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Water and Environment News

Page history last edited by PBworks 15 years, 11 months ago
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Reminder:  IF YOU HAVE NOT YET WRITTEN THE FOREST SERVICE ABOUT ROSEMONT MINE, DO SO TO THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS:

 

 

To: Ms. Jeanine A. Derby, Forest Supervisor

 USDA, Coronado National Forest

 300 W. Congress

 Tucson, AZ 85701

 Re: File Code 2810, your October 19, 2007 letter to Jamie Sturgess, Rosemont Copper

 Subject: Rosemont Plan Of Operations

 Express your opposition,   and insist on a complete environmental impact study before any decision is made.

 Also:

 TO WRITE ANY MEMBER OF THE U.S. HOUSE, ADDRESS YOUR LETTER TO: the rep's full name . at   U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,  WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515.   Your don't need the specific building.  TO CALL ANY MEMBER OF THE U.S. HOUSE OR SENATE CALL       1-(202) 224-3121   TTY: (202) 225-1904 |

Contact Representatives Grijalva and Giffords support them in sponsoring the new mine.  Ask them whom we should write to urge quicker action on their bill.  What is the current status of the Bill and what is holding it up.  Actually there are two different laws.

1)

 

Rep. Giffords' Chief of Staff in Washington, D.C. is   Ms. Maura Policelli. Mail address for Giffords is:

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords -  502 Cannon House Office Building Washington, DC 20515.

Phone:(202) 225-2542 Fax: (202) 225-0378  Email:  maura.policelli@mail.house.gov   or -

Gabe Zimmerman, supervisor of constituent services -  Gabe.Zimmerman@mail.house.gov

520-881-3588 is her Tucson office number.

 

 

 

Additional information for citizen action:

 

At the Thought Provoking Film program March 8 at the Library,  TROUBLED WATERS was shown. 

Nancy Freeman provided this list to everyone to encourage people to write:

 

(Information provided by Groundwater Awareness League, Inc., which is solely responsible for its content.   contact@g-a-l.info )   

 

 

1)Call the Governor's office at least once a week and ask why nothing is being done about water in Arizona.  She held a "water listening forum" in 2004.  Nothing has been done since.  Neither the transcripts nor the list of responders have been made available.  Also mention the mining issues below, especially the Grand Canyon and the Land Exchange Act.  Telephone:  602-542-4331 or

Toll Free:  1-800-542-1381

 

 

2) Mining Reform Law - The Bill has passed the US House of Reps, and will be coming up in the US Senate.  Contact AZ Senators, and more important, the Senators in other states you have residence or family.  See www.mining-law-reform.info.   Call: Jon Kyle - 202-224-4521   and

John McCain - 202-224-2235  Also Senate President Reid, from Montana, a mining state.

 

 

3)  Approval for exploration for uranium on North Rim of Grand Canyon:  Contact Mike Williams, Supervisor,  Kaibab National Forest,  800 South Sixth Street,  Williams, Arizona 86046  or call at

928-635-8200

Call Governor and Congress persons to express your outrage at this destruction of our national  heritage.  Exploration is not necessary if they cannot mine the territory, and exploration drills are destructive also!

 

 

4)  Upcoming environmental hearing on Rosemont mine:

Date not yet set.  Keep informed:  www.savethesantacruzaquifer.info.  Contact Mrs Jeanine A  Derby of the US Forestry Service office in Tucson:  USDA, Coronado National Forest,  300 West Congress,  Tucson, AZ 85701   Call her at 520-388-8300  to ask when the meeting is to be.

 

 

5) Land Exchange Act:   Protect Oak Flats and Apache Leap region from mining by a partnership of the two mining companies with the worst environmental records on the planet   (including the US).  This act will allow them to avoid the environmental process mandated on Public Land.   www.mining-law-reform.info.   Call Congressman Ed Pastor  - 202-225-4065  and

Congressman Raul Grijalva at 202-226-5-2435

 

 

Keep informed: 

Groundwater Awareness League website:  www.g-a-l-,info

 

Water Facts: :  Every other Wednesday,  Feb. 20, March 5, etc) at 4:30pm and every Monday at 6:30 pm on Access Tucson channels or Internet: www.accesstucson.org

 

 

Respond:  Contact info for Congress persons: http://w2eff,org/congress

or call  1-800-828-0498  or 1-866-220-0044  (open 9-5 eastern time which is now three hours ahead of our time)

 

------------------------------

 

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/05/01/8655/

One of History’s Great Atrocities: The Corporate Theft of the Public’s Natural Right to Water

by Ashley Powdar

The Growing Debate on who will Control the World’s Water Supply

The current 1.1 billion people worldwide without access to potable water only opens one of the smaller windows on the injustices and the multiple casualties being wrought by private water-related industries. In fact, many are clueless to the magnitude of the victims — present and projected — of the growing water crisis as well as to the inhumane implications of the role of the private sector in regards to treating water as a commodity that can be owned and sold for profit. As of now, 2.6 billion people are at high risk for not having access to potable and an additional 1.8 million children die each year from water-related diseases.

In the mix of chaos, despair, and confusion, which most affects the poorer elements of society, it is important to note the private corporations’ role, which some critics have identified as being among the major culprits in causing the crisis. Within recent decades, water privatization firms such as Suez, Vivendi, and RWE have bought control of a number of communities’ municipal water services, and then drastically increased the price of water; with some of them failing to effectively purify the water resources they had come to monopolize.

An Innate Right

The heightened trend towards water privatization has gone almost undetected by the general public for well over a decade, despite the huge ramifications it is having on many lives. Public water advocates argue that it is a necessity of life and no individual or corporation has the right to seize ownership and place a value on the resource. Water is for life, not for profit. Author Vadana Shiva resolutely states that “water is a commons because it is the basis of all life. Water rights are natural rights and thus usufructuary rights, meaning that water can be used, but not owned.” Water privatization has caused considerable strife around the world, specifically in less industrialized nations. Major water companies, with the help of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), continue to divest communities of their natural right to water, thus undermining the essence of democracy as well as contributing to an insidious form of global deprivation.

Water is a Means to Life

At a 2 percent water loss from the body, one is thirsty. At 5 percent, one is dehydrated, and at 11 percent, one is immobilized. It is estimated by WaterAid that in less industrialized countries, one child dies every 15 seconds from the lack of water. This disturbing figure has the potential to grow into an even harsher reality with much greater numbers at risk in the next 20 years, given that the global water supply is predicted to be depleted by 30 - 40 percent.

In addition to the necessity of water for survival, water acts as a principle force behind some of the most important socio-cultural, religious, and political aspects of society. Since the establishment of waterways as a major means of international transportation in the 15th century, water has also been a facilitator in communication as well as a mainstream factor in the exchange of goods and services. Water has both brought nations together and diversified economies for centuries. During this period, water has been the primary, most vital vehicle for communication among countries, societies and cultures. Thus it is reasonable to say that water has been the fundamental, initiating actor in technological innovation, cultural awareness and economic diversification.

Water also plays a central role in religious practices. For many faiths, water represents purity and rebirth. In Christianity, water is used for baptism, a sacred practice in which the individual is immersed in water to symbolize the rebirth as a follower of Christ. In Islam, the five daily prayers of the latter cannot be performed without the cleansing of body parts in water. In fact, water is a sufficiently sacred substance as it is mentioned in the New International Version of the Bible 442 times.

Water also has shaped the economic prosperity of many nations. If a nation has a coastline, there is abundant opportunity for viable trade and markets — as water can introduce a variety of new foods, expand agricultural production, and increase the prospects of tourism. Furthermore, water acts as a strategic resource for countries because it allows for geopolitical control over adjoining regions, as well as has the potential to enhance and make visible a state’s infrastructure. Due to the political connectivity of water, this scarce resource has caused numerous border wars between neighbors as well as countless water-related fatalities. There have been numerous instances where conflict has resulted from countries, organizations, and/or communities threatening to take control of a region’s main water resources and severely impeding the bulk of the local population’s access to the resource. These incidents have ranged from Israel’s partial ex parte control Jordan River running through the Middle East, to South Africa’s withholding of water resources from its black population during the Apartheid period (1948 - 1994), to Washington’s interest in the Guaraní Aquifer in the Triple Frontier region in South America.

The “Blue Gold” of the 21st Century

The World Bank and IMF are among the principle factors behind the implementation of water privatization. The commodification of water began in earnest in the 1990’s in various developing regions of the world in an effort to address a number of water-related issues varying from its scarcity to a woeful mismanagement of the resource. To begin, the World Bank and IMF, along with multinational enterprises, argued that by placing a value on water, the general public was less likely to abuse, waste, and indiscriminately consume large amounts of the increasingly scant product. It has been found by a vast array of non-profit organizations that the average European uses 200 liters of water every day whereas North Americans use 400 liters of water a day. This can be compared to the average person in the developing world who uses 10 liters of water every day for drinking, washing, and cooking purposes. Independent environmental journalist Carmelo Ruiz Marrero explains the role played by pro-privatization international lending agencies by stating that “water is wasted because people get it for free or for artificially low prices. Therefore, if its price reflected its true ecological and economic cost, people would avoid its abuse and overuse.”

Pro-privatization defenders maintain that in addition to poor water management by the general population, there is a serious lack of good management practices on a national level, which introduces the next argument. Critics of the status quo contend that the state has ill-served its citizens by not providing a clean, efficient water supply. Marrero explains that “the state has failed as administrator of the resource, not only because of its corruption, incapacity, and lack of investment in the infrastructure, but also through its promotion of paternalistic cheap water for all cultures that has resulted in waste and overexploitation.” Supporters of privatization argue that the government’s inability to comprehend and properly execute the methods needed to widely and effectively distribute water to the community inexorably results in an inadequate water supply for the general public. Their argument is that by inviting experienced international corporations into the country, water allocation, purity, and affordability will be made more efficient.

