Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
October 22, 2008
1. Top Items -
Construction of
The project will store Colorado River water that had been flowing to
By Tony Perry
Reported from The Imperial Valley -- On a rocky patch of desert, federal and state officials Tuesday began construction on a $172.2-million reservoir that will store water from the Colorado River that otherwise would be "lost" to Mexico.
The reservoir will mean more water for coastal Southern California, southern
But it will mean less water for
For decades, the
But with the region suffering a historic drought, the U.S. Interior Department took the lead in devising a project to capture excess water from the
"It's not
The reservoir, scheduled to be completed in August 2010, is the second Imperial Valley project that will mean more water for the
Seepage from the canal, and excess flows from the Colorado River, have helped replenish the
When the canal-lining project was in the planning stage,
Last year, Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne and his Mexican counterpart agreed on a binational study group to find ways to stretch the
Kempthorne, the key speaker at Tuesday's groundbreaking, said he remained hopeful that the two countries would find solutions to their common problem: drought.
He called the reservoir "a triumph for common sense water-management policy" and noted that it brought together three agencies that have feuded for years over allocations from the
The cost is to be split among the Southern Nevada Water Authority ($115 million), the Central Arizona Project ($28.6 million) and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California ($28.6 million).
Each will receive a share of water in proportion to how much it has paid.
The water will be sent from the
Despite the canal lining and reservoir,
For Metropolitan, the additional water comes as the agency's board of directors is set to begin discussions about possible mandatory cutbacks to its customers in six counties.
"This project could not have come at a better time for Metropolitan," said Roger Patterson, the agency's assistant general manager. "Our water supplies are under a great deal of pressure."#
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-water22-2008oct22,0,6454616.story
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