Indian Water Rights and Infrastructure Issues: HR 3342

Statement of Michael L. Connor, Commissioner

Bureau of Reclamation


U.S.
Department of the Interior

Before the

Committee on Natural Resources

Subcommittee on Water and Power


U.S.
House of Representatives

On

H.R. 3342

September 9, 2009

Madam Chairwoman and members of the Subcommittee, I am Mike Connor, Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation.I am pleased to provide the Department of the Interior's views on H.R. 3342, the Aamodt Litigation Settlement Act, which would provide approval for, and authorizations to carry out, a settlement of the water rights of four pueblos in
New Mexico
-- the Pueblos of Tesuque, Nambe, Pojoaque, and San Ildefonso. This Administration supports the resolution of Indian water rights claims through negotiated settlement.Our general policy of support for negotiations is premised on a set of general principles including that the United States participate in water settlements consistent with its responsibilities as trustee to Indians; that Indian tribes receive equivalent benefits for rights which they, and the United States as trustee, may release as part of a settlement; that Indian tribes should realize value from confirmed water rights resulting from a settlement; and that settlements are to contain appropriate cost-sharing proportionate to the benefits received by all parties benefiting from the settlement.

This settlement would resolve a contentious water dispute in northern
New Mexico, as well as a federal court proceeding that has been ongoing for over 40 years.We recognize that substantial work and refinements have been made to this settlement by the parties and the
New Mexico
delegation.
As a result, the parties have taken positive and significant steps toward meeting the Federal goals just articulated, contributing to long-term harmony and cooperation among the parties. We would like to continue to work with the parties and the sponsors to address certain concerns, including those discussed in this statement (such as appropriate non-Federal cost share) that could make this a settlement that the Administration could wholeheartedly support.

Negotiated Indian Water Rights Settlements

Settlements improve water management by providing certainty not just as to the quantification of a tribe's water rights but also as to the rights of all water users.That certainty provides opportunities for economic development for Indian and non-Indians alike.Whereas unquantified Indian water rights are often a source of tension and conflict between tribes and their neighbors, the best settlements replace this tension with mutual interdependence and trust.In addition, Indian water rights settlements are consistent with the Federal trust responsibility to Native Americans and with a policy of promoting Indian self-determination and economic self-sufficiency.For these reasons and more, for over 20 years, federally recognized Indian tribes, states, local parties, and the Federal government have acknowledged that, when possible, negotiated Indian water rights settlements are preferable to protracted litigation over Indian water rights claims.

In analyzing settlements, the Administration must consider the immediate and long-term water needs of the Indian tribes, the merits of all legal claims, the value of water, federal trust responsibilities, economic efficiency measures, and the overall promotion of good public policy.An additional critical component of our analysis is cost sharing.

Historic Water Conflicts in
RioPojoaqueBasin

Before discussing the proposed settlement and the Administration's concerns with it, it is important to provide background on the disputes that led to the settlement. The Rio Pojoaque basin, immediately north of Santa Fe, New Mexico, is home to the four Pueblos of Tesuque, Nambe, Pojoaque and San Ildefonso.In total the
Pueblos
hold approximately 51,000 acres of land in the basin.Like other pueblos in New Mexico, the four
Pueblos
were agricultural people living in established villages when the Spanish explorers first entered the area.Before the Pueblos' lands became part of the United States, they fell under the jurisdiction first of Spain, and later of Mexico, both of which recognized and protected the rights of the Pueblos to use water.When the United States asserted its sovereignty over Pueblo lands and what is now the State of
New Mexico
, it did so under the terms of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.In the Treaty, the United States agreed to protect rights recognized by prior sovereigns including
Pueblo
rights.In 1858, Congress specifically confirmed many
Pueblo
grant land titles, including those of the Pueblos of Tesuque, Nambe, Pojoaque and San Ildefonso.

Subsequently, patents were issued to the Pueblos of New Mexico which, in effect, quitclaimed any interest the United States had in the
Pueblos
' grant lands. The
Pueblos
were then considered to own their lands in fee simple, unlike most other Indian tribes.Despite this unusual title arrangement, the United States asserted jurisdiction over the Pueblos for their benefit, seeking to protect Pueblo lands and resources by extending the restrictions on alienation of Indian lands in the Indian Trade and Intercourse Acts to
Pueblo
lands.Unfortunately, initial efforts by the United States to protect
Pueblo
lands and waters were ineffective.New Mexico's territorial courts did not accept the application of the Trade and Intercourse Act to
Pueblo
lands.In United States v. Joseph, 94 U.S. 614 (1876), the Supreme Court expressly held that the
Pueblos
were not Indian tribes within the meaning of the 1834 and 1851 Non-intercourse Acts.This meant that non-Indians were able to buy Pueblo lands without regard to federal Indian law and as a result, there was significant loss of
Pueblo
lands to non-Indians.

