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Campaign Updates>
Governor Signs Penry Water Legislation
May 27, 2006
For Immediate Release: May 27, 2006 216-8039 GOVERNOR SIGNS PENRY WATER LEGISLATION Colorado Governor Bill Owens signed two water bills sponsored by representative Josh Penry Friday, setting the stage for landmark water negotiations around Colorado that will focus on tackling Colorado’s growing water supply challenges for the coming decades. The two new laws signed by Governor Owens late yesterday are the next steps in implementing the Colorado Water for the 21st Century Act, a bill Penry sponsored in 2005 and signed by Governor Owens last summer which creates a new, locally-driven framework for water providers to develop new reservoirs, find improved water efficiencies, and developed other means of meeting the fast-growing water demands of Colorado’s cities, farmers and industrial water users. The Colorado Water for the 21st Century Act creates an Interbasin Compact negotiation process, consisting of local roundtables in each of Colorado’s river basins, and a statewide Interbasin Compact Committee made up of representatives from the local roundtables and other water stakeholders. “The Governor’s signature of these two landmark bills means the table is set for water negotiations that are absolutely critical to the future of Colorado. There’s a lot of very difficult work ahead, but for the first time in a very, very long time Colorado has a window of real opportunity to make progress on our mounting water challenges. “The bottom line is: we need to put our water to its fullest use, which means building new reservoirs and storing more water here on the Western Slope,” he said. Specifically, SB 179, which Penry sponsored along with Senator Jim Isgar, would dedicate $10 million in each of the coming years to fund water projects that are agreed upon as part of the Interbasin Compact negotiation process. Under the new law, those dollars can only be allocated to water related projects that have the support of the applicable local basin roundtable, ensuring that water rich areas on the Western Slope have the final say on any activity affecting its waters in the Interbasin Compact process. The dollars will likely be used to underwrite feasibility and environmental analyses required to build new reservoirs or expand those that exist. And HB 1400, jointly sponsored by Western Slope Representatives Bernie Buescher, Josh Penry, and Kathleen Curry, would ratify the Interbasin Compact Charter developed by water negotiators from around Colorado. The Colorado Water for the 21st Century Act required the creation of a legal Charter to guide water negotiations, and further stipulated that the Colorado General Assembly had to ratify that Charter before negotiations could commence. HB 1400 provided for that ratification. A provision in the Charter mandates that water can only be moved from one basin to another with the consent of the originating basin, a measure that, again, ensures that water rich areas have final and definitive say over any activity that affects the water in their region for those projects developed under this new framework. Penry said the recent shutting down of wells along the South Platte is a stark reminder of what can happen if water solutions are not found. Loss of access to those wells threatened to put scores of farmers on the Eastern Plains out of business forever. Concluded Penry, “What’s happening out on the Eastern Plains is an ominous reminder of the stakes in all this. If Colorado’s water factions can’t find a way to work together and store more of our water, the results will be very bad for all of Colorado, and rural Colorado in particular. Failure just isn’t an option.” ###
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