SENATE CONSERVATION COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR
SENATE MEMORIAL 70
53rd legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2017
A MEMORIAL
REQUESTING THAT CONCERNED PARTIES COOPERATE IN ADDRESSING THE ISSUES AND PROBLEMS AFFECTING THE SANTA FE RIVER BASIN; REQUESTING THE NEW MEXICO CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION TO URGE THE APPROPRIATE FEDERAL AGENCIES TO PARTICIPATE IN MEETINGS ON WATER ISSUES; REQUESTING THAT STATE AGENCIES PARTICIPATE IN MEETINGS ON WATER ISSUES.
WHEREAS, area residents formed the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative in 2011 to study and solve problems and issues along the forty-six-mile Santa Fe river basin; and
WHEREAS, the purpose of the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative is to seek active stakeholder engagement, including governmental agency representation and participation, in the planning and funding of a watershed plan for addressing the administration and health of riparian areas; and
WHEREAS, the impetus for formation of the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative came from stakeholders, with support from La Cienega valley association, a neighborhood association and improvement entity composed of the traditional communities of La Cieneguilla, village of La Bajada and La Cienega; and
WHEREAS, other traditional community organizations, such as the Agua Fria village association, acequia Agua Fria and the Aguia Fria well-owners association joined the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative; and
WHEREAS, the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative membership also includes mutual domestic water associations and acequia associations; and
WHEREAS, government organizations that have attended Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative meetings include representatives from Santa Fe county, the city of Santa Fe, the United States forest service, the United States bureau of land management, the office of United States Senator Tom Udall, the office of United States Representative Ben Ray Lujan, the department of environment and the department of game and fish; and
WHEREAS, nongovernmental community organizations that have attended Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative meetings include representatives of the Santa Fe watershed association, the WildEarth guardians, Santa Fe girls' school and Rivers Run through Us; and
WHEREAS, many problems along the Santa Fe river are caused by jurisdictional issues, where several hundred owners control or regulate the land through which the Santa Fe river and tributaries pass; and
WHEREAS, federal jurisdictional and regulatory issues arise where the United States forest service, the United States bureau of land management, the United States army corps of engineers, the United States bureau of reclamation, the United States environmental protection agency and the United States fish and wildlife service may exert authority over the Santa Fe river across their jurisdictions; and
WHEREAS, tribal governments of this region recognize themselves as true traditional communities and as the first people who lived in the region and cared for all waterways descending from the peaks of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range; and
WHEREAS, those tribal governments and communities consider themselves the first caretakers of these watersheds and have ensured that adequate flows to the lower areas surrounding these watersheds are unobstructed; and
WHEREAS, the city of Santa Fe has sought to address these jurisdictional issues and water-flow quality issues by creating a Santa Fe river commission; and
WHEREAS, the work of the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative is centered on river restoration, erosion stabilization, water quantity, water quality and open-space planning; and
WHEREAS, issues pertaining to water quality along the Santa Fe river basin date back to the 1880 damming of the river by the Santa Fe water and improvement company; and
WHEREAS, in 1971, fifty residents of Agua Fria village filed suit against the city of Santa Fe's public utility for cutting off water; and
WHEREAS, the farmers in the La Cienega valley and the village of La Bajada who were negatively affected by water quality issues protested to the office of the state engineer and won an annual offsets-release of water from the city of Santa Fe's water treatment facility; and
WHEREAS, in 2004, the legislature requested the state engineer to conduct a study and report on the history and status of water rights for lands in the vicinity of Agua Fria; and
WHEREAS, as a result of the study, in 2009, the interstate stream commission initiated water rights negotiations to settle the adjudication; and
WHEREAS, issues prevalent to water quality along the Santa Fe river basin include the identification and cost of bioremediation systems to neutralize the emerging pollutants and pharmaceuticals from the water that treatment facilities are unable to eliminate; and
WHEREAS, river restoration and erosion initiatives require support of both the downstream and upstream owners along the Santa Fe river basin;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that to conserve, preserve, protect and develop the Santa Fe river's precious water supplies to effectively plan for the future, all concerned parties be encouraged to come together to solve their mutual issues and problems; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the New Mexico congressional delegation be urged to encourage the cooperation and participation of federal agencies in meetings with the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the state engineer be requested to send staff to the appropriate meetings of the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that tribal governments be requested to continue to participate in a collaborative and cooperative effort with city, state and federal agencies to achieve successful cooperation and mutual understanding in the protection of the Santa Fe river and other waterways in the region; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be transmitted to the governor, the state engineer, the members of the New Mexico congressional delegation, the commissioner of public lands and the Santa Fe river traditional communities collaborative.
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