After almost forty years of loss of land and water rights, the Supreme Court reversed its decision in Joseph and decided that the
Pueblos
were, in fact, covered by laws extending federal guardianship and protection.United States v. Sandoval, 231
U.S. 28, 48 (1913).The Supreme Court's reversal of opinion threw the status of title to lands occupied by 12,000 non-Indians in
New Mexico
, along with the water rights exercised on those lands, into serious doubt.Responding to the outcry concerning title, Congress sought to remedy the uncertainty by passing the Pueblo Lands Act of 1924, 43 Stat. 636, to "settle the complicated questions of title and to secure for the Indians all of the lands which they are equitably entitled."

Under the 1924 Act, if the non-Indians could persuade a special lands board that they had used and occupied
Pueblo
land for a period of time, the non-Indians were awarded title, and the Pueblo was supposed to be compensated for the value.In practice, this resulted in the non-Indians successfully claiming some of the most valuable, irrigable
Pueblo
farmland. The Pueblos of Tesuque, Nambe, Pojoaque and San Ildefonso collectively lost more than 4000 acres to claims by non-Indians under the 1924 Act.The compensation awarded by the lands board to the
Pueblos
was lower than actual appraised values, and woefully inadequate.Congress followed up by enacting the 1933 Pueblo Lands Act, which provided additional compensation to the Pueblos and also expressly preserved the Pueblos' prior water rights, but the compensation still did not adequately remedy the losses to the
Pueblo
.

In passing the 1924 and 1933 Acts, Congress recognized the necessity of resolving the uncertainty of title to land and water and also restoring the severely eroded economic footing of the
Pueblos
caused in large part by the loss of land and interference with water rights.Cash awards made to the Pueblos under the Acts were expressly intended to compensate the Pueblos for their losses and to help fund the replacement of their lost economic base through the purchase of lands, construction of irrigation projects, and by financing various other permanent improvements for the benefit of
Pueblo
lands.Sadly, the Acts did not fully accomplish their purposes.While land titles may have been more or less resolved, title to water rights clearly was not and uncertainty over title to water has continued to plague all the residents of the basin.

In a final attempt to resolve title to these
Pueblos' water, a general stream adjudication was initiated in 1966.That case, now in its 43rd year, is
New Mexico
v Aamodt and is one of the longest running cases in the federal court system.Forty-three years of litigation has yielded surprisingly little in the way of results.The parties initially skirmished over whether state or federal law applied and what role, if any, Spanish colonial and Mexican law would play.A 1976 decision by the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the Pueblos' water rights were not subject to
New Mexico
's prior appropriation law.Subsequently, the United States District Court, nineteen years into the case, ruled the federal reserved water rights or Winters doctrine does not apply to the unique circumstances of the
Pueblos' grant lands. The Tenth Circuit court denied interlocutory appeal and litigation proceeded on a Historically Irrigated Acreage (HIA) quantification standard for the grant lands, but a Winters right quantification standard for other lands reserved for the
Pueblos. Judge Mechem directed the parties to negotiate in 1998, and in 2000 the litigation was stayed. The parties, who had engaged in sporadic settlement talks since 1992, then intensified their efforts to settle the litigation.

The settlement negotiations were difficult for many reasons, including that the basin is chronically water short. The average annual surface water yield of the watershed is approximately 12,000 acre-feet per year, but claimed irrigated acreage calls for the diversion of 16,200 acre-feet per year.Deficits have been addressed by using groundwater with the result that groundwater resources are now threatened.The negotiation goal of the parties was to control groundwater extraction in order to prevent impacts on surface water flows from excessive groundwater development.In order to allow junior state-based water right holders to continue to use water while still allowing the Pueblos the right to use and further develop their senior water rights, the non-federal parties agreed to a settlement centered on a regional water system that will utilize water imported from the San Juan basin to serve needs of the Pueblos and other water users in the Rio Pojoaque basin.In May 2006, the Pueblos, the State of New Mexico, and other non-federal settlement parties executed a Settlement Agreement which requires the construction of the regional water system to deliver treated water to
Pueblos
and non-Pueblo water users.It also requires the United States to provide, via the regional water system to be constructed, 2,500 acre/feet per year of imported water for
Pueblo
use.

Concerns Related to Cost

H.R. 3342 approves this Settlement Agreement, authorizes the planning, design, and construction of the regional water system and authorizes the appropriation of $106.4 million for that system.In addition, the bill provides the
Pueblos
with a $37,500,000 trust fund to subsidize the operations, maintenance, and replacement costs of the system, and $15,000,000 to rehabilitate and maintain water-related infrastructure other than the regional system facilities.The bill also requires the United States to acquire water for Pueblo use in the regional water system by specific purchases and by allocating available Bureau of Reclamation San Juan-Chama Project water to the
Pueblos
.The total cost of the settlement is estimated to be at least $286.2 million, with a federal contribution of $174.3 million, to be paid over 13 years, and State and local contributions of about $116.9 million (subject to finalization and execution of the cost share agreement).

