Jan. 11, 2003
County Water Board Sues U.S. in Dispute
Over Colorado River
Farmers in Southern California who use most of the
state's disputed
supply of Colorado River water have struck back at the
federal government
for taking some of it away.
County Water Board Sues
U.S. in Dispute Over Colorado River
By DEAN E. MURPHY
SAN
FRANCISCO, Jan. 11 — Farmers in Southern California who use most of
the
state's disputed supply of Colorado River water have struck back at
the
federal government for taking some of it away.
The Imperial Irrigation
District, which provides the farmers with
irrigation water, has asked a
federal judge to block a decision by the
secretary of the interior that
reduces the district's allocation from the
river. Imperial officials said a
lawsuit was filed on Friday in federal
court in San Diego.
The interior secretary, Gale A. Norton, last month
ordered a reduction of
about 7 percent in Imperial's water after a deal
collapsed that would
have transferred a similar amount of water from the
Imperial Valley to
neighboring San Diego County. In her legal capacity as
"master of the
river," Ms. Norton also reduced some of the water requested
by the
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, the big urban
supplier in Los Angeles.
In a letter sent to Ms. Norton, the Imperial
district's recently named
board president, Lloyd Allen, sounded a bitter and
defiant tone.
"Simply stated, the action of your department is misguided,
unjustified,
unsupported by the law or the facts," Mr. Allen wrote, "and is
an example
of heavy-handed and unwarranted federal interference with
intrastate
water allocation matters."
"Our forefathers worked too hard
to create the most productive farm
region in the world," the letter
continued. "While I.I.D. would prefer to
have consensual agreements, we will
not retreat from litigation to
protect the lifeblood of our community."
Ms. Norton's top water official, Bennett W. Raley, said today that he had
not seen the lawsuit but that the Interior Department had been
anticipating the legal challenge.
"This was something that we expected
and are fully prepared for," said
Mr. Raley, an assistant secretary. "I
don't think it is helpful, but we
respect entities' ability to litigate if
they are unhappy with government
actions."
An agreement to transfer some
of the Imperial district's water to San
Diego was supposed to signal a
turning point in the long history of
fighting over water from the Colorado
River. It was a requirement of an
accord reached two years ago among the
seven states that draw water from
the Colorado. But since the negotiations
failed on Dec. 31, tensions have
grown among the various groups in
California and positions have hardened.
On Monday, the board of the
Metropolitan district, which is involved in
the talks, directed negotiators
"to make no commitments" to the Imperial
district beyond those made in
October, which the Imperial board voted
last month to reject. Also this
week, two state legislators said they
were considering legislation that
would further cut the Imperial
district's water allotment.
"The dynamic
certainly has shifted," Mr. Raley said. "I think people are
dealing with a
new reality. It will be at least a matter of months before
we can assess
what direction California wants to go with respect to
Colorado River water."
Mr. Allen, in his letter to Ms. Norton, blamed the government for the
unraveling of negotiations. "Instead of government neutrality in the face
of disagreements among the southern California water agencies, your
department utilized heavy-handed tactics and threats against I.I.D.," he
wrote. "Frankly, your actions are in stark contrast to the principles of
the Bush administration." In a First, U.S. Puts Limits on California's
Thirst (January 5, 2003)
Failed Deal in California Cuts Water for Nevada
(January 2, 2003)
U.S. Approves Water Plan in California, but
Environmental Opposition Remains (August 31, 2002)
Study Discounts
Halting Irrigation to Protect Fish (February 5, 2002)
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