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Aspen and Other Ski Areas Support a Bill That Could Dry Up Rivers

Posted by Amy Kober of American Rivers in Water Currents on January 24, 2014
[dropcap]I[/dropcap]t’s ski season, and ski areas like Aspen (currently home to the Winter X Games) are good at getting PR touting their commitment to environmental sustainability – like this recent Men’s Journal story. But what many people don’t know is that Aspen Skiing Company and the National Ski Areas Association are currently supporting a bill that could dry up rivers, damage fish and wildlife habitat, and hurt fishing and boating. The so-called “Water Rights Protection Act” (HR 3189) would allow private water users to dry up rivers on public lands with no regard for other uses or needs. With their support of this anti-environment bill, the ski areas association is in bed with Big Ag and western cattle groups.The bill would prevent federal agencies within the Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Interior from ensuring enough water flows in our rivers – which is essential for healthy streams, local economies, and endangered species. The bill would put private uses of water, like snow-making and irrigation, ahead of other beneficial public uses such as fish and wildlife and recreation.Matt Rice, director of the Colorado Basin program at American Rivers, spells out the bill’s implications in Steamboat Today:

For instance, in Colorado, this could prohibit the Forest Service from requiring water diverters to leave some water in streams on National Forests to keep native cutthroat trout alive. It could also stop the Fish and Wildlife Service from requiring flows that help salmon find fish ladders so that they can safely pass over dams. It would potentially destroy broadly supported multi-year and multi-million dollar settlement agreements to restore American shad, salmon and steelhead fisheries at hydropower facilities. It even undermines fundamental principles of states’ rights by creating a new federal definition of a water right. At the very least, it would create mountains and mountains of litigation.

To read complete story – click here […]

 

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