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PIPELINE FOES CHALLENGE WATER RIGHTS IN ELY DISTRICT COURT
June 5, 2013
Great Basin Water Network
P.O.
Box 75
Baker,
NV 89311
775/881-8304
www.greatbasinwaternetwork.org
June 5, 2013
NEWS RELEASE FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Abby Johnson 775/885-0612
Steve Erickson 801/554-9029
Rob Mrowka
702/249-5821
PIPELINE FOES CHALLENGE WATER RIGHTS IN ELY
DISTRICT COURT
Opponents of the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s massive
pipeline project are confident heading into next week’s hearing in White Pine
County (NV) District Court challenging the water rights granted SNWA in Spring,
Cave, Dry Lake, and Delamar Valleys.
On June 13 and 14, Senior Judge Robert Estes will hear oral
arguments concerning the Nevada State Engineer’s rulings from March 2012
permitting SNWA to pump and export to Las Vegas up to 61,127 acre feet of
groundwater annually from Spring Valley and 22,861 acre feet per year from
Cave, Dry Lake and Delamar Valleys. Day
one will likely consider issues affecting all four valleys and those specific
to Spring Valley. The second day is
expected to focus on the other three basins.
Simeon Herskovits, who represents Great Basin Water Network,
White Pine County and more than 350 additional plaintiffs in Nevada and Utah,
said “we are confident that the science, the facts and the law support our case
that the State Engineer’s decisions should be reversed.” Other plaintiffs in
the hearings include the Confederated Tribes of the Goshute Nation, the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Millard County (UT), and Baker Ranches.
“There isn’t the amount of water available to export without
devastating effects upon senior water rights holders, the environment and the
communities in the region. It would take
centuries after pumping ceases before these basins would return to equilibrium
– so allowing SNWA to pump to these permitted limits would amount to illegal
groundwater mining,” Herskovits said.
The same court in Ely in 2009 overturned the State
Engineer’s ruling awarding SNWA water rights in Cave, Dry Lake and Delamar
Valleys, finding that the Engineer had “abused his discretion”, that the ruling
was “arbitrary and capricious”, and that the groundwater in question was already
appropriated and used down-gradient.
A previous ruling by
the State Engineer granting SNWA water rights in Spring Valley was invalidated
in 2010 by the Nevada Supreme Court in a separate case brought by GBWN. In that case, the Court found that the State
Engineer had taken too long to hold hearings on SNWA’s water rights
applications, effectively denying the due process rights of water rights
holders and other interested parties an opportunity to protest those
applications.
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