Unsettled Waters: Rights, Law, and Identity in the American West
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About this ebook
Eric P. Perramond
Eric P. Perramond is a geographer and holds a joint appointment in the Environmental and Southwest Studies programs at Colorado College. He is the author of Political Ecologies of Cattle Ranching in Northern Mexico.
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Unsettled Waters - Eric P. Perramond
Unsettled Waters
CRITICAL ENVIRONMENTS: NATURE, SCIENCE, AND POLITICS
Edited by Julie Guthman, Jake Kosek, and Rebecca Lave
The Critical Environments series publishes books that explore the political forms of life and the ecologies that emerge from histories of capitalism, militarism, racism, colonialism, and more.
1. Flame and Fortune in the American West: Urban Development, Environmental Change, and the Great Oakland Hills Fire, by Gregory L. Simon
2. Germ Wars: The Politics of Microbes and America’s Landscape of Fear, by Melanie Armstrong
3. Coral Whisperers: Scientists on the Brink, by Irus Braverman
4. Life without Lead: Contamination, Crisis, and Hope in Uruguay, by Daniel Renfrew
5. Unsettled Waters: Rights, Law, and Identity in the American West, by Eric P. Perramond
Unsettled Waters
Rights, Law, and Identity in the American West
Eric P. Perramond
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu.
University of California Press
Oakland, California
© 2019 Eric P. Perramond
Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file with the Library of Congress
ISBN 978-0-520-29935-1 (cloth)
ISBN 978-0-520-29936-8 (paperback)
ISBN 978-0-520-97112-7 (e-edition)
27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
List of Illustrations, Maps, and Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction. The Cultures of Water Sovereignty in New Mexico
PART ONE. UNSETTLED WATERS: HOW WATER ADJUDICATION WORKS, WHAT IT DOES, AND WHAT HAPPENS WHEN IT FAILS
1. How Local Waters Become State Water
2. Aamodt, Dammit! Big Trouble in a Small Basin
3. Abeyta: Taos Struggles, Then Negotiates
4. Local Settlements Connect What State Adjudication Severed
PART TWO. THE PRODUCTION OF WATER EXPERTISE: THE ADJUDICATION-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
5. Changing Measures: How Expert Metrics Change Water
6. Working for the Adjudication-Industrial Complex
7. New Water Agents and Actors in Civil Society
PART THREE. ADJUDICATING THE UNKNOWN FUTURE OF NEW MEXICO’S WATER
8. City Water, Native Water, and the Unknown Future
9. Beyond Adjudication: Nature’s Share of Water
10. Water Coda, with No End in Sight
Notes
References
Index
Illustrations, Maps, and Tables
ILLUSTRATIONS
1. A hypothetical valley in New Mexico with acequias
2. Simplified flowchart of the water rights adjudication process in New Mexico
3. A mayordomo stands on the banks of the connecting canal that brings water from the Rio en Medio splitter box, agreed to in the 1897 convenio, to the upper ditches of the Chupadero Valley
4. The historic 1897 convenio document that allowed sharing of water from the Rio en Medio stream to a ditch that connects to the upper reaches of the Rio Chupadero, New Mexico
5. Photo of the statue of Pedro de Peralta and his colonial surveyor’s vara measuring stick
6. Typical water flume device employed by the Office of the State Engineer in its Active Water Resource Management program
7. Photo of map detail from the Taos Hydrographic Survey work done in the late 1960s
8. One example of expert water: an abstract diagram and screenshot of the San Juan-Chama and Middle Rio Grande waters, flows, and depletions
9. Tamara, a mayordoma on the upper Santa Barbara River, an unadjudicated watershed that is a tributary to the Rio Grande
10. Chupadero residents installing a liner in their ditch so that water from the upper ditches will reach farther downstream and replenish well water near the village of Chupadero
11. The dry bed of the Santa Fe River, in 2009, prior to the living river program enacted by the city to release up to one thousand acre-feet per year of water to the channel
12. Released water in the Santa Fe River channel, summer 2015
13. Colorado College students and Juan Estevan Arellano walk along the dry Acequia de la Junta y Ciénega ditch, on the lower Embudo River, in February 2014
MAPS
1. Interview locations included in Unsettled Waters
2. Distribution of acequias in New Mexico
3. Locations of completed and pending stream adjudications in New Mexico as of 2017
4. Map of the Aamodt adjudication area, the Pojoaque River Valley, showing the four major pueblos
5. Map of the San Juan-Chama Project
6. Map of the Taos Valley and its major streams and acequias
7. Location map of Top of the World Farms in northern Taos County