The third argument is that population growth will soon outweigh the ecosystem’s ability to provide abundant water supply for every individual, thus resulting in a very unsettling conditions of water scarcity. Because of this, social conflicts are likely to arise among communities, nations, and regions. Although this argument already has begun to prove to be self-fulfilling, private water companies can be seen as exacerbating social tensions by failing to properly assess the many different factors of water consumption. Marrero maintains that “this argument tends to grossly simplify complex social dynamics surrounding use of natural resources by assuming that extreme economic inequalities and differences in consumption patterns do not exist, and if they do, they are of no consequence.”

Water Privatization in the Western Hemisphere

Mexico

Less industrialized countries have borne the brunt of the most severe effects of water commodification. In Latin America and the Caribbean, the corporate ownership of water has only aggravated an already dire situation-both in terms of compromising the democratic, innate rights of citizens and endangering the environment. For example, during the Fox Administration in Mexico, water privatization often left Mexican citizens — specifically the poorest sector of the population — deprived of water resources as well as a deteriorating infrastructure. By 2002, precisely a decade after the Mexican government constitutionalized the jurisdiction of foreign-based corporations over what formally had been municipal water services, 28 of the country’s 30 states had been affected by privatization practices; this represented roughly 70 percent of the nation’s water supply. Once President Fox had created the Program for the Modernization of Water Management Companies (PROMAGUA), an agenda geared towards the commodification of the nation’s water supplies, Mexican citizens began to feel the harsh consequences of private ownership of water — and at an exceedingly expensive price. During the 2004 World Water Forum in Kyoto, Japan, Maude Barlow, a highly regarded Canadian field expert in the subject of water privatization, described the actions of one very irate Mexican citizen in the midst of confronting a panel of executives and specialists in water policy:

“Representatives of an international civil society network appeared at a meeting of chief executive officers at the World Water Forum in Kyoto, Japan, in March. The group took over the microphones and offered a series of testimonials about the impact of water privatization around the world. Toward the end of the event, a water activist from Cancun, Mexico, stepped to the microphone and held up a glass of pitch-black, putrid-smelling water. He explained that he had taken the water from his home tap in Cancun, where French company Suez runs the municipal water system. He then requested that the moderator pass the glass of black, smelly water up on stage to the CEO of Suez, inviting him to drink it.”

Water decentralization critics maintain that once these foreign companies, such as Vivendi and Suez, came into Mexico, they increased water prices by at least 60 percent and those who could not pay were cut off from services altogether. Furthermore, as the price of water escalated, its quality continued to deteriorate. The technology and filtration practices used to purify water reservoirs often cause serious damage to the environment while contaminating the surrounding air and soil, and displacing local wild life.

Stockton

Since the decentralization of water became a trend throughout Latin America in the early 1990’s, local communities in the United States and Canada have succumbed to it. But many other locals were prepared to fight for what they felt was rightfully theirs. In 2003, the city council of Stockton, California signed an agreement with water companies Thames and OWI to privatize the municipal water services for a period of 20 years, with the value of the contract approaching $600 million dollars. Similar to the citizens of Mexico, Stockton residents resisted once they discovered what was being signed away in their name. Despite the residents’ plea to be involved in the decision-making process, the city government continued to ignore the general consensus to oppose the privatization of the city’s water services. One resident attempted to reason with city council members, insisting that “I’m ashamed that we’ve followed this path and have gone down the road at making something happen that was not consensus building, not citizen-involved. It was basically handed down as a dictate. This is not the principle of an All-America City.” Despite an overwhelming opposition by the Stockton’s citizens, the city government overrode the group’s dogged opposition and its water resources were privatized. However, the persistence of the residents soon proved successful. In March of 2007, an overwhelming vote granted the residents their long-standing wish to keep water a free, equally accessible resource. The major reversal could turn out to be a pivotal moment in the history of water privatization in the United States. Not only did it prove that private firms failed to purify and deliver water any better than the previous public services, but it was the second time that the largest commodification project in the region was defeated by the electorate.

Walkerton

Similar to the lack of popular participation in the decision to privatize Stockton, California’s water systems was the experience of Walkerton, Canada, which was subjected to a comparable lack of transparency in the management of the community’s water resources. In May of 2000, the lack of proper water management techniques resulted in the death of seven Walkerton residents and left at least 2,000 ill (half of the population). The culprit behind this tragedy?-the city’s private water sector. It had failed to report indications of contamination, not only because it would hinder the corporation’s revenue, but more alarmingly, it was not required to report such details. Canada continues to remain a lucrative location in the eyes of privatization companies, as the country contains approximately 408 publicly owned water systems. The tragedy of Walkerton only reflects the greater global struggle for water democracy-a struggle that has resulted in many casualties ranging from the elderly to the youth, and from the healthy to the disabled.

Cochabamba

Perhaps the most infamous water privatization case involved the residents of Cochabamba, Bolivia, where the community overwhelmingly spoke out against Betchel. The giant U.S. multinational had gained responsibility over the region’s water resources. In October of 1999, the Drinking Water and Sanitation Law was passed, which permitted foreign water corporations to privatize Bolivia’s municipal water systems. Water prices in the Cochabamba region soon reached a disturbingly high level-the average Bolivian, who hardly earned a $100 a month, had to pay $20 alone for water services; the choice for many residents soon became whether to feed and house their families or purchase water. Through protest and perseverance, the local community rose up and soon won the battle, but not without dire costs. Seventeen year-old Victor Hugo Daza was killed by the police during the uprisings, not to mention hundreds injured. After the uprisings, Oliver Olivera, a Bolivian water activist, stated to the supporters of water privatization that “you have blood on your hands.” These six simple words that were heard throughout the world further attested to the severity of the situation and the distance people were willing to travel to obtain their innate rights to an essence of life.

The Price of a Bottle

The next time a consumer purchases a bottle of water, think of its true cost. There are several patterns of water privatization, but none are as offensive as the bottling of water. In fact, most people are unaware of the veritable scandals existing behind the bottled water industry. Characteristically, these multinational water companies go into less industrialized countries, where they monopolize water reservoirs (most often, these public reservoirs are the only available water resources that a given community might have), and sell the water back to the community at a price that invariably is far too expensive for its residents to pay. Water commodification is a global movement. In Africa, where privatization and lack of access to water is most prevalent, over half of the population earns less than one dollar a day; one can imagine the burden of trying to afford a bottle of water that is often priced a little higher than a dollar. Furthermore, women and female children are most affected, as they are forced to travel an average of five miles a day to fetch available water — often times this water is not even potable. The time-consuming task of searching for water impedes women from obtaining jobs to help feed their families and hinders female children from attending school on a regular basis. It is stated that 40 billion working hours are spent carrying water each year and 26 percent of women’s time around the world is spent on physically obtaining the water. In addition, it is estimated that 443 million school days are lost each year due to water privatization and the consequences it has on individual lives.

Water Democracy

Once the attendant injustices of water privatization became evident to the international community, activists, environmentalists, and average citizens alike have been arguing for a greater local presence in the decision-making process affecting water use. Also, advocates have been urging the World Bank, IMF, WTO, as well as national governments to discard their privatization scenarios, as, due to their high cost, they more often than not cause dissension among communities. There are alternatives. Advocates for democratizing water, Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke, assert that there are three essentials the public must control in order to secure their water from any conglomerate monopolization. First, they stress the need for conservation. The population is predicted to exponentially increase while the ecosystem’s water supply is likely to decrease by at least 30 percent. Therefore, preservation is a vital measure to take in order to safeguard this precious resource. Second, they emphasize the importance of equity in regards to water allocation.

Although some nations are blessed with abundant access to fresh water, others are burdened with an egregious lack of this fundamental source of life. Third, in order to institutionalize conservation and equity, water democracy must be obtained at all costs. Water management, its proponents maintain, should be in the hands of the people, not under control of corporations whose principle desire is to generate revenue. It is also notable that accountability, transparency, and consensus are vital in the management of water. Water is for life, not for profit. If the commodification of water continues — thus possibly undermining the basic right to life, it is not absurd to conclude that other vital resources might only become available on a for-pay basis. The coming water crisis must be dealt within a transparent, democratic process or else the globe will fall victim to a series of potentially violent and life threatening consequences. Barlow and Clark state that “In the 21st century, our water is becoming a commodity. Some want to profit from it and others are ready to go to war over it, but every form of life must have it.” The overarching question will be, “who will control this source of life?”

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Ashley Powdar.

The Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and information organization.

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.

 

 
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Our Political Leaders Are to Blame in World Water Crisis

         By Maude Barlow, The New Press

         Posted on April 24, 2008, Printed on April 24, 2008

         http://www.alternet.org/story/83362/

/This piece originally appears in Maude Barlow's Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water <http://www.thenewpress.com/index.php?option=com_title&task=view_title&metaproductid=1674> and is published here with the permission of The New Press. Available now at good book stores everywhere. © 2007 by Maude Barlow. /

So here, then, is the answer to the question, Can we run out of freshwater? Yes, there is a fixed amount of water on Earth. Yes, it is still here somewhere. But we humans have depleted, polluted and diverted it to such an extent that we can now actually say the planet is running out of accessible, clean water. /Fast./ The freshwater crisis is easily as great a threat to the Earth and humans as climate change (to which it is deeply linked) but has had very little attention paid to it in comparison.

The world is running out of available, clean freshwater at an exponentially dangerous rate just as the population of the world is set to increase again. It is like a comet poised to hit the Earth. If a comet really did threaten the entire world, it is likely that our politicians would suddenly find that religious and ethnic differences had lost much of their meaning. Political leaders would quickly come together to find a solution to this common threat.

