45th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2001
RELATING TO WATER; PROVIDING FOR CHANGE IN POINT OF DIVERSION FOR APPROPRIATIONS.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. FINDINGS--PURPOSE--CHANGE OF POINT OF DIVERSION.--
A. The legislature finds that:
(1) the entire watershed is the generating source from which the water of a river comes or accumulates in its channel;
(2) precipitation falling on the watershed sinks into the soil and finds its way by surface or underground flow or percolation through the sloping strata down to the central channel;
(3) the water of the watershed constitutes the stream, and it does not cease to be such in its centripetal movement to the channel;
(4) appropriators are entitled to the underground waters or to the stream waters pursuant to their appropriation and are entitled to a change of point of diversion; provided that it does not impair other existing rights;
(5) an application for a change in point of diversion by an appropriator by means of wells is not an application for a new appropriation in the underground water basin, but merely a request to follow the source of the original appropriation for restoration of appropriators' water; and
(6) if a water source is the same and will not impair existing rights, an application for a well permit to restore the flow of water to an amount previously appropriated is a change of place of diversion.
B. The purpose of this section is to ensure that:
(1) an appropriator of water from the central channel is entitled to depend upon all the sources that feed the main stream above his own diversion point, clear back to the farthest limits of the watershed; and
(2) an appropriation follows the water to its original source, and water appropriated from the natural flow of a river includes waters in an underground water supply that naturally reaches the river.
C. The state engineer shall approve an application for a well permit as a change in the point of diversion of an existing surface consumptive water right, not to exceed three and one-half acre feet per acre of water rights, if the natural flow of the stream includes the underground water supply of the well.