8. General location map for the Active Water Resource Management (AWRM) basins currently administered by the Office of the State Engineer
9. Map of the regional acequia associations in New Mexico
10. The official Office of the State Engineer/Interstate Stream Commission map of designated water regions for planning purposes
11. Regional map of the Santa Fe River watershed (Anaya adjudication area)
12. Location and context of the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District within the larger Middle Rio Grande stretch and major works on the Rio Grande
13. Hypothetical future conflicts in the western United States over water resources
TABLES
1. Key points and benefits of the Aamodt settlement (Nambé-Pojoaque-Tesuque Valleys)
2. Key points and benefits of the Taos Pueblo Water Rights Settlement Agreement
3. Costs of adjudication and settlements in New Mexico, 2005–2018
Preface
"Why are you here, exactly?" Tamara asked me on a hot July day in 2011. We stood by the Rio Santa Barbara, a high-mountain New Mexican stream lined with cottonwoods and aspens, with dry meadows and juniper-dotted hills stretching beyond. Tamara had been describing her work as a mayordoma, the water ditch boss in charge of allocating the stream’s trickle to her neighbors’ fields.
By that point, four years into my research, I’d been asked this question many times, and I had the answer: I’m here to listen and learn.
Well,
she said, straightening up a bit, that’s different.
Unsettled Waters conveys the voices and concerns of actual people caught up in the legal labyrinth of what are known as water rights adjudications. Water adjudications in the American West are often state-driven lawsuits designed to find, map, and inventory existing water-use rights. Every western state has its own distinct procedure, although many share similar templates.
For all involved in these watershed lawsuits—the irrigators, lawyers, technicians, politicians, and observers like me—adjudication is a complex, adversarial, and sometimes baffling process. Adjudication has been underway for well over a century, longer than New Mexico has been a state, and there is no end in sight. It can also seem boring, as most of the work is conveyed in legalese through administrative court documents. This is partially why the process has often been ignored.
However, as I learned from water users like Tamara, adjudication is anything but boring. Adjudication resurfaces conflicts. It delves into the intricacies of state cartographies, of multiple histories of colonialism, culture, sovereignty, and identity. The process has exposed, antagonized, and rearticulated social relationships over water that are vital to understand in an era of increasing water scarcity and competing demands.
This book is a geographic ethnography that makes use of living testimony, historical and legal archives, and on-the-ground observations from New Mexico. When I moved back to the West in 2005, I was interested in pursuing regional research that reflected my new academic appointment at Colorado College in Southwest studies and environmental science. It all started as a modest project to document how small ditches in New Mexico were coping with water scarcity. It turned into something far more complex than I had anticipated. Adjudication kept coming up in my interviews. I was curious as to what adjudications entailed, why they were taking so long, and what they meant for water users. My small summer project turned into a decade-long study that, like adjudication, still continues. Like the process itself, this book has had to account for the state’s fixation with tracking water users and prior dates of water use and the fact that the process is ongoing and still happening in the present, with an eye toward the future. After all, when New Mexico started this enterprise, the hope was that there might be water left over to allocate.
As New Mexicans made clear from the start, our collective water futures are at stake in adjudications. I listened to water experts across the spectrum, from irrigators like Tamara to the attorneys and state experts who conduct the process. Unsettled Waters is a book for all who care about the future of water, the ways in which states allocate and manage water, and the effects of these largely unseen legal proceedings on water users.
Acknowledgments
I am most grateful to all the water rights holders, irrigators, ditch bosses (mayordomos), ditch riders, water managers, lawyers, engineers, hydrologists, and personnel from the Office of the State Engineer (New Mexico) who generously agreed to share information, insights, and expertise of all kinds. This book is the result of our conversations, and I hope it provokes more of them.