However, with rare exceptions, average people do not know that the world is facing a comet called the global water crisis. And they are not being served by their political leaders, who are in some kind of inexplicable denial. The crisis is not reported enough in the mainstream media, and when it is, it is usually reported as a regional or local problem, not an international one. Water policy is raised as a major issue in very few national elections, even in water-stressed countries. In fact, in many countries, denial is the political response to the global water crisis.

In November 2006, former Australian prime minister John Howard hosted a high-level summit in Sydney to deal with what one scientist called "the worst drought in Australia in 1,000 years." Howard's answer? Allow farmers to "trade" country water to the city, thereby draining already thirsty rivers of yet more water; drain the wetlands to supply the cities; ship in tankers full of water from Tasmania; and look to technology such as desalination plants. The government uttered not a word about conservation, protecting watersheds and replenishing water systems, cleaning up toxic dumps or stopping the massive export of Australia's water stock-in-trade with China.

Under two terms of the Bush administration, environmental stewardship has been dealt a terrible blow. In his passionate book /Crimes Against Nature/, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reports that the Bush White House has rolled back more than four hundred pieces of environmental legislation and taken the United States back to a time before environmental consciousness. Not only has George W. Bush not taken his country's water crisis seriously, he has cut funding for clean water and safe drinking programs and allowed once-banned chemicals and toxins back into circulation, gutting the Clean Water Act. He has allowed logging and mining in national parks, resulting in the destruction of pristine rivers and lakes. Funding for water research in the United States has been stagnant for thirty years, and the portion dedicated to water quality has actually been reduced in the last decade.

Canada has no national water act and no inventory of its groundwater resources. A 2005 report from Environment Canada said that a national water crisis was looming and that no one in government seemed to be listening. The report gave a blunt assessment of pollution and overextraction of Canada's water systems and noted a total lack of leadership on the issue by both federal and provincial governments. Canada is allowing the destruction of huge amounts of water in the Alberta tar sands, where water is actually being lost to the hydrologic cycle in order to mine the heavy oil from the ground.

To its credit, Europe has taken some more serious action. In 2000, the European Commission launched the Water Framework Initiative, a European Union-wide plan for water conservation, clean up and administration based on the joint management of river basins. All European waters must achieve "Good Status" by 2015.

All people in the European region must have access to clean drinking water (there are currently 120 million without), and the environment must be protected as well. The initiative requires cross-border cooperation on all areas of watershed protection. While this program is among the most progressive in the world, the powerful countries of Europe have been responsible for practices in the Third World that have denied clean water to millions. Europe's record must include this fuller picture.

In the developing world, all that most governments can do is desperately try to provide water for their citizens. There is little attempt to address the environmental crisis that has polluted water in the first place. Most have bought into the tenets of the World Bank and the World Trade Organization and are attempting to export their way to prosperity, creating more environmental damage in the process. And most are helpless to police the big transnational oil, forestry and mining corporations fouling their water systems; some are in collusion with these companies to repress their own people. Most First World governments refuse to even consider legislation that would hold their corporations accountable for polluting the water systems of poor countries.

The United Nations, the European Union and the World Bank have devised a water rescue plan for the developing world totally devoid of plans to deal with the growing rivers of sewage killing whole watersheds and coastlines. Ninety percent of the raw sewage in poor (and some not so poor) countries is still discharged untreated. Most of the megacities in the Third World also lose massive amounts of water from leaky infrastructure. In the global South, more than 50 percent of municipal water is lost because of faulty systems.

Nor are most rich countries prepared to cancel or at least renegotiate the debt owed by the global South to the global North to allow governments in poor countries to address these issues themselves. Every year, more money flows to the global North to pay the debt than flows to the global South in aid and trade together. No serious plan to alleviate the water crisis can ignore the poverty of the global South and the role of debt repayment in that cycle.

In addition, few countries in the world are confronting the pervasive and harmful agricultural practices that are dramatically exacerbating the crisis. Large-scale factory farms create a staggering amount of manure and depend on intensive use of antibiotics, nitrogen fertilizers and pesticides, all of which eventually end up in the water supply. Flood irrigation, used in many parts of the world, wastes enormous amounts of water. (In China, close to 80 percent of water used in flood irrigation -- the main form of irrigation in that country -- is lost to evaporation.) Flood irrigation also leads to desertification, as it overtills the soil, which then is carried away by the wind. Yet not only are wealthy countries wedded to industrial agriculture, the World Bank and the World Trade Organization promote this model in the developing world.

Nor have these international institutions and the powerful countries behind them, blinded by their unquestioning faith in market economics, begun seriously to question the abuse and overuse of water by industry. While it is commonly understood that agriculture is the biggest user of water in the world, this is changing. In industrialized countries, industry now accounts for 59 percent of total water withdrawals, and industry is fast gaining as a water abuser in developing countries as well. India, for instance, will triple its use of water for industry in the next decade. As countries such as China, India, Malaysia and Brazil undergo industrialization at an unprecedented rate, water use and misuse is growing exponentially. Yet few political leaders have the courage or foresight to question this model of development.

Every day, the failure of our political leaders to address the global water crisis becomes more evident. Every day, the need for a comprehensive water crisis plan becomes more urgent. If ever there was a moment for all governments and international institutions to come together to find a collective solution to this emergency, now is that moment. If ever there was a time for a plan of conservation and water justice to deal with the twin water crises of scarcity and inequity, now is that time. The world does not lack the knowledge about how to build a water-secure future; it lacks the political will.

But not only are our political leaders following the false promises of a quick technological fix, they are abdicating the real decision-making about the future of the world's depleting water supplies to a group of private interests and transnational corporations that view the crisis as an opportunity to make money and gain power. As we'll see, these big players know where the water is. They simply follow the money.

/Maude Barlow is a recipient of Sweden's Right Livelihood Award and a Lannan Cultural Freedom Fellowship. She is head of the Council of Canadians and founder of the Blue Planet Project. She is the author of sixteen books, including Blue Gold. /

         © 2008 The New Press All rights reserved.

         View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/83362/

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A GOOD ARTICLE:

 

 

CONTINUED ABUSE OF GROUNDWATER

(This was published in the Green Valley news two weeks ago, but not everyone saw it.)

 

 

 

I have been reading the newspaper articles over the past 10 months regarding the potential of a water crisis here in the Green Valley area within possibly 10 years. Articles further indicate there has been a serious groundwater overdraft during the past 5-7 years and the water table has gone down an average of 2-4 feet per year.

 

 

 

Having worked in the Kennecott Copper mine in Bingham, Utah for 40 plus years made me start to wonder where does Phelps Dodge-Sierrita copper mine get their groundwater.  I know that copper mines draw a lot of water from the ground and the water that they discharge after production is most always contaminated.

 

 

 

Here is what I found:  Phelps Dodge-Sierrita pumps from the Canoa Ranch area on the East side of I-19.  They use grandfathered irrigation rights transferred to them when they bought water rights out in that area several decades ago.  After investigating and finally receiving information from the Department of Water Resources, this is how much water they have taken out of the ground since 1987 to the end of 2006:  505,734 AF or 164,363,550,000 gallons.  There has been no way to put back water to replace this other than rainwater or a small amount that trickles down the Santa Cruz River from Nogales.  People this is a huge cavity down there, and getting worse each year, that is getting ready to sink.

 

 

 

Also, do I dare mention that there are about three golf courses out in that area that take about 600,000 gallons per day, per golf course.  I do not know about you, but after reading that article about the Palm Springs golf courses sinking last week due to groundwater overdraft, makes me wonder how soon is that whole area out around Canoa and Canoa Ranch going to begin to sink maybe up to 6-10 feet.  This could cause tremendous damage to house foundations, streets, not to mention all the utilities under the ground.  Who is going to pay for all of the damages, as our insurances will not pay for earth movement, unless we have earthquake insurance.

 

 

 

This copper mine could have changed over to CAP water in the 1990’s.  They were offered a CAP allocation, but forfeited it because it was cheaper to pump groundwater.  Don’t you think it is time that the mine buys CAP allotments, hooks up at Pima Mine Road, and begin to do the right neighborly thing for Green Valley.  If they can contribute one million to the proposed new hospital and $250,000 to the theatre, the least they could do is help us save the community.

 

 

 

Bill Johnson

Retired copper mine employee and

A resident of Green Valley since 2005

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February 23 - Saturday - Thought -provoking DVD Film - A Journey in the History of Water - 9:30 am at Green Valley - 601 N. La Canada. The film tells the dramatic story of how the struggle for water has shaped human society in profound ways since the dawn of civilization.

 

This documentary is a must for anyone concerned with one of the great challenges facing humanity: the understanding and the management of fresh water resources.

 

There are four segments: 1) the Struggle:2) the Energy:3) the myths: 4: the Conflict

 

Segment 1) The Struggle - No society can exist not even for one day without fresh water. Segment 4) The Conflict - Many argue that many future conflicts will be over fresh water.  Others argue that the Water questions will encourage cooperation

 

Segments 2 and 4 - to be screened MARCH 8, 2008

Admission: Free and invitation extended to one and all

Refreshments: Coffee and Brownies

 

Contact; Alma Sychuk - 520-648-6416 

email: arizcasa@cox.net

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Calendar of Water events

February 29- FRIDAY -  Citizens Water coalition public meeting at the Green Valley Library- 601 N. La Canada - from 11:00-2:00.  Supervisor Ray Carroll has been invited.  We are also trying to get a speaker from the U.S. Forest Service.

 

Next Water Planning Committee meeting - March 3- Monday, at 1:00pm at the Bank of America   (Continental Branch ) .  All welcome.

