringt birds on <br />the South Platte River, as more than 20 species of migratory birds and 27 species of waterfowl of national <br />importance depend on these. These wetlands will be utilized for waterfowl hunting which contributes <br />significantly to the local economies. <br /> <br />Early in Duck Unlimited’s (DU) program efforts, they joined Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District <br />(NCWCD), Lower South Platte Water Conservancy District (LSPWCD), and South Platte Wetlands Focus <br />Area (SPLRG) to develop the Tamarack Recharge Project. This project is the centerpiece of Colorado’s <br />contribution to the Platte River Recovery Program (PRRP). Seven years after initiating preliminary work on <br />the Tamarack Ranch recharge activities, the PRRP was signed by all three states and the federal government, <br />making Tamarack a much needed project. But, it is only part of the solution. Much more work is needed to <br />build the required capacity to meet the 10,000 acre feet/year first increment goal for Colorado. For Morgan, <br />Logan and Sedwick and Washington Counties, SWSI identified a shortfall of 8,000 acre-feet of water for <br />M&I uses for 2030 assuming that 8,900 acre-feet developed through the Identified Projects and Processes <br />(IPPs). <br /> <br />For the purposes of this application DU chose three landowners on three tracts of land that would best <br />demonstrate the power of collaboration and the ability for partnerships to meet the goals and objectives of <br /> 1 <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.