Various chapters and snippets in Unsettled Waters were informed by Melanie Stansbury, David Correia, Juan Estevan Arellano, Darcy Bushnell, Eric Shultz, Sylvia Rodriguez, Stanley Crawford, Miguel Santistevan, Maria Lane, David Benavides, Paul Mathews, David Garcia, and Aaron Bobrow-Strain. I want to single out Maria Lane’s excellent work that is reshaping our understanding of water, science, and the courts during the territorial period of New Mexico. Melanie Stansbury and Darcy Bushnell were vital to my early understanding of the Aamodt case and the multiple outcomes of adjudication in general. Long-time water authors Helen Ingram and Jim Wescoat corrected early misconceptions and filled in gaps. New Mexico water beat reporters Staci Matlock and John Fleck also had useful feedback and insight as I developed the prospectus for this book. Rick Carpenter at the City of Santa Fe Water Division also provided repeated individual and course visits to the infrastructure of that small city.
To the late Juan Estevan Arellano, I owe the most: his lessons and his memory remind us of the values and challenges of small-scale irrigation in New Mexico. His recently released Enduring Acequias appeared before he passed in late October 2014 and will no doubt serve his legacy well. William Doolittle and the late Karl Butzer shaped my early understanding of the value of ancient and historic irrigation systems.
At Colorado College, I am humbled to have current (and former) colleagues willing to share their time, support, and expertise. This work was shaped by conversations, ideas, and inspiration by my colleagues in Southwest studies—notably, Santiago Guerra and Karen Roybal (Montoya). Their scholarship and teaching remind me that the greater Southwest is a source of theory and praxis, not just a recipient. Colleagues Anne Hyde, Takeshi Ito, David and Christina Torres-Rouff, and Corina McKendry shared their early and late version insights on this project. Informal discussions over beer were no less vital, and I thank William Davis, Michael O’Riley, and Tyler Cornelius for often listening to my book-driven rants. I have benefited from students’ comments, insights, and shared senior capstone moments, as well as their own senior-year work that informed parts of Unsettled Waters.
The Colorado College Crown Faculty Center (Rebecca Tucker, Jane Murphy) supported a development workshop on the first iteration of this manuscript, during which James F. Brooks, Stanley Crawford, and Wendy Jepson shared comments and insights that vastly improved the organization, tone, and argumentation you find here. The Office of the Dean, Social Science Executive Committee (SSEC), and multiple Jackson Fellowships from the Hulbert Center for Southwest Studies funded this work between 2007 and 2016. Additional funding from the SSEC in 2017 paid for Bill Nelson’s finely executed maps. A sabbatical in 2017 and 2018 provided the time to write this book.
An initial conversation with Rebecca Lave led me to the Critical Environments book series at the University of California Press and Kate Marshall and Bradley Depew, who provided guidance throughout. Peer reviews at the University of California Press by Tom Sheridan and Maria Lane provided valuable and constructive criticism. The book production process was ably assisted by Nicholle Robertson at BookComp, Inc., and I thank the excellent work of copy editor Wendy Lawrence. I am grateful to artist Chuck Forsman for allowing me to use his painting Native Land as inspiration for the book cover and the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center at Colorado College for permission to use this work.
Archival collections and their excellent staff were fundamental: the New Mexico State Records Center and Archives, the Center for the Southwest at the UNM main library, the small collections in the basement of the Office of the State Engineer’s Bataan building complex, and the Fray Angélico Chávez Historical Library were all carefully consulted. I benefited from being an ACM (Associated Colleges of the Midwest) Newberry Library Faculty fellow during the fall semesters of 2013 and 2017, in Chicago. At Newberry, Diane Dillon, Scott Stevens, Jim Akerman, and 2013–2014 Newberry fellows Tobias Higbie, Kathleen Washburn, Michael Vorenburg, Leon Fink, Elizabeth Shermer, Susan Sleeper-Smith, Patricia Marroquin Norby, and Michael Schermer were especially helpful in shaping an initial prospectus for this book. Diana and J. Stege allowed us time for writing in their idyllic adobe house in New Mexico, and they have my profound thanks.
The personal debts here run deep. I thank my close and extended family for letting me work and live like a hermit this past year. To Ann, my constant companion and compassionate, ruthless critic, I owe you most of all.
Introduction
The Cultures of Water Sovereignty in New Mexico
I walk with Hector along the irrigation canal, the village’s acequia, as the ditch is called in northern New Mexico. The only sounds are the pulsing, burbling water in the constrained channel and fluttering cottonwood leaves. Standing on the canal bank, we can feel the vibrations from the water through our feet. Hector, the mayordomo, a kind of ditch boss, turns and raises his eyebrows: It’s pretty clean, isn’t it?
The water looks great,
I respond.
He frowns, shaking his head, and starts walking again as he mutters, No, I mean the banks of the acequia.
