Title: Lessons from Western Water Adjudication
1Lessons from Western Water AdjudicationApplicat
ion Ogallala Aquifer
- Professor Barbara Cosens
- University of Idaho College of Law and Water of
the West - Professor Burke Griggs
- Bill Lane Center for the American West, Stanford
2Lessons
- General lessons
- Managing complex litigation
- Tailoring evidentiary standards
- Developing technology for water management
- The importance of dialogue
- Cost and finality
- Application
- Threshold Question for application to new
problems is adjudication the answer? - The problem of legal diversity
3Managing Complex Litigation
Montana Water Court Basins
Idaho SRBA Basins
4Tailoring Evidentiary Standards
5Developing Technology for Water Management
6Legal Land Description
- SE ½, SE, Sec 1, T19N, R20W
7Overlay Color Photography
8Irrigation Ditches and Turnouts
9Irrigated fields
10Select field and turnout
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12The Importance of Dialogue
13But Cost and Finality
14Is Adjudication the Answer?
15Ogallala AquiferWater Volume Lake Huron
Blue unconsolidated sand Yellow consolidated
sand Gray gravels of glacial origin USGS
16The High Plains-Ogallala Aquifer
- Area 174,000 sq. miles
- Average Saturated Thickness 190 feet (highly
variable, from 51 in NM to 342 in NE) - Water Level Change, predevelopment to 2011 -14
(highly variable, with TX (-39) and KS (-24)
the worst) - Effectively non-renewable
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18The Problem of Legal Diversity
- Defining the Nature of the Right
- Colorado Designated Groundwater
- Nebraska, Oklahoma Correlative Rights for
Groundwater - Texas Rule of Capture (on steroids overlying
surface owner has a right to the corpus) - Wyoming, New Mexico, Idaho, Kansas, South Dakota
integrated legal regimes, with wide variations in
legal and hydrological results - Interstate and Tribal Groundwater
- The Federal Role in Groundwater Adjudications