Share this page And share with Stumbleupon.com GENERAL DELIVERY UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW REVIEW 10 WATER LAWS OF THE WEST
By Hugh Holub Introduction: It does not take a law
degree to understand water law and policy in the
western United States. Ten basic legal and
historical principles govern the rights to and
uses of water in the West. By understanding these
ten Water Laws of the West anyone can then
understand the current issues of water and its
relationship to the future of the West. I.
The Law of Gravity: The First Water Law of
the West is the Law of Gravity. Water runs down
hill. The initial uses of water in the West
involved the use of gravity to tap rivers and
divert their flows into canals for delivery to
farms and mines. This is also known as Newton's
Law.
II. The Law of Los Angeles: The
Second Water Law of the West is the original lawof Los
Angeles. This L.A. Law states that "water runs
uphill to money". The development of energy
technologies to lift water against the pull of gravity is
the basis for modern Western civilization. Los Angeles
pioneered the effort to defy gravity with money in the
early 1900's with its Owens Valley Aqueduct. Southern
California is now served with a network of pipelines and
canals such as the Metropolitan Water District's Colorado
River Aqueduct. Phoenix, San Francisco and Denver also
utilize massive pumping and diversion systems to
transport water from great distances in defiance of
gravity to serve their growing urban populations. III. The Law of Supply Creating Demand: The
Third Water Law of the West, also invented by Los
Angeles, is that "if you don't have the water, you
won't need it." This is sometimes stated as "he
who brings the water brings the people". Both are
attributed to William Mulholland, a pioneer director of
the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (DWP).
Los Angeles and other Western cities operate on the
premise that in order to assure growth of their cities,
water supplies for the future must be developed well in
advance of that growth. This is in contrast to the
general approach in Western cities of developing freeways
and other public infrastructure long after the growth has
actually happened. IV. The Law of I Got It First: The Fourth Water
Law of the West, embodied in the West's surface water
laws, is the doctrine of "prior appropriation"
translated into "first in time is first in
right". First in time for most water uses in the
West were farms and mines. Instead of "first in time
is first in right", we have seen the evolution of
"we've got more votes than you in the state
legislature" to decide who gets water. V. The Law of Beneficial Use: The Fifth Water
law of the West is that to have a right to water it must
be "beneficially" or "reasonably"
used on that appurtenant land. This is only understood in
the context that water left flowing in a river
maintaining the survival of fish in that river and
vegetation growing along side that river was not
originally defined as a "beneficial" use in
Western water law, whereas drowning gophers or growing
rice in deserts were deemed "beneficial" uses.
In recent years, environmentalists have succeeded in
gaining recognition of "instream" beneficial
uses of water and a new category of water rights is
beginning to emerge to preserve flows in rivers. However
this process is emerging only after most rivers and
streams in the West have been dammed and dried up by
diversions of the flows to the previously established
beneficial uses. To fully appreciate why this happened,
it must be remembered that the fish in these streams only
recently were able to obtain the services of water
lawyers via various environmental and conservation
organizations. VI. The Law of Worthless Land: The Sixth Water
Law of the West is that without a water right or access
to water, land is worthless. There is not enough water
available to use all available land for all the potential
beneficial uses. Thus lands with water rights or access
to water have value for use, whereas land without water
rights is known as the desert, with zero value except
when being subjected to state and local property
taxation. It is also a historic fact that farmers,
ranchers and miners figured all this out about a hundred
years before the average city council or environmental
group, thus most Western water laws are heavily weighted
in favor of using water for farming, ranching and mining.
This law is also known as the "appurtenancy"
rule meaning the rights to the use of water are tied to
specific parcels of land, which are usually owned by
farmers, ranchers or miners. VII. The Law of Expropriation: The Seventh
Water Law of the West focuses on how water (and other
natural resources) are obtained for Western civilization.
This Law depends on finding some fairly impoverished and
unsophisticated water right holder (usually Indians,
farmers, or rural communities) on the other side of the
mountain a city can steal water rights from. Los Angeles
pioneered this approach by buying up the Owens Valley on
the east slope of the Sierra Nevada for water rights
nearly 90 years ago. What we are now experiencing is not
so much a water shortage, but a shortage of people on the
other sides of the mountains who are willing to let their
water resources be stolen from them by cities. VIII. The Law of the Price is Right: The Eighth
Water Law of the West is that there is no water shortage
if the price is right. It is widely believed in city
halls that the farmers will sell their water rights if
the price is high enough so the farmers can go raise
martinis in La Jolla instead of cotton in the Salt River
Valley of Arizona, or the Imperial Valley in California.
Thus when someone asks "is there enough water for
Los Angeles or Phoenix to grow?" the answer is
probably yes--if you don't care about how much the
water will cost. IX. The Law of Water Monopoly: The Ninth Water
Law of the West is that water management in an arid
environment almost always results in the creation of a
water monopoly. Thus (along with the discovery of fire
and religion) the first steps towards civilization
included the construction of irrigation ditches and the
immediate creation of some sort of bureaucracy to run the
system. Not surprisingly where irrigation water monopoly
civilizations rose, they lasted for thousands of
years. The Westlands Irrigation District in the Central
Valley of California and the Salt River Project in
Arizona are merely the modern counterparts of one of
humankind's most ancient of institutions--the water
monopoly. Many western urban areas figured out the value
of water monopoly and created enormously powerful
regional agencies such as the Metropolitan Water District
of Southern California and the Central Arizona Water
Conservation District in Arizona, to do essentially the
same thing--building vast networks of canals to bring
water to their constituents. X. The Law of Vanishing Civilizations: The
Tenth (or Last) Water Law of the West should be called
the Hohokam Law of Water and Gravity. Under this law, if
there is no rain, there is no water to flow down hill.
What went up--the buildings and the civilization--may
crumble to dust if Mother Nature decides to hold a long
drought. Lying beneath the streets of Phoenix are the
ruins of the ancient Hohokam Indian metropolis that
vanished prior to 1400 AD. Phoenix is the second
city to be built on the same site in reliance on the
erratic flows of the Salt River. Californians prayed for
rain for the last six years (apparently successfully)
because they didn't have enough water to flush their
toilets. Many Southern Californians had been heard to ask
"what do you mean this used to be a desert?" Conclusion: The principles that govern Western
water law and policy have a long and somewhat
distinguished history. It should also be noted that
similar arid environment ditch-dependent civilizations
ultimately collapsed under extreme environmental
stresses, internal political conflict, and invasion by
barbarian hordes. This is worth contemplating after a six
year drought with various water interests fighting over
who will get water in times of future shortages while the
streets of Santa Monica or Scottsdale are filled with RVs
with New Jersey license plates. Copyright 1998,1999 by Hugh Holub
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