Indian tribes exercising water rights
| February 26, 2008 |
Could mean less (or pricier) water for others in West as drought lingers
For decades, ranchers and farmers across the West have tapped into rivers and streams on or near Indian reservations. Now, as drought conditions plague big parts of the region, they're concerned their access to those sources could dry up.
Although the U.S. Supreme Court gave tribes the primary rights to streams on their reservations in 1908, until recently, 19 tribes in the West had not exercised those rights. This year, tribes in Montana, New Mexico, Idaho, Nevada and California are on the verge of securing their claims.
That could result in less water, or higher water prices, for non-Indian agricultural producers and communities downstream, according to Victor Marshall, an attorney who represents irrigators in New Mexico's San Juan Valley.
By Karl Puckett USA TODAY
Full Story: http://www.usatoday.com/printedition ... s26.art.htm
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Human-Induced Changes in the Hydrology of the Western United States. "The Montana water supply is in trouble!" http://matr.net/article-27820.html
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