 

---------------------------------------

 

Notes of the CWAC Planning Committee meeting February 4 at 1:00 at the Bank of America.

Present;  Tom Miller, Chair  of the GVCCRR Environmental Committee. and member of PUG a (Southern AZ Providers and Users Group); David Hosea; Dick Shuman; Sandra Rooney,;Judy Hernandez, from Sahuarita United  Water  Well Users group; Roger Waller; and June Wortman.

 

Sandra Rooney was chair for today, but will be away for the next two  or three months.  David Hosea, who had considered co-chairing, decided he could not take it on.  We ended with an open question of who was willing to chair or co-chair the group.

 

Re: PUG,  we were pleased  that vision and planning might be coming from this group.  Tom Miller could not discuss what their discussions were right now, but said he would keep us informed. 

 

Judy Hernandez expressed concern from her group  whose well owners  now find sand in their wells,  when they had not, before the Rosemont Mine had put in two testing wells.  They are having to drill much further down to get water at all.  If this continues, their property will be worthless.  She was also concerned about additional housing developments being planned east of Tucson

 

Both Tom Miller, who had years of experience with the Indiana State Board on Water, and Roger Waller, retired U.s Geologic Survey, which has a District Office in Tucson, where he translated tech reports into common language, were concerned about the need for a change in the Law,  A bill is before Congress, backed by both Rep Giffords and Rep. Grijalva.   

   Roger was also concerned that the severe pumping distorts the natural groundwater flow so contamination comes this way.  There are new techniques for de-salinization and about four studies out on the subject.   The PUG groups is trying to bring together all the information.

 

Re: the Rosemont Mine.  Dick Shuman has written the Forest Service asking  them to insist on more information from the Mine concerning the impact study of the entire valley.  In his view, there are two ways to stop Rosemont  1) Congress must pass a new law and 2) the Forest Service must deny a permit.

 

There is a website  on which to obtain a comprehensive study - at the site of Freeport McMoran is a good layout and report.

 

Sandra Rooney said that the (AAUW) Association of University Women has some long term plans for study of water and she will provide us that information.

 

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED CITIZEN ACTION ;

 

Contact Representatives Grijalva and Giffords support them in sponsoring the new mine.  Ask them whom we should write to urge quicker action on their bill.  What is the current status of the Bill and what is holding it up.  Actually there are two different laws.

1)

TO WRITE ANY MEMBER OF THE U.S. HOUSE, ADDRESS YOUR LETTER TO: the rep's full name . at   U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,  WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515.   Your don't need the specific building.  TO CALL ANY MEMBER OF THE U.S. HOUSE OR SENATE CALL       1-(202) 224-3121   TTY: (202) 225-1904 |

 

Rep. Giffords' Chief of Staff in Washington, D.C. is   Ms. Maura Policelli. Mail address for Giffords is:

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords -  502 Cannon House Office Building Washington, DC 20515.

Phone:(202) 225-2542 Fax: (202) 225-0378  Email:  maura.policelli@mail.house.gov   or -

Gabe Zimmerman, supervisor of constituent services -  Gabe.Zimmerman@mail.house.gov

520-881-3588 is her Tucson office number.

 

2) To write the US Forest Service  to ask for a  copy of the Rosemont Mine plan, and a complete impact study of the Rosemont Mine and your opposition to the mine and reasons for it.  Be short and concise.

To: Ms. Jeanine A. Derby, Forest Supervisor

 

USDA, Coronado National Forest

 

300 W. Congress

 

Tucson, AZ 85701

 

Re: File Code 2810, your October 19, 2007 letter to Jamie Sturgess, Rosemont Copper

 

Subject: Rosemont Plan Of Operations

 

 

We have plans for the future  including  hearing from the Regional Planning Group that has formed in Tucson, and members of Tucson city council;  also plans for summer debates between the candidates for State Senate and State House  (two women from Green Valley are candidates and are members of our coalition);  a future report from PUG when they feel ready;  and fall debates between Giffords and her opponent for the US  House, and between Grijalva and his opponent for the US House.

 

TO THOSE WHO TELL ME HOW FRANTIC THEY FEEL ABOUT THE WATER SITUATION - THERE ARE TWO THINGS YOU CAN DO TO PUT YOUR FRANTIC TO WORK - LISTED ABOVE.

 

 

THE THIRD THING YOU CAN DO IS JOIN THE PLANNING COMMITTEE.  WE NEED PEOPLE TO

 ASSUME SOME OF THE WORK OF CONTACTING SPEAKERS

 

THERE IS NO NEED TO FEEL HELPLESS UNLESS YOU ARE JUST WRINGING YOUR HANDS AND SOBBING.  DO SOMETHING.  YOU WILL FEEL BETTER.

 

June Wortman, scribe - 648-5877

 

 

-------------------------------------------------------------------In the Star's special on Sahuarita today it reported that Residents of an area west of Sahuarita will meet  January 17 to talk with neighbors and others about their concerns over a mining company's plans to pump groundwater from their area for a proposed copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains.

Tje grpi[s. which is calling itself Sahuarita Well Owners Unite, will meet from 6 to 8 pm at the Sahuarita Baptist Church,  2875 E. Saharita Road.

About 50 residents of Sahuarita Heights and surrounding areas have organized in opposition to Canadian based August Resource Corp's plans to pump 1000.000 acre feet of water from their area.

Residents fear their residential wills will run dry once Augusta cranks up its industrial size wells for the mining operation....................................

The proposal has stirred  strong opposition from area residents because the mile-wide 1,900 foot deep pit would be dug and blasted in an ecologically sensitive area...............................

Anyone interested in the issue is invited to next Thursday's meeting, said Thomas Perry, an organizer and area resident.  For information contec him at 907-2188 or via email at sahuaritawells@yahoo.com

Anyone from the CWAC who wants to go should go.

Message sent by June Wortman, editor of June's Rag at junesrag@cox.net and at http://junesrag.pbwiki.com

520-648-5877

 

 
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IMPORTANT INFORMATION TO THE CITIZENS WATER ACTION COALITION  and the PUBLIC

 

Pima County Board of Supervisors

 

Attached are Comments I plan to submit at the ACC Meeting On December 5 at 1:00 PM at the American Legion Post 66 Town Hall, 1560 Duval Mine Road, Sahuarita. (I am not attaching the listed supporting documents, available on request).

 

I have also submitted a formal Complaint Form to the Arizona Corporation Commission with the following summary-

 

"Green Valley does not have a sustainable water supply. Community Water Company of Green Valley (CWCGV) power structure  is negotiating with Augusta Resources/Rosemont Mine (ARC) to build an inadequate pipeline to Green Valley to deliver CAP water instead of considering a coalition of water stakeholders to build an adequate pipeline to achieve a sustainable water supply. They are refusing to allow members of this cooperative to  see or ratify the contract.

 

CWCGV should make no legal or contractual obligations with ARC without a complete disclosure and a fair ratifying vote of the members who have a broader viewpoint and are better able to make evaluations for themselves and for the Larger Community. Attached is a Memorandum by Pima County Administrator C.H. Huckelberry which offers a comprehensive analysis of our water crisis."

 

Dick Shuman

Ph 648-0445

 

Note to Richard Elias-

We are waiting to be notified of a PBS Hearing in Green Valley regarding Mr. Huckelberry's October 2, 2007 MEMORANDUM. We welcome your comments and advice.

 

 

 

The public may attend the meeting below.

 

 

COMMENTS SUBMITTED TO THE ARIZONA CORPORATE COMMISSION

SPECIAL OPEN MEETING, GREEN VALLEY TOWN HALL, DECEMBER 5, 2007

PROPOSED CAP WATER PIPELINE

THESE COMMENTS ARE ALSO ATTACHED TO A FORMAL COMPLAINT BY DICK SHUMAN DATED 12/5/2007

 

 

Subject: Community Water Company of Green Valley (CWC) proposed pipeline involving contracts with Augusta Resources Corporation, Rosemont Mine (ARC).

Requested Actions Regarding Pipeline

  1. ACC not approve any requests from CWC at this time.

  2. CWC to make full disclosure of agreement and terms to CWC cooperative members.

  3. CWC to conduct a hearing for discussion, questioning and debate

  4. CWC to conduct a ratifying vote by the members before making legal or contractual obligations

  5. CWC investigate other pipeline options, particularly those suggested by MEMORANDUM dated October 2, 2007 by Pima County Administrator C.H. Huckelberry

  6. CWC to explore collaboration of local water stakeholders to achieve water sustainability in our aquifer basin.

 

 

SUMMARY OF ISSUES

CWC has a relatively small allocation of CAP water. In its well-intentioned haste to find an affordable delivery system to Green Valley, CWC has entered into negotiations with ARC to pay for a pipeline to Green Valley. This action has put it a cross purposes with its members and the Larger Community that is opposed to the Rosemont Mine. They believe this action will facilitate and enable the approval of the mine by the USDA Forest Service because the biggest stumbling block to approval is the devastating effect it will have on efforts to achieve sustainability in our aquifer that is already in a state of crisis.

 

 

Water crisis in Green Valley Aquifer.

The Green Valley aquifer does not have a sustainable water supply given current pumping rates in the Upper Santa Cruz River Basin. The deficit between pumping and recharge is approximately 40,000 Acre Feet (AF) excluding the Rosemont Mine. The level of the aquifer is dropping between 2 and 4 feet annually. No comprehensive plan exists to achieve sustainability. Central Arizona Project (CAP) water is our only possible source of renewable and sustainable water. The Rosemont mine will consume 5000 AF from our aquifer that otherwise could be available to mitigate this crisis.

Our crisis is now being recognized by the water stakeholders in our valley and by state and local governments, and by citizen’s action groups. The stakeholders consist of water providers, agriculture, mining and golf courses. A vision for mitigating our crisis is underway based on successful experience in California establishing watershed authorities of collaborating stakeholders.

