Title: Federal Reserved Water Rights in Utah
1Federal Reserved Water Rights in Utah
- And, some thoughts on Management of the Colorado
River and Protection of Flow for Endangered Fishes
Norman K. Johnson 2011 Utah Water Users
Workshop March 15-16, 2001 The Dixie Center, St.
George, Utah
2J. Golden Kimball
- Lets not get Out of Order!
3Western Water LawOrigin and History
- In the arid West areas of water use were often
located far from sources of supply - Miners built diversions and moved
- water
- Their first in time/first in right
- mining principles carried over to
- water rights
- The doctrine of prior appropriation of water
was - was born (mid to late 1800s)
4Western Water LawOrigin and History
- The federal government supported growth and
development of this new water law - 1866 Mining Act 1877 Desert Land Act
- The U.S. Supreme Court said these acts severed
the land and water estates and directed that
water rights be obtained under the laws of the
territories and states
5Western Water LawOrigin and History
- Appropriative water rights became
constitutionally protected property rights - Their basis is the beneficial use of water
- They are defined by quantity, time, and nature of
use and can be lost by non-use - Priority date is when beneficial use began
- They are transferable
6Reserved Rights DoctrineOrigin and History
- At the same time the appropriation doctrine was
developing, federal reservations of land were
being made - Congress and the President set aside public land
- for special purposes, such
- as Indian reservations,
- but did not create
- accompanying water rights
7Reserved Rights DoctrineOrigin and History
- In 1906 the U. S. brought suit on behalf of the
Fort Belknap Reservation Indians to secure water
rights for them - Defendant farmers/ranchers protested, saying they
had valid water rights created under Montana law - The suit created a genuine dilemma
8Reserved Rights DoctrineOrigin and History
- In 1908 the Supreme Court issued its Winters
decision - It said Congress, when it created the
reservation, must have impliedly intended to
reserve water for the Indians - The reserved rights doctrine was born
- It was judicially created and defined
9Reserved Rights DoctrineOrigin and History
- In Arizona v. California (1963) the U. S. Supreme
Court said the reserved rights doctrine applies
to federal reservations other than Indian
reservations - For Indian Reservations it said the number of
practicably irrigable acres on the reservation
(PIA) is used to quantify the right
10Reserved Rights DoctrineOrigin and History
- Subsequent case law further defined the reserved
water right doctrine - Cappaert v. U.S. (1976) the
- amount of water reserved is the
- minimum amount necessary to
- fulfill reservation purposes
- U.S. v. New Mexico (1978)
- primary purposes only get
- reserved water rights
11Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- Reserved water rights are important property
interests - Their basis is the creation of reservations
- The purpose of the reservation defines them (PIA
for Indian reservations) - Priority date is creation of the reservation
- They are not lost by non-use
12Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- In addition to having very different
characteristics than appropriative water rights,
the more pressing problem is that reserved water
rights are un-quantified when created - Given their early priority dates, they may
compete with State-created water rights
13Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- Utah, an arid state, has many federal
reservations federal lands set aside for
specific purposes, like Indian reservations,
national parks and monuments, military bases,
etc. - How should these rights be quantified?
14Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- States have taken different approaches
- In times past, pretend reserved rights dont
exist - Litigate about reserved rights
- Negotiate such rights on a case-by-case basis
- Utah has chosen to negotiate because the other
approaches have been unsuccessful
15Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- Utah has negotiated reserved water rights for
Zion National Park, a watershed in the Dixie
National Forest, Cedar Breaks, Hovenweep,
Promontory, Rainbow Bridge, Timpanogos, and
Natural Bridges National Monuments and the
Shivwits Indian Reservation
16Reserved Rights vs. Appropriative Water Rights
- We are working on an agreement for Arches
National Park - We are close to agreement with the Ute Indian
Tribe - We are working with the Navajo Nation
- Both the Ute and Navajo settlements involve water
from the Colorado River
17COLORADEO RIVER CHALLENGES
- Optimizing Use of Remaining Allocation (and
integrating federal reserved water rights) - Assuring Continued River Use (ESA/Fish Flows)
- Protecting Project Investments (Priority Issues)
- Keeping Peace with Sister
- States and Mexico
- Studying Curtailment
- issues
18COLOARDO RIVER OPPORTUNITIES
- Negotiate Indian Water Rights
- Negotiate Other Federal Reserved Water Rights
- Solve ESA Issues through
- RIPRAP Compliance
- Implement
- Multipurpose Projects
19Utah/Navajo Reserved Water Right Negotiations
- Navajo has substantial Winters rights
- Compacts require Navajos rights come from Utahs
share - Utah and Navajo have worked to resolve
- Utah must make a financial commitment
-
20LIABILITY POTENTIAL
- PIA 166,500 AF
- Expensive,
- Unpredictable Litigation
- Non-Indian Priority Conflict
SETTLEMENT PROPOSAL
NAVAJO NATION
- 81,500 AF Water Depletion
- 156 Million in Projects
- Subordination to Existing Rights
- Consideration for Local Communities
- Emphasis on Drinking Water
- 5 of cost (8M) State Share
21BENEFITS OF A SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
- Quantify a Significant Reserved Water Right
- Avoid Costly Litigation and Uncertain Outcome
- Improve Quality of Life for Utah Navajo People
- Provide Certainty for Utahs Water Users
- CUP/Wasatch Front
- Uintah Basin and San Juan County
- Lake Powell Pipeline
- Protect Current Water Rights
- Solve Colorado River Issue
22Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- The Colorado River Basin is home to four fishes
listed under the federal Endangered Species Act
(ESA) - Humpback Chub
- Colorado Pikeminnow
- Razorback Sucker
- Bonytail Chub
23Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- Congress enacted ESA in 1973
- It requires federal agencies to conserve species
listed under the Act - It prohibits anyone from taking a species
listed as endangered - Taking is broadly defined and might include
diverting water from listed species habitat - Reasonable and prudent alternative needed
24Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- The ESA has caused dramatic results in the
Columbia and Klamath River Basins (managing for
the salmon) and in the tributaries of
Californias Bay Delta (managing to protect the
Delta Smelt) - In effect, federal judges have become the
equivalent of the State Engineer in some places
25Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- Some 40 years after ESAs enactment, states have
three choices - Legislate
- Litigate or
- Cooperate
- Efforts to legislate or litigate regarding ESA
have been unsuccessful
26Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- The Upper Basin States chose to be proactive and
implement a recovery plan for the Colorado River
endangered fishes - This gives Utah and the other three states an
opportunity to be full partners in recovery
implementation and to use water resources while
recovery efforts proceed
27Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- The program consists of two parts
- The Recovery Implementation Plan (RIP)
- The Recovery Action Plan (RAP)
- The RIP is what we want to do to recover
endangered fishes - The RAP is how were going to do it
- RIPRAP emphasizes science not politics
28Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- Ultimately, recovery would mean ESA issues would
be resolved - Meantime, the RIPRAP means Utah can continue to
develop its water resources - No RIPRAP compliance means both existing and
future diversions may be in question and could be
prohibited
29Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- The two most important elements of the RIPRAP
are non-native species control (bass and pike)
and habitat protection - Habitat protection means facilitation of
reintroduction of fry, predator control, creating
backwaters, and fish flow sufficiency, which is
critical to recovery
30Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- Flow recommendations, or flow targets, are set
based on 20 years of studies - The fish are resilient and can survive drought,
but also need years of significant flow to
reproduce - The RIPRAP seeks a balance between the needs of
fish and water users
31Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- Given use projections, the pinch point for
flows is Reach 3 on the Green River - Generally, flow is sufficient
- How to assure future flows are not jeopardized?
- Exercising the Lake Powell Pipeline water right
may provide a win/win/win opportunity re fish
flows
Reach 1
Reach 2
Reach 3
32Another Colorado River ChallengeFish Flows
- If the LPP water right is exercised as a Flaming
Gorge storage right with a point of re-diversion
at Lake Powell, then flows would be protectable
through Reach 3 - This may require a limited modification to
existing in-stream law
Reach 1
Reach 2
Reach 3
33Questions ?
The End