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<br />3/z<.o1 FI <br /> <br />i- <br />W <br />o <br />-.J <br /> <br />SYNOPOSIS OF TITLE I OF THE COLORADO <br />RIVER BASIN SALINITY CONTROL ACT <br /> <br />Title I of the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act was <br />designed to include the necessary features for compliance with <br />the United States ohligation to Mexico under Minute No. 2~2 of <br />the International Boundary and Water Commission. The main <br />features authorized under Title I include a 129 million gallon <br />per day (mgd) desalting plant near Yuma, Arizona, a brine dis- <br />charge canal, lining of the Coachella Canal, acreage retirement <br />and irrigation efficiency improvement programs in the Wellton- <br />Mohawk Irrigation and Drainage District, and development of a <br />well field along the international boundary. A map showing the <br />relative locations of the major features is shown on Figure I. <br />In addition to the main features above, Title I authorized a <br />feasibility study for replacement water from the desalting <br />plant's reject stream and the acquisition of additional lands <br />above Painted Rock Reservoir to permit operatIon of the dam and <br />reservoir in times of serious flooding in accordance with the <br />obligations of the United States under MInute No. 2~2. <br /> <br />Subsequent to the enactment of this Act, a sIzing study for <br />the Yuma Desalting Plant was undertaken. ThIs study was com- <br />pleted in 1977 and recommended that the plant size be revised <br />from the 129 mgd to 96 mgd. This lower capacity would comply 85 <br />percent of the time with the salinity requirements spelied out In <br />Minute No. 242. This requirement states that the water delIvered <br />to Mexico above Morelas Dam must not have an annual average <br />salinity concentration of no more than 115 parts per mIllion <br />(ppm) + 30ppm over the annual average salinIty of Colorado River <br />waters-which arrive at Imperial Dam. The compliance rate varies <br />not only with the salinity levels at Imperial Dam, but also with <br />the quantity of return flow from the Wellton-Mohawk District. <br />The flow at the time of the study was 173,000 acre-feet, but was <br />projected to decrease to 167,000 acre-feet by 1981, with further <br />decreases expected. The plant was sized based on the lower value <br />with a return flow salinity concentration of about 3200 ppm. <br />With all of the above factors taken into account, it was esti- <br />mated that the amount of reject water would average about 46,000 <br />acre-feet on an annual basis. Some of the initial work has been <br />awarded, but the plant is not expected to be operational until <br />1986. <br /> <br />In order to handie the above-mentioned reject and excess <br />drainage waters, a bypass drain was authorized from Morclas Dam <br />to the Santa Clara Slough In the Gulf of California. The canal <br />is approximateiy 51 mIles in length and has a capacity of about <br />350 cubic feet per second (cfs). The canal was completed in July <br />of 1977. <br />