Kayak parks and other recreational water
uses will be considered "more fairly" after political changes on the
Colorado Water Conservation Board, state water officials said Wednesday.Kayak parks and other recreational water
uses will be considered "more fairly" after political changes on the
Colorado Water Conservation Board, state water officials said
Wednesday.
The appointment this week of a new agency director and the
replacement of a board member known for his antipathy toward
"non-consumptive uses" marks a turning point in how those proposals
will be viewed under Gov. Bill Ritter, according to water officials and
advocates.
"We're looking to dramatically change our position," Alexandra
Davis, assistant water director for the Division of Natural Resources,
told the Northwest Colorado Council of Governments' influential Water
Quality and Quantity Committee.
The recreational water rights - first created by state water
courts in 1992 and established in law a decade later - are part of the
state's seniority-based priority system and require that upstream users
allow sufficient amounts of water to flow past.
Under recently retired director Rod Kuharich, the 11-member
appointed board often opposed proposals for attractions such as kayak
parks sought by more than a dozen towns, ranging from Steamboat Springs
to Pueblo.
"Our sense is the last director burned a lot of bridges on the
Western Slope, with the environmental community and with the
conservation community," Davis said.
Charged with "building those bridges back," Davis said, is
Jennifer Gimbel, a water-law expert who was named as the board's new
director Tuesday.
Geoff Blakeslee, the Yampa River project director for the
Nature Conservancy, took the seat formerly held by rancher Tom Sharp,
an outspoken critic of setting aside water for recreation rather than
traditional uses, such as agriculture and municipal supplies.
"I think the board lost a lot of credibility in its almost
obstinate opposition to the idea that recreational use is a legitimate
use of water," said board chairman John Redifer.
Drew Peternell, director of the Colorado Water Project for
Trout Unlimited, said the water-conservation board has appeared
philosophically reluctant to approve recreational rights in a state
where demand exceeds supply.
"The CWCB guards very jealously that authority and
historically has gone to great lengths to prevent those from being
recognized," he said. "My impression is that things are going to be
more friendly."
Summit County Commissioner Tom Long, a water rights authority
and fourth-generation rancher, brushed off the suggestion that
recreational uses have gotten short shrift from the old guard, noting
that procuring any new water right is difficult.
"It does represent a change. I won't deny that," Long said. "But most of the communities over here got (recreational
water rights) in spite of the CWCB."