A Difficult Choice on Water
By LESLIE MACMILLAN



http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/06/a-difficult-choice-on-water/


Arizona’s two senators, John McCain and Jon Kyl, traveled to the Navajo 
reservation  this week to meet with Navajo and Hopi tribal leaders about a 
proposed water rights accord that would settle the two tribes’ claims to the 
Little Colorado River system.
Associated PressJohn McCain
Mr. Kyl and Mr. McCain have introduced a bill known as theNavajo-Hopi Little 
Colorado River Water Rights Settlement, which would require the tribes to waive 
their water rights for “time 
immemorial” in exchange for groundwater delivery projects to three 
remote communities.
The tribes must sign off on the settlement, 
along with 30 other entities including Congress and the president, 
before the bill becomes law.
Mr. Kyl said the bill was on a “fast 
track” and he would like to see it pushed through Congress before this 
session ends. But the outcome is uncertain, as there is a disagreement 
within the Navajo and Hopi governments over whether or not to endorse 
the bill, as well as disapproval within the communities, which are 
pushing for more public hearings.
The settlement would benefit the two tribes by providing clean drinking water 
piped directly into their 
homes, Mr. Kyl said. There is very little surface water on the two 
reservations, he said, adding that most of the water that does exist is 
in aquifers and the tribes can’t afford to build the infrastructure 
necessary to gain access to it.

What the tribes would lose by settling is a crucial bargaining chip. 
Other parties,  including Peabody Coal and two other corporations, want 
the water for ranching, farming and coal mining operations. Coal mining 
in particular uses copious amounts of water for its slurries.
The 
tiny Hopi reservation is completely surrounded by the much larger Navajo 
reservation, which covers 27,000 square miles of land over sections of 
Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. Many homes lack indoor plumbing, and one 
out of three families on the Navajo reservation does not have access to a 
public drinking water system, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. 
Some wells and springs are still contaminated with uranium and other toxic 
heavy metals, a legacy of 40 years of mining.
In an arid region where water is scarce, some tribal leaders are in favor 
of settling their claims in exchange for running water. But the bill has also 
stirred some controversy among environmental groups and tribe 
members, who say that their leaders didn’t inform them about the 
details.
“Water is life, and when you take away our water, you 
take away our lives,” said Ed Becenti, a Navajo grass-roots organizer. 
He said that after the meeting, which took place behind closed doors, a 
crowd of about 200 milling outside followed the senators to their cars 
chanting “Kill bill 2109″ and “Leave our water alone.”
He said 
that Senator Kyl should “meet with the Navajo and Hopi grass-roots 
representation on the settlement agreement and go over it in detail.” He added, 
“Our tribal leaders have evidently dropped the ball on this 
one.”
Several environmental groups also oppose the bill. The Grand Canyon Trust, 
which was recently successful in halting new mining 
claims on federal land around the Grand Canyon, characterized the bill 
on its Web site as containing “several dangerous provisions that require a 
permanent waiver” of water rights.
Mr. Kyl acknowledges that 
the bill has aroused some deep-seated emotions but says that it has been widely 
misunderstood. “There are a lot of very smart people of good 
will who are trying to get these people wet water,” he said. The water 
the tribes have now, he said, exists mainly on paper in the form of 
rights to water that they cannot use.
Mr. Kyl and Mr. McCain, both Republicans, met privately with leaders of the two 
tribes in Tuba City 
on Thursday. Navajo leaders said they were working on scheduling a 
public meeting with the senators in Window Rock, Ariz., the capital of 
their reservation.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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