I stop. In one awkward moment, I missed the point completely. From Hector’s perspective, this is not about the water. His remark is about the collective work of villagers in nature. The acequia is not just a ditch; it is also an important institution in which people manage and allocate water.¹ Water brings together the people on the ditch, through the act of sharing it, and it is the lifeblood of this valley. The ditch and the institution are their work, defining their water and their landscape. As a cultural and political institution, the acequia keeps neighbors from fighting over water. These ditch institutions have forged an agrarian cultural landscape with political clout and clear institutional rules. After this momentary misunderstanding, I forge on.
So, Hector,
I ask, as he walks along his ditch, are your water rights adjudicated and accounted for on this stream?
He turns, cocking his head, a slight squint in one eye, coming to a dead stop. Who wants to know?
I am sure I blink a few times. After a beat, I respond. I do.
His head lobs farther toward his shoulder. The squint hardens. And who are you, exactly? You’re not a lawyer are you, or some fancy engineer?
I’m not wearing a suit, but my words suggest I have one hidden under my jeans and T-shirt. I rush to explain I am neither a lawyer nor an engineer. I’m a geographer from a liberal arts college trying to understand adjudication and its relationship to water users in New Mexico. A simple summer research project, I say. Hector snorts.
At that moment, the tension between us feels thicker than wet clay. For Hector, adjudication is a four-letter word, the A word. The state of New Mexico uses water adjudications to map and redefine water access as a private-use right, not bound to the village or valleys, parsed to individuals and not the communal institution of the acequia. My seemingly innocent question is perceived by Hector as an alien, unnatural framing of water in legalese. For hundreds of years, the acequias were largely left alone to allocate and manage water along their ditches. Hector’s acequia is one of the hundreds of these local water sovereigns, as I have come to think of them, that preexist the state of New Mexico.
Water sovereignty explains much of Hector’s reaction in this context. Redefining water in any cultural, political, and historical setting is contentious. Members of the ditch control water, which they think of almost as family. Thus, the intimate sovereignty over water is not perceived as only political. Sovereignty includes the lived practice of managing the water as an essential part of the cultural and sacred landscape, across hundreds of valleys in the state. Hector is concerned about losing control over decision-making, about local water governance, and about keeping water attached to the land.² Losing the water would imperil the sense of community, as he told me:
Listen, Eric. No, we haven’t been touched by that process [adjudication] yet, and a lot of people are nervous about it up here. Once it starts, it touches everything. Everything … old family grudges, all the cultural stuff between Pueblos [Indians] and Hispanos gets dragged to the surface again … It exposes everything and everyone. In some ways I wish it had happened fifty or sixty years ago, you know? Back when there was more water use and agriculture on these ditches … now [shaking his head] … I don’t know what kind of water will stay in this [Embudo] Valley once the state engineer is done with us. There’s nothing simple about it … and [tapping on my chest with a finger], you’re gonna be sucked into this for more than a summer if you ask the right questions … just like we will be.
Over a century ago, the 1907 New Mexico water code created the Office of the State Engineer and charged it with a monumental task. The state engineer was to perform general stream adjudications,
accounting for all existing uses of water in every watershed in the state. That task continues today. The state maps out diversion points, land parcels with water rights, the first date of beneficial use of water, and the crops that are grown and their water use in acre-feet per year. The details needed and captured are painstaking. For those undergoing adjudication, the stakes are high: irrigators, agencies, and cities are under pressure to make full and visible use of their water rights. Water users scramble to find old historical documents related to their first-use dates or deeds of property ownership. Adjudication sparks a scramble for time, priority dates, and evidentiary proof to get one’s full measure of water. Studying this process is also a monumental task. Hector was right. This research lasted much longer than that single summer, and I soon found myself, like Alice in Wonderland falling into the rabbit hole, swept into the dizzying maze of adjudication.
Part of me wishes the A word had remained distant and foreign to me because of its complexity and its reach into all aspects of water. Nevertheless, I found it too fascinating and revealing to ignore. These water adjudication lawsuits expose everything that is strange and contentious about western water law and water use: disagreements over use, local and expert knowledge contests, competing legal notions of water, the allocation of water rights by crop, arguments about water’s purpose, and interstate disputes over water.
