TOP: Outlet tubes at Glen Canyon Dam send water out of Lake Powell and down the Colorado River. (U.S. Geological Survey Photo)
MIDDLE: Lingering drought and demand from growing cities have lowered water
levels on Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam. The U.S. Interior Department
could declare a shortage on the Colorado River as early as 2017. (U.S.
Geological Survey Photo)
BOTTOM: The Central Arizona Project aqueduct traverses the desert west of
Phoenix. Some officials say reduced supplies projected for the Colorado
River watershed could require an even greater public works project to
bring in desalinated ocean water. (U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Photo)
(Gazette Blog Editor's note: Again we ask: How can Payson Mayor Kenny Evans and his rubber stamp town council guarantee a 50-year supply of potable water to a private golf course?)
By BRITTANY ELENA MORRIS
Cronkite News Service
PHOENIX – Residents of the Sun Corridor stretching through the Valley
and Tucson turn on faucets, water lawns and fill swimming pools without
any doubt that the state’s most precious resource will always be there.
More than a century of planning has brought Arizona to this point,
starting with the Salt River Project and decades of arduous negotiations
that led to a supply of Colorado River water. So have the landmark
Groundwater Management Act of 1980 and a system of banking some of the
state’s Colorado River allotment in aquifers.
While all of it gives Arizona flexibility in the near term, many
conversations these days focus on the long term as two decades of
drought grips the Southwest and the Colorado River’s watershed.
In January, an Arizona Department of
Water Resources report pointed to the potential for a long-term
imbalance between available water and demands over the next century. It
said that Arizona will need to develop additional water supplies over
the next 25 to 100 years to keep pace with growth.
Former Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon said last year that to avoid a
future water crisis Arizona should partner with Mexico now to establish
desalination plants that would bring water north.
If the Colorado River’s flow continues to suffer, the U.S. Department
of the Interior could declare a shortage as early as 2017. Under the
agreement that established the CAP, Arizona’s rights to the Colorado
would take a hit before California loses a drop, triggering conservation
steps that include reducing delivery to irrigated farms that use the
majority of Arizona’s water supply.
But is Arizona ready for the conversations and hard decisions needed to address a long-term water shortage?
A 2011 report by Arizona State University’s Morrison Institute for
Public Policy said policymakers have avoided the topic because of the
fear that it could create negative perceptions that could hinder growth.
It said that water officials sidestep such conversations by simply
noting that they are prepared for crises.
Pamela Pickard, president of the Central Arizona Project’s board of
directors, said water is a contentious public policy issue and not one
that people will compromise on lightly, in part because proposed
long-term solutions involve costs that policymakers must weigh.
“They always say, ‘Whiskey is for drinking and water is for fighting,’” she said, citing a phrase attributed to Mark Twain.
Former U.S. Sen. Jon Kyl, whose quarter century in Washington
included shepherding landmark legislation on water rights, said the key
at this point is having conversations involving all affected groups,
including farmers and the general public.
“Arizona is the No. 1 state when it comes to water issues,” Kyl said.
“We need a long-term water dialogue in Arizona so people don’t feel
like water will be taken away from them.”
Kyl is teaming with U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., to spend the next
year promoting conversations about Arizona’s water future and exploring
ways to supplement its water supply.
“Now it’s time, where we are really at a point where we need to look
again at a new generation of leaders to do what people in the past have
done,” Flake said. “This matters politically.”
Dan Hunting, a senior policy analyst at ASU’s Morrison Institute for
Public Policy, said a shortage shouldn’t come as a surprise to water
officials in the state.
“What’s characteristic about Arizona’s water supply is that it’s
predictably unpredictable,” he added. “It was always a matter of when,
not if, we experience a shortage.”
Hunting said the farming community, as such a large user of water, needs to be more involved in the conversation.
“They feel like everyone is pointing to them and are not enticed to join the conversation,” he said.
House Speaker Andy Tobin, R-Paulden, said conservation needs to be
part of conversations about Arizona’s water future. He noted that
schools and community centers have added programs to help children and
adults understand the importance of using water wisely, while the use of
reclaimed water has increased at golf courses and parks around the
state.
“Any number of things could make a difference,” he said.
Tobin said Arizona can build on that by involving more people in discussions about the state’s water future.
“We need to have more conversations right now,” he said.
Doug Dunham, special assistant to the Arizona Department of Water
Resources’ director, said education and conservation have taken the
state a long way but aren’t the long-term solution.
“We’ve taken all the big bites out of that apple,” he said.
Dunham said officials should be working with Mexico and California on ways to import desalinated seawater.
“The most drought-proof solution is ocean desalination because sooner or later we have to tackle the big issues,” he said.
CAP spokesman Bob Barrett agreed that the most drought-proof solution
is to build an ocean desalination plant in or near Arizona, noting that
such an agreement may require more than 20 years of discussions.
“The technology is there, but it’s expensive,” Barrett said. “I say
to the Legislature: You’re going to have to pony up and pay for the
costs of treating water. There is no alternative.”
The Morrison Institute’s Hunting said politicians can come to grips
with the price of a desalination plant if they know the facts.
“What we need right now is a deeper understanding by policymakers
about what our situation is,” he said. “I want someone who will look at
the complex solutions, not the short easy ones.”
Pickard, the CAP board president, said this election year will test
which politicians are ready to make Arizona’s water future a priority.
“When Arizonans can unquestionably turn on the tap and get water
without question, we’re doing our job,” she said. “We don’t want our
customers to have to think about whether there will be water or not.”
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