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Wild horses in Nevada catch a break on more man-made drought

Posted by on December 13, 2013

Wild horses in Nevada catch a break on more man-made drought

Since I’ve written about the power of Nevada’s one state water engineer in my past articles, I was glad to see that Senior Judge Robert Estes of the Seventh Judicial Court of Nevada declared that the Nevada State Engineer’s decision favoring the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA) water grab which was to pipeline water from northern Nevada to Las Vegas was “subjective, unscientific, arbitrary and capricious,’ and ‘unfair to following generations of Nevadans’ and ‘not in the public interest.‘”

Wild horse advocates also need to stay on top of BLM’s approval of ”other uses” on public lands that are using more than a fair share of water, especially during “droughts.”  If the BLM claims they need to remove a few wild horses because of “drought,” but then approve other uses that use huge amounts of water, the BLM is mismanaging public lands.  This mismanagement does not create a thriving ecological balance – but instead destroys it.  –  Debbie Coffey

SOURCE:  Great Basin Water Network

News Release            December 11, 2013

For Immediate Release

Contact:  Abby Johnson 775/885-0612  Simeon Herskovits 575-770-3438

COURT INVALIDATES WATER RIGHTS FOR LAS VEGAS PIPELINE

WATER GRAB OPPONENTS DECLARE HISTORIC WIN

Baker, Nevada – A Nevada court today resoundingly rejected the Nevada State Engineer’s allocation of some 84,000 acre feet per year of groundwater in four rural valleys that the Southern Nevada Water Authority planned to pump and pipe to Las Vegas.

In a strong, well-grounded decision, Senior Judge Robert Estes of the Seventh Judicial Court of Nevada declared the State Engineer’s decision “subjective, unscientific, arbitrary and capricious,” and “unfair to following generations of Nevadans” and “not in the public interest.”

Estes’ ruling requires the State Engineer to recalculate and reassess the water available for appropriation from Spring Valley to assure that “the basin will reach equilibrium between discharge and recharge within a reasonable time,” and to “recalculate the appropriations for Cave, Dry Lake, and Delamar Valleys to avoid over appropriations or conflicts with down-gradient, existing water rights.”

The Court also required that the State Engineer add Millard and Juab counties, Utah in the mitigation plans for the groundwater development project because they will be affected by the proposed pumping from Spring Valley.  Estes was highly critical of the project monitoring, management and mitigation plans, finding that the Engineer had, in effect, “relinquished his responsibilities” to SNWA.  Noting the lack of triggers in the plan requiring actions to minimize damages from groundwater drawdown, Estes wrote “if there is insubstantial evidence and it is premature to set triggers and thresholds, it is premature to grant water rights.”

Steve Erickson, Utah Coordinator for the Great Basin Water Network, a lead plaintiff in the case, called the ruling “a huge victory for the families and communities of these rural valleys in Nevada and Utah, and a vindication of our collective efforts to resist a massively misguided and destructive project.”   “This ruling affirms our long-held positions that groundwater withdrawals of this huge scale are not sustainable and can’t be effectively managed or mitigated, will pre-empt existing water rights, and will cause permanent, widespread damage to the environment, the economy, the health, and the quality of life in the Great Basin,” Erickson said.

Abby Johnson, president of the Baker, Nevada-based Network said, “this decision should send a clear message to SNWA and Nevada leaders that this project is doomed to fail and should be cancelled now in order to save Las Vegas ratepayers and Nevada taxpayers billions of wasted dollars.”

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