NORTH PLATTE Representatives of communities in drought-stricken
areas of Nebraska drew a line in the sand Wednesday but no water
sprang from the ground.
The economic vitality of the western two-thirds of the state may
be stunted if it doesnt have water to serve expanding communities,
Sidney City Attorney Jordan Ball said at a meeting called to discuss the
states new water law, which took effect last week.
The complex law will have a significant effect in parts of the state.
It is designed to make the state and its 23 natural resources districts
more active in anticipating and preventing water conflicts between those
who tap rivers and streams and those who pump water from the ground.
Some community leaders in southwestern Nebraska and the Panhandle are
worried about how potential allocations of groundwater by agriculture-dominated
NRD boards might affect their ability to serve the public. They also are
concerned about the effect on economic development goals while a historic
drought continues in the West.
Sidney, McCook, Scottsbluff, Gering, North Platte and many other
communities are growing, Ball said. Any community that isnt
growing has an intention of growing.
Ball, who has represented Sidney in recent water disputes with the South
Platte NRD, said overdevelopment of center-pivot irrigation in Nebraska
created some of the water-shortage problems now facing many farmers and
townspeople in the western half of the state.
The potential under the new law that NRD boards could require cities to
purchase water allocations from owners of agricultural land makes no sense,
given that Nebraskans in communities consume less than 3 percent of the
states water, Ball said.
Shouldnt center-pivot irrigators, who have profited from and
created the overuse problem, be required to solve the problem? he
asked.
An audience of about 110 people at Mid-Plains Community College was largely
made up of community leaders and irrigators. McCook City Manager John
Bingham, who helped organize the meeting, said Nebraska cities need to
join NRDs in resolving water issues.
This is a good start, Bingham said. Some people feel
that LB962 (the water law) might disenfranchise municipal water users
from the process, yet weve probably done that to ourselves.
Nothing has precluded people living in cities from seeking election to
NRD boards, he said.
But I dont think the election process is going to move fast
enough to correct that problem because of the important decisions that
are going to be made, he said. We need to start talking with
our NRDs more effectively than we ever had before.
Rod Horn, general manager of the Sidney-based South Platte NRD, said it
is important for cities to have cooperative relationships with the districts.
Instead of a negative-driven effort, we need to try to look at it
in a more positive light, try to work together, Horn said in an
interview.