 

 

Pima County Supervisors are planning a Hearing in Green Valley soon on a Memorandum regarding “Long Term Green Valley Water Supply”, prepared by County Administrator C. H. Huckelberry on October 2, 2007. This is a comprehensive assessment of the water crises in the Green Valley/ Sahuarita area and provides conclusions and recommendations that can lead to a sustainable water supply in the future.

The Memorandum recommends that Pima County “Facilitate and assist Green Valley municipal water providers, as well as existing mine and agricultural water users, to cooperate in the extension and financing of a CAP pipeline to provide both direct use of CAP renewable water supplies, as well as recharge of the same.” This vision for mitigating our crisis is underway.

 

 

CWC has no comprehensive plan

CWC should participate in this collaborative effort involving the entire community. CWC should not rush into a venture with Augusta/Rosemont (ARC) which is diversionary at best and severely damaging to our community at worst if it facilitates approval of the Rosemont mine. (Rosemont Mine is opposed by a Pima County Resolution and the vast majority of communities, towns, citizens, and homeowner associations in Pima County. Important objections are to its deleterious effects on the riparian and recreational areas in the scenic Santa Rita Mountains. The negative economic effects it will have on tourism and residential development are far greater than the its negligible contribution to the local economy).

 

 

CWC Pipeline- a Diversion

The Pima County MEMORANDUM states-

Rosemont Mine Pipeline Extension a Detractor to the Problem of Water Supply

Recently a great deal of controversy has arisen over the proposal of Rosemont Mine to pay for a Central Arizona Project pipeline extension from the Pima Mine Road recharge site to a recharge site in the general service area of Community Water of Green Valley. It is unfortunate that this proposal received so much publicity and caused so much controversy within the Green Valley community because it is simply irrelevant to the permanent solution of securing the long-term water future of the Upper Santa Cruz Valley Basin within Pima County.

 

 

A new mine, without question, should be prohibited from using groundwater, particularly when other, lower quality water sources are available. In fact, all mine water consumption, whether new or existing, should be from a lower water quality or non-potable water source. The proposal by Rosemont to pay for a 20-inch pipeline extension to convey Central Arizona Project water to a recharge facility within the Community Water service area does more harm than good, particularly when studies sponsored by the Arizona Department of Water Resources indicate that such a pipeline would only serve one small segment of the Upper Santa Cruz Valley water users. Past studies indicate that the size of a pipeline that would convey Central Arizona Project water for direct use or recharge for the entire Upper Basin would need to be at least 72 inches in diameter. Hence, discussion of only a partial solution, a 20-inch pipeline, is counterproductive, and spending money for such a limited solution would be a waste of resources.”

 

 

Ratifying Vote by CWC Members?

CWC refuses requests for a ratifying vote by members. CWC should make no legal or contractual obligations with ARC without a complete disclosure of the terms and a fair ratifying vote by the membership. (The Letter of Intent is seriously flawed by giving undesirable controls to ARC). This is necessary because the CWC power structure appears fixed on a course of action that ignores the broader implications important to its members and to the Larger Community. Indeed, they have stated publicly that they are bound by and restricted as a utility to avoid considerations outside the narrow aspects of their business. The members of the CWC cooperative are not bound by this narrow viewpoint and better able to make evaluations for themselves and for the Larger Community.

Procedures in the CWC Bylaws provide for ratifying votes by the members at annual meetings, or by Special Meetings of the members that can be called by the President of the Board, or any three members of the Board, or by petition by 20% of the members. CWC should commit to ratification; Members are preparing to petition for such a vote if necessary.

Dick Shuman

431 Circulo Del Paladin

Green Valley, AZ 85614

Ph 648-0445   shumans2@cox.net

 

 

Mr. Shuman is a retired Professional Engineer and has lived in Green Valley for 30 years. He has concentrated on GV water problems for several years. He is on GVCCC Environmental Committee, member of the Citizens Water Action Coalition, and Environmental Coordinator for Casa Paloma 1 HOA.

Supporting Documents Included

  • MEMORANDUM- regarding “Long Term Green Valley Water Supply” by Pima County Administrator C. H. Huckelberry on October 2, 2007

  • Letter of opposition to Ms. Jeanine A. Derby, Forest Supervisor, USDA, Coronado National Forest

  • CWAC letter regarding convening of “Green Valley-Sahuarita Water Basin Planning Group”

  • USDA Comments to Consider- regarding Rosemont Mine Plan of Operation

  • ACC Comments to Consider regarding CWC “Letter of Intent”

  • Comments-October 30 Meeting by CWC-Release of Letter of Intent with ARC

Note:

We were told by CWC that this meeting would only deal with tariffs and rate matters. However I find from your ACC Web page that –

Commissioners function in an Executive capacity, they adopt rules and regulations thereby functioning in a Legislative capacity, and they also act in a Judicial capacity sitting as a tribunal and making decisions in contested matters”.

And

can investigate your inquiry or dispute concerning…

A utilities policies and procedures”

And

also regulates utility cooperatives”.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

 

Last weekend my partner and I took a drive up into the Santa Ritas, exactly where the Rosemont open pit mine will be.   On the way up the back-roads we passed scores of families camping, four wheeling, sporting and enjoying the glories of nature.  The whole area is a unique treasure heavily used by our citizens.   Are they aware that soon we will all be barred from the site, as an irrevocable scar is opened on the land?  I applaud Grijalva and Giffords' efforts to limit future mining in our precious wilds but it is too late for Rosemont.   Perhaps you've heard their almost subliminal ads on KUAZ.  Don't be fooled; the owners of the Rosemont mine will take the minerals, destroy the land and watershed and leave us with the mess and without our valuable natural resources.   Star, do your reporting now and inform us of this potential disaster.

John Mijac REALTOR

Tucson AZ, 857122

-----------------------------------------------------------

From Arturo Gabaldon     arturo@communitywater.com

Attached is the latest Drought Monitoring Report (September).  You can also access these reports from the County's Drought Management page (http://www.pima.gov/drought/). 

It is five pages so I won't print it.  Just click on the http above to see it.

 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here is where you can write if you oppose the Rosemont Mine.  Several things were attached.  If you want them, they will be on http://junesrag.pbwiki.com on the Water and Environment Page shortly.  WRITE NOW.  If you did not see Jeff Smith's wonderful article in the same paper today, it will be on http:..junesrag.pbwiki.com shortly all on the Water page.  Write the paper and thank him for it.

-----------------------------

 

To: Ms. Jeanine A. Derby, Forest Supervisor

USDA, Coronado National Forest

300 W. Congress

Tucson, AZ 85701

Re: File Code 2810, your October 19, 2007 letter to Jamie Sturgess, Rosemont Copper

Subject: Rosemont Plan Of Operations

This is an appeal that the Rosemont Mine not be approved. As a matter of basic justice and fairness, no governmental agency should approve a plan that will knowingly cause harm to our community in time of crisis and necessity.

The Green Valley aquifer does not have a sustainable water supply given current pumping rates in the Upper Santa Cruz River Basin. The deficit between pumping and recharge is approximately 40,000 Acre Feet (AF) excluding the Rosemont Mine. The level of the aquifer is dropping between 2 and 4 feet annually. No comprehensive plan exists to achieve sustainability. Central Arizona Project (CAP) water is our only possible source of renewable and sustainable water. The Rosemont mine will consume 5000 AF from our aquifer that otherwise could be available to mitigate our crisis.

Our crisis is now being recognized by the water stakeholders in our valley and by state and local governments, and by citizen’s action groups. The stakeholders consist of water providers, agriculture, mining and golf courses. A vision for mitigating our crisis is underway based on successful experience in California establishing watershed authorities of collaborating stakeholders.

Under no circumstances should a large water consumer such as Rosemont Mine be approved while Our Green Valley Aquifer is in a state of crisis and mitigating plans are proceeding.

Respectfully,

s/ Dick Shuman

Dick Shuman

Casa Paloma I Homeowners, Inc.*

Environmental Coordinator

Ph: (520) 648-0445 Email shumans2@cox.net

 

 

Thank you Richard. for this fine letter.  Now all of you write.

 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Environmental Defense Action Fund   Operation Climate Vote

Dear Richard,

Big week last week, Senate Committee vote could come next week.

It's been a busy and promising week at Operation Climate Vote. And Congress is feeling the pressure.

Steve Cochran, our National Climate Campaign Director, just asked me to send out a personal update to our supporters.

Right now, he and his legislative team are busy keeping the momentum going following last week's bipartisan passage of the Lieberman-Warner America's Climate Security Act in a key Senate subcommittee.

Steve called in with some notes and here's his inside look at where we stand with just weeks left to pass legislation in 2007.

***************************************

  • Thanks to ongoing pressure, last week a key Senate subcommittee passed the America's Climate Security Act with bipartisan support. The bill would cap and cut America's global warming pollution, while protecting the economy and American consumers. The full Senate Environment and Public Works Committee may vote on this legislation before Thanksgiving.

  •  

  • Americans in important swing districts now favor aggressive action to stop global warming. A recent Environmental Defense poll of more than 49 of the most critical swing districts shows overwhelming support for strong global warming legislation – with over 70% of independent voters in favor of swift action to cut global warming pollution.

  •  

  • We've placed a flight of targeted TV and print ads on Capitol Hill and in swing districts to help mobilize those swing votes. We have also strategically placed Metro ads at the Capitol South Metro station used by many congressional staff.

  •  

  • Meanwhile, in the House, we are working hard to get key leaders to begin work on a comprehensive global warming bill. The House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman John Dingell (D-MI) has been working with Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA) on a series of white papers to outline their approach for climate legislation. With the Senate making progress on the Lieberman-Warner bill, it's important the House not fall behind.

