Nevada
California, Arizona and Nevada all agree: The Trump administration needs to fix a key Colorado River dam
Representatives of California, Arizona and Nevada are urging the Trump administration to take a different approach in confronting the problems of the water-starved Colorado River.
As Trump’s appointees inherit the task of writing new rules for dealing with the river’s chronic water shortages, the three states are raising several concerns they want to see addressed. One of their top asks: consider fixing or overhauling Glen Canyon Dam.
The infrastructure problems at the dam in northern Arizona have come into focus over the last few years. If the levels of Lake Powell continue to decline and reach critically low levels, water could be released only through four 8-foot-wide steel tubes, potentially limiting how much could pass downstream to the three states and Mexico.
Last year, federal officials discovered damage inside those four tubes that could severely restrict water flow when reservoir levels are low, raising risks the Southwest could face major shortages that were previously unforeseen.
“It’s a better situation to have the dam actually function without tripping us up and forcing massive reductions,” said JB Hamby, California’s Colorado River commissioner. Making fixes to Glen Canyon Dam, he said, “would prevent the need for draconian reductions.”
Hamby and officials representing the governors of Arizona and Nevada presented their concerns in a letter to the Trump administration last month.
They urged Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum to scrap a report the Biden administration released in November outlining options for new water management rules, arguing that it failed to consider their proposals and would violate the 1922 Colorado River Compact, the foundational agreement that apportions the water.
For one thing, they said, the federal Bureau of Reclamation, which manages the river’s dams, “must evaluate the impacts of infrastructure repairs, modifications and enhancements at Glen Canyon Dam” as part of its analysis of options.
The Colorado River provides water for cities from Denver to Los Angeles, 30 Native tribes and farmlands from the Rocky Mountains to northern Mexico. California relies on Colorado River water to supply farmlands in the Imperial Valley and the Coachella Valley, as well as cities from Palm Springs to San Diego.
The river’s water has long been overused and its reservoirs have declined dramatically since 2000. The average flow of the river has shrunk about 20% in that time, and while drought is partly to blame, scientists have estimated that roughly half the decline in flow has been caused by global warming driven by the burning of fossil fuels and rising levels of greenhouse gases.
The water level of Lake Powell, the nation’s second-largest reservoir, now stands at 34% of capacity. The reservoir’s surface is currently 71 feet above a threshold at which water could no longer flow through the dam’s main intakes and would instead have to move through the low-level bypass tubes — called the river outlet works.
The dam’s managers said last year that they had spotted deterioration in these bypass tubes, and federal officials have said they are analyzing options for fixes — but have been doing this on a separate track from the writing of new rules for sharing shortages.
The three states’ representatives said in their Feb. 13 letter that failing to consider these “infrastructure limitations” as part of the new rules would violate the law.
“The prior administration’s approach to protecting the Lake Powell outlet works by reducing releases from Lake Powell — rather than making infrastructure repairs and improvements — is shortsighted,” they wrote. They said this approach would harm the three states “by slashing the water available to our farmers, communities, and economies.”
Lake Powell has shimmered between Glen Canyon’s reddish sandstone walls along the Arizona-Utah border since the dam was completed in the 1960s.
But Glen Canyon Dam has been controversial since its inception, with environmentalists arguing the reservoir was unnecessary and destroyed the canyon’s pristine ecosystem. In recent years, advocates of river restoration have called for reengineering the dam and gradually draining Lake Powell to store the water downstream in Lake Mead near Las Vegas.
Hamby said the dam was “built in not a great way.” He likened it to a defective gas tank in a car that would stop working if it was less than half full.
“You’ve got a couple options. You could either constantly gas up your car or you could just stop driving,” Hamby said. “But a better option is, go get your car fixed.”
The push by California for the federal government to take a different approach is occurring alongside persistent disagreements that have left two camps at an impasse. On one side are the states in the river’s lower basin — California, Arizona and Nevada — which have been deadlocked in negotiations with the states in the river’s upper basin: Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico.
Those on both sides say they are willing to continue trying to reach a deal on how to apportion cutbacks in water use after 2026, when the current rules expire.
In their letter, Hamby, Tom Buschatzke of Arizona and John Entsminger of Nevada suggested that the potential water-supply bottleneck at Glen Canyon Dam could be “avoided by some combination of straightforward engineering fixes, moving water to Lake Powell from upstream reservoirs when necessary, and temporary reductions in upper basin use.”
They said they would strongly support a “collaborative, consensus-driven approach,” but they also suggested that without a consensus, ongoing disputes among the Colorado River Basin’s seven states might end in court battles.
In response to questions about the states’ letter, a spokesperson for Bureau of Reclamation said in an email that the agency is “actively engaging in dialogue with the Colorado River Basin partners as we work toward long-term operational agreements for the river after 2026.”
The three states stressed in the letter that the 1922 Colorado River Compact requires the upper basin states to deliver an annual average of 7.5 million acre-feet to California, Arizona and Nevada over any 10-year period. If water deliveries were to decrease below that required minimum, that would enable the lower basin states to make a so-called compact call and require the upper basin states to cut their water usage.
The letter mentioned a potential compact call 23 times. It said this outcome is “reasonably foreseeable” in the coming years if the states don’t reach an agreement, and that the implications must be considered in the federal government’s review of alternatives.
“Ultimately, having a strong federal role to motivate people to come together and come to a compromise is essential,” Hamby said, “in order to get us to a place where we sustainably manage the river and don’t end up in litigation.”
Environmentalists said they agree with California, Arizona and Nevada.
“What the letter really is trying to do is force the Bureau of Reclamation to rebuild those bypass tubes so that they will pass enough water,” said Gary Wockner, executive director of the Colorado nonprofit group Save The World’s Rivers. “There needs to be an infrastructure solution that allows water to get through or around that dam in order for the Colorado River Compact to not be violated.”
