River Beat: Storm Coming

If you’re a western water manager, the corners of your smile must be crinkled up in delight at the latest Quantitative Precipitation Forecast from the National Weather Service. That’s some mighty big bulls-eyes you see on the map over the Sierra Nevada and the Colorado River Basin. Going into this, the snow pack in the …

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Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: My Fascination With Flood Control

Most of my water journalism involves the supply side, but this week I indulged my fascination with the back end of the problem – moving it away from the places we don’t want it (sub/ad req): The southwest valley is one of three large areas in the Albuquerque metro area where government agencies working on …

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“So this was a drive-in restaurant in Hollywood”

The seminal influences on my aesthetic/writerly self are an eclectic bunch, a function more than anything else of who I was at the time I read them (or listened to them, or stared at their art). But thinking this afternoon about the death of Captain Beefheart (who I count as an odd member of my …

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Western Water – the Persistent Roadblock

The roadblock to solving western water problems: [T]he understandable tendency of state, local, and federal interests to defer painful concessions in water resource allocation. Indecision persists as long as there is no absolute requirement that problems be solved. Paul L. Bloom, Law of the River: A Critique of an Extraordinary Legal System, in New Courses …

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Climate Change and Southwest Drought – Is It Happening Now?

Does it matter whether the current southwestern US drought is caused by anthropogenic climate change? Or, to be slightly more precise, in what ways does it or does it not matter? This isn’t a rhetorical question. Let me know what you think in the comments below. The question arises anew in the context of the …

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Stuff I Wrote Elsewhere: Navajo Settlement

From the morning paper, a look at money for the a Navajo Nation water project in the Indian water rights settlement bill the president signed last week: A century of federal investment in dams and canals was built to serve cities and farms — “a long tradition in water politics in which states receive federal …

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River Beat Weekly Report: What’s 169,000 Acre Feet Among Friends?

A month of warm, dry weather left Lakes Mead and Powell with 24.8 million acre feet of water at the end of November, 169,000 acre feet less than had been forecast a month earlier. The crux of the Colorado River Compact lies in Article III (d): The States of the Upper Division will not cause …

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