***************************************

One thing is certain: every member of Congress needs to hear from every concerned citizen. Please forward this message to your friends and your family and ask them to take a stand: http://environmentaldefense.org/climatevote07.

Steve and his team are doing everything possible to make the legislation the strongest it can be and pass it this year. We'll keep you up to date as the Lieberman-Warner bill progresses in the Senate and on any progress in the House.

Your actions and your support make this work possible. Thank you for sticking with us and turning up the heat on Congress.

Sincerely,

Sam Parry

Manager, Online Membership and Activism

Environmental Defense

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

County staff back Mission Peaks plan, call for CAP water connection

By Philip Franchine, Sahuarita Sun  (a shorter version is in the Green Valley News.)

 

Tuesday, October 30, 2007 9:32 PM MDT

Pima County staff are recommending a plan amendment for the huge Mission Peaks master-planned project west of town, saying the developer has shown the commitment necessary to making an urban-sized development work in the sparsely populated desert.

“The scale of development proposed is relatively uncommon in Pima County ... Staff believes there is enough information available, commitment on the part of the developer and a conceptual design for further study to consider this as an appropriate location for future urban growth.

“Staff recommends proceeding with the comprehensive plan amendments, realizing that there is much more work to be done before a rezoning or specific plan is completed,” a report compiled by county senior planner Jim Veomett said.

The staff report said, “the preferred option for providing water ... is direct connection to the Central Arizona Project, including provision of appropriate water treatment facilities, to be designed, funded and constructed by the developer,” although the developer, American Nevada Co., has said publicly in recent weeks that it will use groundwater and not CAP water.

 

To read the rest of this very informative article click to

/www.sahuaritasun.com/articles/2007/10/30/news/news03.txt

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Rosemont Copper drilling well in Sahuarita Heights

By Philip Franchine, Sahuarita Sun

www.sahuaritasun.com/articles/2007/10/30/news/news04.txt

The firm seeking to developer a copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains has begun drilling an exploratory water well east of Sahuarita.

Meanwhile, Rosemont Copper, an affiliate of Augusta Resource Corp., has been asked by the Forest Service to detail its groundwater and surface water plans.

The large drilling rig near Dawson Road and Alvernon Way is the second of two test holes to determine the best location for a well field for groundwater that would serve the proposed copper mine, said Jamie Sturgess of Rosemont Copper.

“That’s a Rosemont Copper Co. test hole. We have another test hole already drilled. It’s part of our water sourcing plan. We have to develop the technical data and aquifer characteristics to support (mine) permit applications and the public review process,” said Sturgess, vice president of projects and environment for Augusta Resource.

“I expect our operation to generate on the order of 5,000 acre feet of water a year. We’ll have as many as a dozen different production wells.

“We are not looking for one jumbo well—we are looking to have a dispersed well field—several wells with a manageable amount of water coming from each one, so it doesn’t depress the aquifer.

 

To read the rest of this article click on 

www.sahuaritasun.com/articles/2007/10/30/news/news04.txt

 

 

-------------------------------------------------------

 

By Jim Lamb, Green Valley News -  10/31/07

Hoping to answer questions about bringing Central Arizona Project water to Green Valley, Community Water Co. released documents on the issue last week, only to find Tuesday morning there were skeptics with more questions.

Participants at a water company forum crowded around information tables, asking such things as the ultimate cost of the plan and how long it would take to acquire state land for a water recharge basin.

Community Water says Rosemont Mining Co., an affiliate of Augusta Resource Corp., will pay to build a pipeline to deliver CAP water to the Green Valley area.

Rosemont plans to build a copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains east of Green Valley.

For its operations, Rosemont would take water from the local aquifer from wells at Sahuarita and pipe it across the mountains. It would take water from the southern end of the CAP pipeline at Pima Mine Road and pump it to Green Valley for recharge. Before this deal was proposed, Rosemont had planned to recharge water in to the Tucson aquifer at Marana about 35 miles north.

More than 150 people listened as water company President Art Gabald—n outlined the agreement with Rosemont.

Gabald—n said the agreement was not the final solution to this area’s threatened water supply, “but its a darn good start.” He added, “We need to get the water down here.”

The local aquifer provides water for thousands of residential users in Mexico and Southern Arizona, for existing mining operations, agriculture users and golf courses.

Experts say the local water table is falling two to three feet a year.

During negotiations to get Rosemont to build a pipeline to the Green Valley Gabald—n said, the first idea of how to recharge the aquifer was “to just dump it into the Santa Cruz River.” a not-so-good idea.

“River recharge runs off,” as much as seven miles downstream he said. And it can pond in some places, meaning places of stagnant or mosquito-breeding water.

So he said Community Water decided to opt for an artificial recharge basin, and discovered that the most suitable location was on Arizona State Trust land.

Getting that land would be difficult. The state Land Department wants to get money for its land to help pay for education and by law it must sell to the highest bidder, said Gabald—n

Pima County Supervisor Ray Carroll, who opposes the deal with Rosemont, attended the meeting and said it raised more questions than it answered, especially what it would take to build a pipeline from Pima Mine Road to Green Valley.

“We don’t know the costs,” said Carroll.

And Carroll said the company hasn’t been forthcoming with other critical information.

Tom Ward, first vice president of Green Valley Community Coordinating Council, said paying for State Trust Land would surely increase the price.

Community Water has had five meetings with members and the public about the proposal.

In early December, the Arizona Corporation Commission plans to come to Green Valley for a hearing on the proposal.

jlamb@gvnews.com | 547-9749

 

---------------------------------------------------------

 

By Jaime Richardson, Green Valley News

www.gvnews.com/articles/2007/10/30/news/news03.prt

Tucson Mayor Bob Walkup spoke Tuesday at the Rotary Club of Green Valley on Tucson’s future and the need for regional unity.

 

Walkup said that water allocation was the issue that first inspired him to run for mayor in 1999 and is still a major concern for Tucson and surrounding cities.

 

“I say that Green Valley needs a pipeline that has CAP water. Any organization that has to rely on groundwater is going to be put in a delicate spot in the future,” Walkup said.

 

“Hopefully, the next thing we’ll be seeing is regional water and regional planning,” he said.

 

But the mayor said he is optimistic about the benefits of cooperation in the future, citing progress stemming from the Tucson Regional Economic Organization (TREO) and the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA), which was created to improve Southern Arizona roadways and make traveling between cities more convenient.

 

The Transportation Authority serves Tucson, Pima County, Marana, Oro Valley, Pascua Yaqui Tribe, Sahuarita, South Tucson and the Tohono O’odham Nation, he said, each district in control of one vote. The program has already released 108 transportation projects to the region since its inception in 2004.

 

Tucson recently adopted the “Smart” Highway Technology program which put 265 four-way cameras at city intersections that interpret the flow of traffic and send information to the next intersection.

 

“If you have a hard time driving in Tucson these days, just wait. It’ll be a delight.”

 

He also joked about the recent construction in downtown Tucson. “Just so you know, one of my jobs as mayor is to drive around Tucson and try to find a street that’s not torn up, then say ‘this is the one we’ll tear up next.’”

 

“I thought I’d say that before you said it.”

 

Walkup, 70, is a retired engineer and aerospace industry executive who has been Tucson’s mayor since 1999. He was re-elected in 2003 and is running for a third term this November. The Republican’s only challenger is David Croteau, a Green Party member.

 

If Walkup wins, he would be the second mayor in Tucson’s history to serve a third four-year term.

 

One Rotary club member asked what future issue most worries the mayor.

 

“An epidemic in Mexico that might come across the border, that would put us in a position where we would have to evacuate our citizens,” said Walkup, citing the recent wildfires in California that led to an evacuation of at least 500,000 people in San Diego county.

 

Despite extensive planning with the city’s law enforcement and fire officials, he says, it’s a concern that needs to be addressed.

 

“The one thing that brings me to a cold sweat is planning for how to serve under adverse conditions like that.”

 

jrichardson@gvnews.com | 547-9726

 

 

 

I tried to find the excellent editorial in today's  10-/30  GV News but can't find in on their website

 

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/

 

by Kevin Drum  October 29, 2007

THICKER THAN WATER....Brad Plumer hits on one of my pet peeves today: the fact that drought policies (and drought press coverage) inevitably focuses on residential water use even though it's, literally, a drop in the bucket:

As [Jon] Gertner notes in passing, it's farming, and not residential areas, that consumes the vast majority of water in the [Southwest] (90 percent of Colorado's water goes toward agriculture). You'd think, then, that inefficient agriculture practices would get most of the scrutiny here. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, most irrigated farmland in the area — in California, Colorado, and Wyoming — is watered via flood irrigation, the least efficient method out there. Basically, farmers dig a bunch of trenches and dump water in them. In the short run, it's cheap and easy; in the long run, it tends to waste water and deplete topsoil.

Subsidies are part of the problem here: Large farms often qualify for taxpayer-subsidized irrigation water, paying as little as 10 percent of the full cost. That, in turn, discourages conservation: "A 1997 study by researchers at Cornell University suggests that more than 50 percent of irrigation water never reaches crops because of losses during pumping and transport." The subsidies also encourage farmers to grow water-guzzling crops like alfalfa, a crop that sucks up about 20 percent of California's water but comprises only a tiny part of the economy (it's mostly used to feed cows). I'd like to see more on the subject, but this seems like a major place to focus on, no?

Unfortunately, this is an almost impossible problem to address. Reducing agricultural water use by 20% would basically solve all our problems, but it can't be done because water rights are controlled by an almost impenetrable maze of local water districts, Spanish land grants, English common law, multi-state compacts, acts of Congress, court rulings at every level imaginable, overlapping jurisdictions, and local, state and federal environmental regulations. And that's not even counting the vast corporate lobbying forces that would be at work even if the legal Gordion knot weren't.

