|

Source: National Park Service |
Environment, Energy and Transportation Program
Water Resources |
Updated September 2008
Areas of Interest
State Legislative Activity to Enact the Compact | Water Allocation | Water Quality | Water Security | Meetings and Presentations | Publications
To view PDF files, you must install Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Governors in the Great Lakes Region Applaud Congressional Passage of a Compact to Protect the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River Basin
On the Council of Great Lakes Governors website there are links to the bill in each state. click here
- Does the Water Belong to Farmers or the Citites?
Denver Post, March 7, 2007. Farmers claim they must irrigate crops in dry times but others point out the long-term damages to the land as aquifers are sucked dry for irrigation.
- Effort to Conserve Water Continues.
Concord Monitor, October 16, 2006. New Hampshire's population is expected to increase 25 percent by 2025, mostly in the southeast, and that could test the region's water resources, experts said.
- Water Crisis Demands Attention..LJWord.com, October 15, 2006.
Beneath the soil of landlocked Kansas lies a vast, life-sustaining source of water called the High Plains aquifer
- Platte River EIS Keeps Conflicting Interests Out of Courtroom.
Irrigation and wildlife needs addressed in plan affecting Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming.
- Eastern States Reassessing Water Management Options
Faced with drought and growing competition for water both within and outside their boundaries, several eastern states are rethinking the way they manage water use.
- Arizona Using Underground Water Storage
Arizona is using an innovative groundwater storage law to bank surface water for drought insurance.
Water Quality
Water Security
Meetings and Presentations
Water Rights and Wrongs: Resolving Water Disputes Without Litigation -- presentation by George William Sherk NCSL Fall Forum, December 2003
Incentive-Based Options for Land Conservation in the Upper Mississippi river Basin -- presentation by Larry Morandi and Cheryl Runyon.
NOTE: NCSL provides links to other Web sites from time to time for information purposes only. Providing these links does not necessarily indicate NCSL's support or endorsement of the site.
The Natural Resources
|