During the Biden administration, federal officials said they were studying the possibility of overhauling the dam. They discussed proposals such as penetrating through the dam’s concrete to make new lower-level intakes, or tunneling a shaft around either side of the dam, among other options.
The Bureau of Reclamation announced in September that the agency was spending $8.9 million relining the bypass tubes, where the original coal-tar coating was “showing normal signs of wear and tear” after more than 60 years of use. The agency said this maintenance work, expected to take about a year, will not prevent the risk of additional “cavitation” when reservoir levels are low — which refers to the formation and collapse of air bubbles in flowing water, and which can pit and tear into metal, damaging infrastructure. The agency said it was “working on reducing that risk” by developing interim procedures and carrying out “additional analyses.”
But the three states indicated in their letter they believe the government must do more to address what they see as problems in the dam’s design.
“The reason that they wrote this letter is because they see a very serious water delivery risk at Glen Canyon Dam,” said Eric Balken, executive director of the nonprofit Glen Canyon Institute.
“The writing is on the wall that something has to be done sooner than later,” he said. “If we want to actually fix this river system for the long term, we have to have a thorough debate about how to reengineer Glen Canyon Dam.”
Nevada
North Las Vegas man charged with killing girlfriend dies while in Nevada prison
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — A North Las Vegas man awaiting trial for allegedly killing his girlfriend during a fight is dead, according to Nevada prison officials.
Markeem Benson, 30, died at High Desert State Prison near Indian Springs on Monday, Dec. 22, the Nevada Department of Corrections said in a statement.
An autopsy has been requested, according to the department.
Benson was serving time for an attempted robbery conviction from 2024, for which he was originally sentenced to probation with a suspended prison sentence.
He was also charged with the murder of 33-year-old Renise “Nene” Wolfe.
Renise Wolfe is pictured in this undated photo. Police allege Markeem Benson shot and killed Wolfe in a North Las Vegas apartment. (Photo provided)
North Las Vegas Police arrested him in December last year. According to an arrest report, Benson’s father called 911 saying Benson wanted to turn himself in for murder.
The father told detectives that Benson called him saying, “I killed her; I think I killed her” and “told him something to the effect of ‘she’ came at him with a gun, there was some kind of ‘tussle,’ and then the gun went off,” the report states.
An grand jury indicted him for murder and possession of a gun by a prohibited person. He pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Following the indictment, his probation was revoked in March, and he was incarcerated at High Desert State Prison to serve a term of two to five years.
A jury trial was scheduled to begin in April next year for Wolfe’s murder. Instead, prosecutors have asked for a hearing on Dec. 30 in light of Benson’s death, per court records.
Nevada
28-year-old inmate at Southern Nevada prison dies
A man serving time at the Southern Desert Correctional Center for felony reckless driving died last month, the Nevada Department of Corrections said Tuesday.
Shiloh Walker, 28, died at the Indian Springs facility on Nov. 24, a news release said. Cause of death was not listed.
Walker was serving a sentence of up to six years after a plea agreement was reached in 2022 following a DUI crash that happened May 31, 2021 in Las Vegas, according to online court records.
An autopsy was requested following Walker’s death, though results were not available as of Monday evening. Attempts to reach Walker’s family members have been unsuccessful, according to the department.
Contact Bryan Horwath at bhorwath@reviewjournal.com. Follow @BryanHorwath on X.
Nevada
Is USPS breaking vow not to use Sacramento for Northern Nevada mail?
After widespread condemnation last year, the U.S. Postal Service backed away from plans to move its Reno mail-processing operations to Sacramento — but did it stay true to what it told the public?
The question arose recently after letters sent from one Carson City address to another in Carson City were both postmarked in Sacramento.
Northern Nevadans did not want first class mail sent from one Northern Nevada address to another going first to California. They sent a unified message to the USPS all the way up to the postmaster general.
Critics of the USPS plan were especially worried about delays from mail having to go back and forth over the Sierra during winter.
The Washoe County District Attorney’s office filed a lawsuit over the plan, the Washoe County Commission voted to oppose the plan, public comment was universally opposed, and Democratic and Republican elected officials from across the state joined to stop it.
Could it possibly have happened anyway? The answer is yes, temporarily, for a brief time.
How letters sent in Carson City came to be processed at Sacramento USPS facility
A reader told the Reno Gazette Journal they’d twice had letters internal to Carson City postmarked in Sacramento, so we asked USPS if the policy had changed.
“Mail processing for First Class mail that originates in Northern Nevada and is destined to Northern Nevada has not changed,” USPS spokesperson Sherry Patterson responded by email.
“However,” she added, “without the specific mail piece and class of mail, we cannot determined if there is an issue.”
The reader then supplied a photo of the two envelopes postmarked Nov. 5 in Sacramento, and this was shared with USPS.
“Our processing machine in Reno was temporarily out of service while we awaited a replacement part,” Patterson said after viewing the postmarks to nail down the specific date the letters went through Sacramento.
“To ensure that mail was not delayed during this time, we implemented a contingency plan that involved routing certain mail to our Sacramento facility for cancellation and processing. This measure allows us to maintain service continuity and minimize disruptions for our customers. We understand that this may cause some confusion, and we are committed to ensuring that all mail is processed efficiently and accurately.”
Bottom line: Regarding first class mail that’s being sent to and from Northern Nevada addresses, it’s still USPS policy to process that in Reno at its Vassar Street facility, she said.
The path these particular letters took, Patterson added, “is indeed an unusual occurrence.”
Mark Robison is the state politics reporter for the Reno Gazette Journal, with occasional forays into other topics. Email comments to mrobison@rgj.com or comment on Mark’s Greater Reno Facebook page.
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