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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Rainaldi
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/17/08
02/09/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Pass Northwestern NM Water Project Act
SJM 18/aSRC
ANALYST Escudero
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Indian Affairs Department (IAD)
Office of the State Engineer (OSE)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SRC Amendment
The Senate Rules Committee amendment adds the following language:
"WHEREAS, because the proposed federal budget for fiscal year 2009 recently submitted to
congress by President George W. Bush does not include funding for projects identified in the
Northwestern New Mexico Rural Water Projects Act, it is critical that congress take the initiative
to ensure that adequate federal dollars for planning and implementation of the Navajo-Gallup
water supply project are included in the federal budget for fiscal year 2009".
SIGNIFICANT ISSUE
This Amendment makes clear that the fiscal year 2009 federal budget recently submitted to
congress does not include funding for projects identified in the Northwestern New Mexico Rural
Water Projects Act and that it is critical that adequate funding be available for the Navajo-Gallup
Water Supply Project for fiscal year 2009.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Memorial 18/aSRC – Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
This Joint Memorial urges Congress to pass the Northwestern New Mexico Rural Water Projects
Act.
The State of New Mexico and the Navajo Nation have negotiated the San Juan River
Basin in New Mexico Navajo Nation Water Rights Settlement Agreement, referred to in
this memorial as the "settlement agreement", that quantifies the Navajo Nation's rights to
use water of the San Juan river basin in New Mexico.
The Navajo Nation, the State of New Mexico and the City of Gallup have approved the
settlement agreement or related agreements that will implement the settlement
agreement and the construction of the Navajo-Gallup water supply project.
Both the Interstate Stream Commission and the State Engineer have approved the
settlement agreement.
The settlement agreement fits within New Mexico's apportionment under the Upper
Colorado River Basin Compact and provides benefits to the State of New Mexico, the
Navajo Nation and the Jicarilla Apache Nation and also provides substantial protections
to other parties to the San Juan River adjudication.
Construction of the Navajo-Gallup water supply project will provide water to numerous
chapters of the Navajo Nation and will reduce the need for eighty thousand Navajo men,
women and children to bear the financial and physical burden of hauling water for
domestic use.
Construction of the Navajo-Gallup water supply project will provide the City of Gallup
with a renewable surface water supply that is essential to the city's future growth.
The state of New Mexico has already appropriated more than twenty-five million dollars
($25,000,000) for the implementation of planning and construction of distribution
systems for the water that will be delivered to the Gallup area through the Navajo-
Gallup water supply project.
The Legislature of The State of New Mexico that it express its support of the San Juan
River Basin in New Mexico Navajo Nation Water Rights Settlement Agreement.
Copies of this memorial be transmitted to the Chair of the United States Senate
Committee on Energy and Natural resources, the Chair of the Subcommittee on Water
and Power of the United States House of Representatives Committee on Natural
Resources, New Mexico's congressional delegation, the Governor, the President of the
Navajo Nation, the Speaker of the Navajo Nation council, the President of the Jicarilla
Apache Nation, the City Council of Gallup and the Mayor of Gallup.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
As follows, the IAD states that SJM 18 received endorsement by the Interim Indian Affairs
Committee at their November 7, 2007 meeting.
The State of New Mexico and the Navajo Nation on April 19, 2005, signed a water rights
settlement agreement to resolve the claims of the Navajo Nation for the use of waters of the San
Juan River Basin in northwestern New Mexico.
According to the Office of the State Engineer (“OSE"), the settlement agreement is
intended to adjudicate the Navajo Nation’s water rights and provide associated water
development projects for the benefit of the Navajo Nation in exchange for a release of
pg_0003
Senate Joint Memorial 18/aSRC – Page
3
claims to water that could potentially displace existing non-Navajo water users in the
basin and seriously impact the local economy.
Additionally, the settlement agreement would establish the water rights of the Navajo
Nation in the San Juan Basin in New Mexico. The OSE further provides that the
settlement agreement would draw to a close more than 20 years of efforts to adjudicate
the Navajo Nation’s water right owners, protect existing uses of water, allow for future
growth, and would do so within the amount of water apportioned to New Mexico by the
Colorado River Compacts.