 

 

So it's hopeless, I guess. But that doesn't stop me from bitching about it. And it sure doesn't justify this massive Bush administration giveaway to California agribusiness, which has to be read to be believed.

Kevin Drum

 

 

 

---------------------------------------------------

A WATER ALERT

 

Sean Sullivan

 

Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection

 

 

_____________________________________________________

 

 

As part of Pima County’s Comprehensive Plan Amendment process, the Water Resources Element of the Regional Plan Policies is being amended. The overall goal of the amendment is to address water resource issues earlier in the land-use decision making process. The Coalition provided comments on a draft of this amendment in September as part of the public review process. The two most significant comments we provided were in relation to (1) more thoroughly addressing local groundwater depletions and (2) the need for more specific policies and guidelines:

 

The draft did not adequately address local groundwater depletions. Currently, under state law, water can be drawn from one part of a water basin as long as it is recharged elsewhere in the basin. This reflects an emphasis on a regional water balance. However, when this happens, localized groundwater depletion occurs, often negatively impacting groundwater-dependent riparian areas in proximity to the point of water withdrawal. The Coalition requested that property owners be required to mitigate their impacts on local groundwater in the area that will be affected in order to better protect nearby riparian areas.

 

 

 

The draft amendment did not provide adequately detailed policies for land-use decisions. For example, a previous draft included the following provision:

 

 

Plan amendments that would increase the development potential in areas that are less than five miles from a shallow groundwater area or groundwater dependent spring or stream shall not be approved if the development is likely to have negative impacts on the flow or stability of these ecological areas.

 

 

Unfortunately, this policy, along with others, was removed from the most recent draft and replaced with more general policies. The Coalition requested that specific policies be included.

 

 

In general, the Coalition supports the revision of the Water Resources Element within the Comprehensive Plan. Accounting for water resource impacts early in the land-use decision-making process will assist in protecting Pima County’s riparian areas and many endangered species. The Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan states that, “Riparian resources and aquatic systems are the most vulnerable and least protected habitats in Pima County.” (emphasis added) By revising this section of the Comprehensive Plan, Pima County will make great strides towards protecting these vulnerable habitats and resources.

 

 

What You Can Do! Contact the Planning and Zoning Commissioners and the Pima County Supervisors to let them know that you support the following points and want them included in the Water Resources Element of the Regional Plan Policies:

 

 

1.   Recharge activities must occur in the area being affected.

 

 

2.   The inclusion of detailed policies that will ensure the protection of Water/Riparian Resources.

 

 

The text of the Draft Amendment can be found at http://www.rfcd.pima.gov/Recharge/index.htm under “Draft Policies,” along with additional background information. Coalition comments can be found at www.sonorandesert.org.

 

 

 

 

PUBLIC COMMENTS ON THE WATER RESOURCES AND MISSION PEAKS AMENDMENTS:

 

 

Attend one or both of the below meetings:

 

 

9 AM - Wednesday, October 31, 2007, Planning and Zoning Commission, Public Works Building, Basement Meeting Room C & D , 201 N Stone Ave, Tucson, AZ

 

 

9 AM - Tuesday, December 11, 2007, Board of Supervisors, Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, Pima County Administration Building, 130 W. Congress,1st floor, Tucson, AZ

 

 

 

 

Send written comments to:

 

 

Due October 29th - P&Z Commission, C/O Ben Changkakoti, Pima County Development Services/Planning Division, Public Works Building, 201 N. Stone Ave., 2nd Floor, Tucson, AZ 85701. Send your email to: manbendra.changkakoti@dsd.pima.gov  Due December 10th - Board of Supervisors, Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, Pima County Administration Building, 130 W. Congress, 1st floor, Tucson, AZ 85701

 

 

Sean Sullivan

 

 

Outreach Coordinator

 

 

Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection

 

 

300 E. University Blvd., Suite 120

 

Tucson, AZ 85705

 

Ph: (520)388-9925

 

Fx: (520)620-6401

 

www.sonorandesert.org

 

 

 

 

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IMPORTANT COMING EVENTS WITH WATER AND MINES.

 

----------------------------------

 

ALSO:

 

OCTOBER 30- TUESDAY - AT 9:30AM AT WEST CENTER IN GREEN VALLEY,  THE COMMUNITY WATER COMPANY SPONSORS AN OPEN MEETING TO PRESENT THE LETTER OF AGREEMENT WITH AUGUST MINE  FOR YOUR INFORMATION AND DISCUSSION.

------------------

 

OCTOBER 30 - TUESDAY, AT 9:30AM AT THE GREEN VALLY LIBRARY,  601 N. LA CANADA, GREEN VALLEY - THOUGHT PROVOKING FILMS PRESENTS THE MOVIE ON THE LIBBY MINE AND DISASTER IT LEFT BEHIND.

 

TOUGH CHOICES- BOTH GOOD

-------------------------------

 

BE SURE TO PUT THIS ON YOUR CALENDAR.

Water pipeline meeting set for Dec. 5 in GVARIZONA DAILY STAR

            Members of the Arizona Corporation Commission will hear public comments in a Dec. 5 meeting in Green Valley.The special public hearing is set for 1 p.m. at the Elks Lodge 2592 at 2951 S. Camino Mercado.The five commissioners aren't scheduled to take any action during the meeting, said Adam Staf...

 

http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/relatedstories/206765.php

 

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From Arturo Gabaldon     arturo@communitywater.com

Attached is the latest Drought Monitoring Report (September).  You can also access these reports from the County's Drought Management page (http://www.pima.gov/drought/). 

It is five pages so I won't print it and I don't know how to transfer an attachment to the wiki, so click to the pima.gov  link to read it

 

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Link to Coalition Newsletter Page with Printable PDF: http://www.sonorandesert.org/newsletters

 

 

 

 

Friends of the Desert

 

Issue #35

 

Fall 2007

 

A project of the Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection in Pima County, Arizona

 

300 E. University Blvd., #120, Tucson, AZ, 85705, (520) 388-9925, www.sonorandesert.org

 

 

In an effort to ensure all Coalition supporters receive regular program updates, we're sending this monthly newsletter relaying information about important activities related to the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan (SDCP) and other Coalition efforts.

 

 

In This Issue:

 

           Message from the Director

 

           2008 Open Space Bond Needs Your Help! - Action

 

           Important Pima County Comprehensive Plan Amendments

 

                        Better Protection for Water Resources / Riparian Areas - Action

 

                        Mission Peaks Proposal for up to 15,000 Housing Units  - Action

 

           Tumamoc Hill Public Hearing Notice

 

 

Message from the Director by Carolyn Campbell

 

Dear Friends,

 

It is hard to believe that it’s been close to a decade now since the Coalition formed to promote regional habitat conservation planning – then with 19 member groups and eventually 40!  The successes we’ve had since we began our work have been, I believe, monumental.  Since our first organizing meetings in early 1998, the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan has been implemented as a local land use planning tool.  We have secured close to $175 million of open space bond funding for Pima County through our successful 2004 campaign. With this funding, tens of thousand of acres of biologically-significant lands have been set-aside for protection through acquisition.

 

 

We have optimism that through our continued work, the County’s Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan, when completed, will incorporate permanent protections for these lands, be fully funded, and will better protect – and recover! – the many vulnerable species of plants and animals of the Sonoran Desert.

 

 

Thanks to all of you for your support over the last many years.  I am continually energized by your actions – large and small; they all contribute to the Coalition’s ability to demonstrate the vast community support for the work that we do. I know I can count on all of you to continue your support. This month’s newsletter contains a number of Action Items.   We are asking you, our Friends of the Desert, to voice your opinion on all of these issues.  To summarize:

 

 

  • Next year’s Bond Program will consist of many issues, or “Questions”.  Open Space is just one of them, and is competing with substantial requests for projects such as parks, public works, court buildings, libraries, public health facilities, neighborhood reinvestment, affordable housing, and solid waste facilities.  Many of these projects have received considerable public comment; we need to do the same for Open Space!  We need you to voice your support for the 2008 Open Space Bond in order to make it a reality!

     

 

  • The County is proposing that water resources and land use be more fully integrated through amended policies in their Comprehensive Land Use Plan.  Water usage will be considered earlier in the planning process so that developments with inappropriate water use can be denied.  We need your support and comments! 

     

 

  • A development has been proposed in Pima County that if approved would allow construct of up to 15,000 housing and commercial units west of I-19 and the Santa Cruz River, near Sahuarita and Green Valley.  This project lies wholly within the Conservation Lands System of the SDCP, and the developers plan to mine groundwater to serve their residents and customers.  We are asking your help to ensure compliance with the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan policies.

     

 

Thanks again to all of you, for both your on-going financial support and actions,

 

Carolyn

 

 

2008 Open Space Bond Needs Your Help!

 

As the 2004 Conservation Acquisition (Open Space) Program continues with implementation, Pima County is gearing up for another bond election in 2008. As of August 31, 2007, the County has spent nearly $75 million of the $174.3 million approved in the 2004 bond election. The County has acquired more than 25,500 acres of conservation land and holds grazing leases on an additional 86,000 acres of state trust land. All of these lands are an integral component to the success of the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan.

 

 

The long-range vision of the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan created an acquisition program that would necessitate a series of open space bonds in order to acquire all of the important conservation lands.  The citizens’ Conservation Acquisition Commission (CAC) has finalized its recommendation of $285 million for the 2008 Open Space Bond. The lands not yet acquired in the 2004 bond will be “rolled over” into the 2008 bond program, minus those that have since been developed. As well, there have been minor additions to the 2004 eligible property acquisition map.