Under the 1907 water code, water abruptly became a state-owned yet privately allocated resource. Adjudication was the process by which the state would translate water access to a private-use right. In some cases, adjudications went smoothly and quickly. These were typically in sparsely populated areas with little water to allocate. More typically, however, the legal process has been adversarial, costly, and lengthy. Multiple generations of families have been embroiled in the same adjudication lawsuit, and the most difficult and massive water cases have not even started yet. Water cultures in New Mexico, like the Hispano irrigators or Native sovereign nations who think in more collective, not individual, water terms, contested the state’s rereading of their water norms and customary understandings of the purpose of water.³
Allocating small and big water shares will be an increasing challenge in this drier, warmer, more contentious century. Hector knows this, and so does the state engineer, but they think about water in different ways and at different scales. Scholars have recognized the importance of adjudications. Earlier contributions in a 1990 special issue of the Journal of the Southwest highlighted the problematic social tensions of adjudication as a process.⁴ Those concerns remain thirty years later. Ten years ago, in an interview by Jack Loeffler, Frances Levine wrote, No contemporary issue is as emblematic of the struggle between traditional and modern lifeways as the water rights adjudications currently under way in much of New Mexico.
⁵
In the field of critical legal studies, scholars have demonstrated that multiple customary and formal legal traditions can coexist in the same space. New Mexico represents such a case where competing worldviews and customary traditions of water use endure to this day.⁶ Legal scholars have assessed and critiqued various state approaches to water adjudication, often focusing on the expense, the lengthiness, and the legal dilemmas. These works were aimed primarily at audiences of water law professionals.⁷ In addition, work by social scientists has addressed the impact of changes to water governance, water privatization, and the urbanization and commoditization of water.⁸ Water infrastructure, changes in water law, and federal Indian water policies in the American West have also been well documented.⁹ Historians too have provided rich accounts of the transformation of the American West’s rivers, the impacts of large-scale irrigation and dams, and the movement of water to cities.
Unsettled Waters fills an unexplored space in the water literature, focusing on lived experiences of New Mexicans. I critically examine how adjudications affect water users, how they create new forms of water expertise, and also how they might be useful in addressing twenty-first-century water challenges. Adjudication spans generations, is ongoing, and has no end in sight. As I hope will be clear, adjudication has consequences, intended and unintended, for all water users. Here I focus on how the state translates and transforms water from a shared, necessary communal good into a singular resource to be owned by individuals.¹⁰ From a theoretical stance, tracking adjudication allows us to examine how a state sees
water and attempts to redefine its new water citizens as property holders. Adjudication transforms water into a private-use right through law, a system under which water becomes a potential commodity.¹¹
COLLECTING NEW NARRATIVES OF ADJUDICATION
Unsettled Waters is based on a mixed-methods approach combining archival, field, and ethnographic research. Between 2006 and 2017, I conducted 274 interviews. Of these, 211 were of rural irrigators, with a special emphasis on those who belong to acequias or are in irrigation districts where acequias are present.¹² Local expertise preexisted the rise of disciplinary water experts
(attorneys, engineers, etc.). I did not focus on a single basin or valley. Rather, I interviewed water users from basins around the state to get a fuller picture of this statewide process (see map 1).
MAP 1. Interview locations included in Unsettled Waters. These are aggregated totals of the basin-specific interviews conducted by the author in New Mexico. Note that an additional twenty-four interviews came from smaller basins that are difficult to represent independently due to the map scale.
I also interviewed sixty-three lawyers, engineers, historians, technicians, and water managers who were working for state agencies and in private industry. I included these informants because no single body of water users can claim a monopoly on understanding water problems, much less solving them. These water professionals
also provide balance against an overly localized and nostalgic view of water in the Southwest.¹³
Because this is a book that depends on the views and perspectives of living New Mexicans, informant names are pseudonyms. A few interviewees wanted to be recognized by their real names, and I honored their requests. In some instances, I modified characteristics of the person depicted or quoted to disguise the source of information. I did not want to betray the confidences of those who shared sensitive, personal, or ditch-wide perspectives. When real names were published in the public record and legal documents, I used those real names. None of those cited, mentioned, or acknowledged bear any responsibility for misinterpretations of fact, fiction, or their own words. The views and voices herein reflect the concerns, thoughts, and constructive critiques of adjudications by New Mexicans.