The Settlement Agreement will become effective if the Congress passed the Settlement
Act and the President signs the act into law. Currently, the Northwestern New Mexico
Rural Water Supply Act, which would authorize the Settlement Agreement, is pending in
the United States Congress.
On December 7, 2006, Senator Bingaman and Representative Udall introduced
legislation (S. 4108 and HR 6436) to authorize and fund the settlement. On April 12,
2007, the legislation was reintroduced by Senators Bingaman and Domenici (S. 1171)
and Representative Udall (HR 1970).
On June 27, 2007, the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee held a hearing on
the settlement legislation. On July 24, 2007, the House Subcommittee on Water and
Power of the Natural Resources Committee held a hearing on the legislation. Mr. John
D’Antonio, New Mexico State Engineer, testified at the June 27, 2007 hearing. Mr. Jim
Dunlap, Chairman of the Interstate Stream Commission, presented testimony at the July
24, 2007 hearing.
Overall, State Engineer John D’Antonio believes “the Navajo settlement is fair to both
Navajo and non-Indian water users in the San Juan Basin in New Mexico because it
removes the cloud of unsettled Navajo water rights and brings real promise of safe
drinking water to Northwest New Mexico."
In his testimony before the United States Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
concerning S. 1171, Navajo Nation President Shirley testified that “[m]any of the 80,000 Navajo
men, women, and children who live within the project service area, including Navajo Code
Talker Frank Chee Willeto, presently haul water for drinking and cooking. Although
construction of the project will not necessarily eliminate all water hauling on the reservation, this
project will allow the Indian Health Service to expand distribution systems to provide potable
water delivery to more homes, and creates growth corridors within the Navajo Nation where
future communities can be built with ready access to roads, electricity and potable water. As
such, this project represents a critical component of the Navajo Nation’s economic development
strategy. While construction of the pipeline may not represent a condition sufficient to ensure
economic prosperity for the Navajo People, surely such prosperity will never be possible in the
absence of a sustainable potable water supply."
The City of Gallup and the Jicarilla Apache Nation would also be beneficiaries of the
Northwestern New Mexico Rural Water Supply Project. According to State Engineer D’Antonio
“[i]t is estimated that by 2040, the Navajo Settlement pipeline will serve approximately 250,000
people in Northwest New Mexico, including residents of Gallup."
Copies of SJM 18 would be transmitted to the Chair of the U.S. Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources, the Chair of the Subcommittee on Water and Power of the U.S. House of
Representatives Committee on Natural Resources, New Mexico’s Congressional Delegation, the
pg_0004
Senate Joint Memorial 18/aSRC – Page
4
Governor, the President of the Navajo Nation, the Speaker of the Navajo Nation Council, the
President of the Jicarilla Apache Nation, the City of Gallup and the Mayor of Gallup.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
As stated by, OSE, Page 2, lines 17-21. The Northwestern New Mexico Rural Water Projects
Act would authorize two pipelines as part of the proposed project, one distributing water
generally along the US 491 corridor from Shiprock to Gallup and one distributing water
generally along the US 550 corridor from near Bloomfield to the junction of State Hwy. 537.
The appropriations cited are for planning and construction of facilities to distribute water along
both pipeline routes.
As stated by IAD, copies of SJM 18 should also be transmitted to the NM Office of the State
Engineer and the NM Interstate Stream Commission. The Office of the State Engineer is
charged with administering the state’s water resources.
RELATIONSHIP
This bill requests the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives to
approve, during the one-hundred-tenth session of congress, the Northwestern New Mexico Rural
Water Projects Act that has been introduced in the senate as Senate Bill 1171 and in the House of
Representatives as House Bill 1970.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
IAD states that if SJM 18 is not enacted, the United States Congress may not be made aware of
the support that the legislation has in the State of New Mexico.
PME/mt:bb