 

 

These additions include additional private and state lands in the Tortolita Fan, grasslands, and lands associated with water rights, streams, and springs. The CAC also included a number of properties that have significance to the community. These properties include parcels at the base of Sentinel Peak (A Mountain), the West Desert Preserve in Green Valley, Rosemont Ranch, and private lands which would be added to Saguaro National Park.

 

 

Projects

 

Millions

 

Conservation Acquisition

 

   $285

 

Parks

 

  $357

 

Public Works

 

  $140

 

Law Enforcement

 

  $60

 

Transportation Safety

 

  $50

 

Cultural Resources

 

  $50

 

Affordable Housing

 

  $37.6

 

Neighborhood Reinvestment

 

  $31.75

 

Public Health Facilities /

 

Libraries

 

~$400

 

The 2008 Bond Program will fund various project categories in addition to Open Space. These categories include public works, justice and law enforcement, parks, transportation safety, affordable housing, neighborhood investment, libraries, public health facilities, and cultural resources. Each category was assigned to a subcommittee which will forward a recommendation to the Pima County Bond Advisory Committee (BAC). This Committee will review the proposals and send their recommendations to the Pima County Board of Supervisors in the coming months.

 

                                                           

 

 

The subcommittee proposals represent over $1.4 billion in project funding requests. It will now be up to the BAC to make cuts to the proposals in order to bring the bond package to somewhere in the range of $600 - $700 million.

 

 

Another important element to include is floodplain acquisitions. Pima County Regional Flood Control requested $10 million dollars to continue their program, but no funding was included in the Parks Subcommittee package.

 

 

In order for Open Space to be fully funded at $285 million, the BAC needs to hear from you!

 

 

 

Please let the Pima County Bond Advisory Committee know that the protection of the Sonoran Desert is your number one priority!

 

Please contact the Pima County Bond Advisory Committee and let them know you support:

 

 

·     $285 million for conservation acquisition

 

·     And an additional $10 million for flood plain acquisition.

 

 

Please take the time to send an email to bondinfo@pima.gov. You can also send letters to Nicole Fyffe, County Administrators Office, 130 W. Congress St., Floor 10, Tucson, AZ 85701.

 

 

Important Pima County Comprehensive Plan Amendments

 

Better Protection for Water Resources / Riparian Areas

 

As part of Pima County’s Comprehensive Plan Amendment process, the Water Resources Element of the Regional Plan Policies is being amended. The overall goal of the amendment is to address water resource issues earlier in the land-use decision making process. The Coalition provided comments on a draft of this amendment in September as part of the public review process. The two most significant comments we provided were in relation to (1) more thoroughly addressing local groundwater depletions and (2) the need for more specific policies and guidelines:

 

 

  • The draft did not adequately address local groundwater depletions. Currently, under state law, water can be drawn from one part of a water basin as long as it is recharged elsewhere in the basin. This reflects an emphasis on a regional water balance. However, when this happens, localized groundwater depletion occurs, often negatively impacting groundwater-dependent riparian areas in proximity to the point of water withdrawal. The Coalition requested that property owners be required to mitigate their impacts on local groundwater in the area that will be affected in order to better protect nearby riparian areas.

     

 

  • The draft amendment did not provide adequately detailed policies for land-use decisions. For example, a previous draft included the following provision:

     

Plan amendments that would increase the development potential in areas that are less than five miles from a shallow groundwater area or groundwater dependent spring or stream shall not be approved if the development is likely to have negative impacts on the flow or stability of these ecological areas.

 

Unfortunately, this policy, along with others, was removed from the most recent draft and replaced with more general policies. The Coalition requested that specific policies be included.

 

 

In general, the Coalition supports the revision of the Water Resources Element within the Comprehensive Plan. Accounting for water resource impacts early in the land-use decision-making process will assist in protecting Pima County’s riparian areas and many endangered species. The Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan states that, “Riparian resources and aquatic systems are the most vulnerable and least protected habitats in Pima County.” (emphasis added) By revising this section of the Comprehensive Plan, Pima County will make great strides towards protecting these vulnerable habitats and resources.

 

 

What You Can Do! Contact the Planning and Zoning Commissioners and the Pima County Supervisors to let them know that you support the following points and want them included in the Water Resources Element of the Regional Plan Policies:

 

 

1.                  Recharge activities must occur in the area being affected.

 

2.                  The inclusion of detailed policies that will ensure the protection of Water/Riparian Resources.

 

 

The text of the Draft Amendment can be found at http://www.rfcd.pima.gov/Recharge/index.htm under “Draft Policies,” along with additional background information. Coalition comments can be found at www.sonorandesert.org.

 

See box below for public input / meeting information.

 

 

            Mission Peaks Proposal for up to 15,000 Housing Units

 

A Las Vegas firm, American Nevada Company, has submitted a development proposal to build up to 15,000 residential and commercial units on more than 4000 acres of biologically sensitive land near the Green Valley/Sahuarita area in unincorporated Pima County. The development proposal will be considered as a Comprehensive Plan Amendment by the County’s Planning and Zoning Commission on October 31. The proposed development, known as Mission Peaks, is located south of Helmet Peak Road on the west side of I-19.  The current zoning allows for 1 house per 4 acres, or about 1,200 houses. An adjacent Plan Amendment for 632 acres has been concurrently submitted for high density commercial by the Arizona State Land Department.  Both sites lie within the County-designated Conservation Lands System.

 

 

 

Conservation Lands System

 

The Conservation Lands System (CLS) is a key element of the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan (SDCP). The CLS was developed by the Science and Technical Advisory Team (made up of prominent University and agency biologists from Southern Arizona) and adopted by the Pima County Board of Supervisors in 2001. CLS designations and associated development mitigation guidelines are part of the County’s comprehensive land use plan. Pima County lands were assigned CLS designations based on the biological value of the habitat and their contribution to landscape connectivity. The Mission Peaks development proposal seeks to designate only about 1000 acres, or roughly 25% of the site, as natural undisturbed open space, even though CLS guidelines require that over 3,500 acres of the residential and commercial projects need to be preserved on the site (see the following table for more detailed figures).

 

 

Off-site Mitigation Option

 

County guidelines, which the Coalition supports, allows for other suitable lands, off-site, to be purchased and protected, in order to off-set the impacts on the site and better facilitate a comprehensive and connected preserve system of protected lands in the County.  In a letter from the County Administrator to the developer dated January 4, 2007, he states that preserving only 1,054 acres on-site is allowable if the developer provides mitigation money to purchase, “potentially a minimum of 2,500 acres of private lands now subject to development, primarily in the northern Altar Valley.” However, a minimum of 9,500 acres of land would need to be purchased to comply with the CLS, depending on the type of habitat that is impacted. Considering that the price of land in the Altar Valley area is at a minimum $6,000 per acre, the land mitigation required to off-set development impacts would require a minimum of $57 million; the developer has offered merely $13 million. The developer is also asking for exemption from the County’s Watercourse and Riparian Habitat Protection and Mitigation Requirements.

 

 

WHAT YOU CAN DO!

 

We need your help to let the Planning and Zoning Commissioners and Pima County Supervisors know that you support the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan and want CLS guidelines followed for the Mission Peaks development proposal. See box below for public input / meeting information.

 

 

Talking Points:

 

  • The development should comply with the Conservation Lands System guidelines adopted by the County.

     

  • Compliance would require: ~3,500 acres should be preserved on site OR if only 1,054 acres will be preserved on-site the developer should transfer at least $57 million to the County to acquire conservation land.

     

  • The development should comply with the County Watercourse and Riparian Habitat Protection and Mitigation Requirements.  

     

 

PUBLIC COMMENTS ON THE WATER RESOURCES AND MISSION PEAKS AMENDMENTS:

 

Attend one or both of the below meetings:

 

9 AM - Wednesday, October 31, 2007, Planning and Zoning Commission, Public Works Building, Basement Meeting Room C & D , 201 N Stone Ave, Tucson, AZ

 

9 AM - Tuesday, December 11, 2007, Board of Supervisors, Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, Pima County Administration Building, 130 W. Congress,1st floor, Tucson, AZ

 

Send written comments to:

 

Due October 29th - P&Z Commission, C/O Ben Changkakoti, Pima County Development Services/Planning Division, Public Works Building, 201 N. Stone Ave., 2nd Floor, Tucson, AZ 85701. Send your email to: manbendra.changkakoti@dsd.pima.gov  Due December 10th - Board of Supervisors, Board of Supervisors Hearing Room, Pima County Administration Building, 130 W. Congress, 1st floor, Tucson, AZ 85701

 

 

 

 

Pima County Holds Public Hearing on Tumamoc Hill Public Auction

 

 

Pima County recently requested that the State Land Department put Tumamoc Hill up for public auction. If purchased by the County, 320 acres to the west of the peak will be preserved as a Natural Area.

 

 

Input sought on Tumamoc Hill:

 

What: Public hearing on the risks and advantages of Pima County requesting the State to put Tumamoc Hill lands up for public auction in order to protect the cultural and environmental resources found on site.

 

 

When: The Pima County Board of Supervisors meeting at 9 a.m. Nov. 6.

 

 

Where: First-floor meeting room of the county Administration Building, 130 W. Congress St.

 

 

You can hear more about this plan, ask questions and express your opinions.  Recent news articles on this issue can be found at http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/207283 and http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/207220n

 

 

 

 

Until next time!

 

 

Sean Sullivan

 

Outreach Coordinator

 

Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection

 

300 E. University Blvd., Suite 120

 

Tucson, AZ 85705

 

Ph: (520)388-9925

 

Fx: (520)620-6401

 

www.sonorandesert.org

 

 

 


 

 

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