SWSI: Colorado's Statewide Water Supply Initiative.
Water allocation has always been - and always will be - a major issue in the arid West. Colorado has long struggled with how to best use and share the wealth of water its mountains provide. Recent and ongoing efforts will chart the future of water diversions and could radically impact whitewater paddling as we know it in the state - unless whitewater paddlers step up and represent their interests. Perhaps the most crucial effort for paddlers to be involved with is the Statewide Water Supply Initiative.
The 2003 Big Straw Referendum A would have given the Colorado legislature $2 billion to build dams and divert more water to the Front Range. After it lost handily, the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) created SWSI. SWSI Phase I determined that Colorado will have 20% less water than the amount needed (the 20% Gap) based on projected population growth.
“SWSI's findings so far have bolstered Western Slope concerns about possible new attempts at water grabs by the Front Range. It is projecting that Colorado's cities and industrial users will need an additional 708,000 acre-feet of water by 2030, as the state population grows from 4.3 million in 2000 to an estimated 7.1 million people.” Aspen Times, August 27, 2004
SWSI Phase II created four technical roundtables that now meet regularly:
1) Water Efficiency (Agricultural, Municipal, & Industrial (M&I), 2) Alternative Agricultural Transfers to Permanent Dry-up 3) Prioritize and Quantify Recreation and Environment Needs 4) Addressing the 20% M & I Gap.
In addition to these technical roundtables, the Interbasin Compact Committee (IBCC) was created. The IBCC organizes nine additional roundtables to meet and negotiate diverting water between basins. Critical decisions will be made within these roundtables that will determine whether many rivers and streams in Colorado have sufficient flows for paddling and other river recreation, fish, wildlife, local economic benefits, and municipal needs. Currently the paddling community is unrepresented or underrepresented on these roundtables. American Whitewater is seeking paddlers willing to thoughtfully represent the paddling community and AW on these roudtables.
Watershed | Contact | Phone | Location | Details |
Colorado | Dave Merritt | 970-945-8522 | Glenwood Springs | Colorado |
Yampa-White | Tom Sharp | 970-879-1482 | Yampa | |
Gunnison | Michelle Pierce | 970-944-2333 | Montrose | Gunnison |
Dolores-San Juan | Steven Harris | 970-259-5322 | Cortez | Delores |
North Platte | Kent Crowder | 970-723-4660 | Walden | North Platte |
Arkansas | Alan Hamel | 719-584-0221 | Pueblo | Arkansas |
Denver Metro | Doug Scott | 303-789-2541 | Denver Area | Denver |
Rio Grande | Mike Gibson | 719-589-2230 | Alamosa | Rio Grande |
South Platte | Bille Jerke | 970-336-7204 | Longmont | South Platte |
Please attend these meetings and contact AW if you are interested in formally participating as a representative for the paddling community.
For details on the meeting locations, dates, and times, please call the contact person listed above. We encourage paddlers to attend these meetings whenever possible, and if you are willing to be involved in a more formal capacity please contact Kevin Colburn (kevin@amwhitewater.org) immediately. Senate Bill 06-179 allocates $10/million year from 2006 and 2010 for water projects and to do needs assessments in the basins. The IBCC Roundtables are now determining how that money should be spent. This is a one-time opportunity for boaters to obtain money to study and protect recreational river flows. If we do not clearly define the rivers that are important to us, and the flows we need, then our interests and the higher flows critical to recreation and to the rivers' ecological health will be lost.
For more information, please visit the State of Colorado's website on these issues at: http://dnr.state.co.us/Home/ColoradoWaterforthe21stCentury/IbccHome.htm