Each of the interviews, stories, or accounts in this book has deep historical roots. Legal and historical archives were consulted and used to enrich my accounts of past adjudications, since many of these court cases have lasted through two or more generations of New Mexicans. Archival records were vital supplements to the gaps of peoples’ memories as they recounted their court experiences.¹⁴ Adjudication relies on court decrees and data, hydrographic surveys, maps, and charts. I consulted these resources in interpreting the regional cases that appear later in this book. The maps themselves, often dating back to the days of hand-drawn ink on linen, are gorgeous objects left behind by the technicians doing the field mapping. However, numbers and maps alone cannot provide a full picture of the process or its effects on those involved. Since the state, hydrologists, and other experts already track quantitative aspects of adjudication and state knowledge, this book focuses on the qualitative and cultural impacts of an unfinished process.
Listening to those affected by the process reveals how water users have questioned and contested the state’s simplified reading of water as property. Following Freyfogle’s treatment, private property has always been a contingent relationship, not a solid and identifiable object
of property.¹⁵ Water is owned by each state as a public good, but the use rights are private and dispensed to individuals by the state. Water rights are especially contingent since they depend on state-driven framings of water as a public good and an actual supply of water to use. Water itself in the West is thus a hybrid good: publically owned yet privately dispensed for use as a property right to use. This critical ethnography of water adjudication holds implications for those affected by the process, the state agencies and individuals doing the work, and those who have yet to be visited and adjudicated by the state.¹⁶
GOALS AND ORGANIZATION OF UNSETTLED WATERS
This is a hybrid text that uses the pragmatic lessons from New Mexican water users and experts and draws on insights from scholarship on water issues. I have intentionally written this as a kind of public political ecology, with as little jargon as possible.¹⁷ There is much to learn here from the region and its people, which can inform the scholarly water literature and water policy in the West alike. The lengthiness of the adjudication process may actually have some benefits. There is still time to reform or adapt adjudication, and lessons from New Mexico extend beyond the state line. Few western states have completed their water adjudication processes, and all are seeking solutions to water scarcity and allocation challenges.¹⁸
I have divided Unsettled Waters into thematic sections. Part 1 focuses on the work of adjudication and case studies. Chapter 1 describes the roots and purposes of adjudication and how adjudication is linked to prior appropriation, as well as how both complicate cultural understandings of water in New Mexico. The two regional cases in chapters 2 and 3 exemplify how adjudications founder in basins with multiple cultures of water. Chapter 4 then details the problematic social, political, and hydrological consequences when adjudications leave the courts to become negotiated water settlements.
Part 2 examines what adjudications and settlements produce. Chapter 5 examines how adjudication has produced new metrics of space, time, and volumes of water. The adjudication-industrial complex has also produced new forms of expertise, as I argue in chapter 6. In chapter 7, I describe how new water-user organizations and regional water-planning strategies have emerged as by-products of adjudication.
Part 3 focuses on the future of adjudication and coping with new water demands and potential lessons. Chapter 8 discusses what threatens to be the hardest work of all: adjudicating heavily populated regions along the Rio Grande. Chapter 9 addresses climate change, the water demands of other species, and how to account for water in our new era. Finally, in chapter 10, I revisit the experiences of New Mexicans and how they may inform other western states struggling to count and allocate their waters.¹⁹
PART ONE
Unsettled Waters
How Water Adjudication Works, What It Does, and What Happens When It Fails
1
How Local Waters Become State Water
Miguel never understood the logic in water adjudication. In his late fifties and a retired employee of the Los Alamos National Laboratories, he was now a constant gardener. Most of his concerns were for the younger generation along his ditch and those few people under the age of thirty still living nearby. Sitting on a lawn chair in the shade of his backyard apple tree, he reflected on adjudication’s implications for him and his neighbors.
I mean, I get that we have to know how much water we have, right? That makes sense, so that Texas doesn’t get it all (he smiles a bit). But beyond that, what do we get out of this whole thing? They haven’t even done my valley, and now they’re warning us that the adjudication is coming to us soon, and we’re not ready. We haven’t organized yet like the Taos folks. My neighbors don’t seem to be worried or alarmed, but they will be once it’s here. Once the state engineers show up, it’s all over, and it’ll be too late for them to make any claims about having irrigated this or that patch, and then that water number gets fixed, and it’s done. There won’t be any future ability to expand water needs, I think. That’s what no one here tends to get—once the process is over, you don’t get another chance, and the amount of water we are using at the time of the process means that is the water we get, assuming no one sells their water or goes out of business … Then the engineer can figure out if there is any water we aren’t using