This represents a 40% non-federal cost share which is a significant improvement over many past settlements and is moving in the right direction.The Administration considers the willingness of the settling parties to provide a significant cost share for this project to be a good indication that they are invested in and deeply supportive of this settlement.It is evident that serious consideration has been given by the settlement proponents to the design and intended function of the facilities to be constructed under this settlement.A settlement to which many interests are contributing deserves more favorable treatment by federal government than a settlement that comes at solely federal expense.

Nevertheless, the Administration is concerned about the costs of this settlement for several reasons.First, the absence of a signed cost share agreement among the parties for the construction of the regional water system creates uncertainty about the viability of the system as planned and the costs to be borne by the
United States
.

Second, the Administration is concerned about the validity of the cost estimates that the settlement parties are relying on for the regional water system.The parties rely on an engineering report dated June 2007 that has not been verified by the level of study that the Bureau of Reclamation would recommend in order to assure reliability.Much of the cost information contained in the engineering report was arrived at three years ago, none of the costs have been indexed to 2007, and the total project cost estimates cannot be relied upon. Any additional costs (both for the Pueblo related and non-Pueblo related components of the regional water system) may become the responsibility of the
United States
under H.R. 3342. To better understand the risks associated with costs that could potentially greatly exceed the current cost estimate, Reclamation has identified and is allocating the resources necessary to complete a design, engineering, and construction review of the engineering report by the end of this calendar year. On the basis of this review, Reclamation will be able to provide the bill proponents with a better sense of whether or not the project is likely to be able to be completed using the funds authorized in this bill.The Administration believes that the parties should agree in the cost share agreement that the non-federal parties will share proportionately any increases in cost estimates that result from Reclamation's analysis.

Third, multiple site-specific cost issues remain that cannot be resolved until final project design is completed, not the least of which is access limitations at the diversion point for the system on the
Rio Grande
.The costs associated with NEPA and EIS compliance, acquiring unspecified easements (including possible condemnation expenses), and agency implementation costs have not been studied and are not included in current cost estimates to develop the proposed regional water system.These uncertainties will likely serve to drive the overall settlement's costs and the corresponding Federal commitment higher than anticipated.These costs should be reflected in the authorization levels provided for in this bill.

Other Federal Concerns

In addition to costs, there are other provisions and issues that need to be addressed and resolved.

The waiver provisions of this bill were significantly improved as a result of negotiations over the last year between the Pueblos, non-federal parties, and the
United States
.Nonetheless, there is one ongoing concern.The waiver provisions of H.R. 3342 include a provision that could be interpreted as waiving important environmental protections that would otherwise be available to the Pueblos, the citizens of New Mexico, and the
United States
. This provision, section 204(a)(9) of the bill, is confusing and unnecessary, and could lead to injury to the environment. The Administration cannot accept waivers which have the potential to erode important environmental safeguards put in place to permit the
United States
to take actions to protect the health, safety, and well being of its citizens and the environment.Fortunately, I am pleased to report that the parties have worked with the Departments of Interior and Justice on this issue and it is my understanding that they have reached agreement on removal of this provision.

In addition, the settlement poses an arrangement under which the
United States
will expend significant funds to plan, design and construct a regional water system.While the Pueblos would be waiving their water rights and related damages claims in exchange for the system, under H.R. 3342 the
Pueblos
retain the right to withdraw these waivers and trigger nullification of the entire settlement agreement, if the system is not substantially complete by 2021.To minimize the risk of building a system only to have waivers withdrawn and the settlement fail, the Administration believes the legislation should include: (1) a definition of substantial completion, (2) a mechanism for determining when it has occurred, and (3) a clearly specified process to challenge that determination.

The Administration has long worked with local parties on these issues and has strongly advocated for a process under which substantial completion is determined by the Secretary of the Interior and, subsequently, subject to review under the Administrative Procedures Act.Our concern stems from the fact that, as introduced, the legislation provides neither certainty of process nor any clear substantive standards for how a determination that substantial completion has not been achieved would be made, or how a court would be expected to handle any subsequent review and litigation over the settlement voiding provisions contained in H.R. 3342 if these provisions are triggered. Under the provisions of H.R. 3342 as introduced, the only certainty is that any litigation ensuing from a claim to void the settlement would be protracted, expensive, and have few bounds.The
United States
believes that one lesson to be learned from the forty-three years of Aamodt litigation is not to set up a legal regime that has the potential to lead to expensive, long-lived, and futile litigation.The Administration believes that the bill must adopt such a substantial completion provision.

Finally, while language in section 203(f) provides generally in the event the settlement is voided that the United States is entitled to return of any unexpended federal funds and property, the Administration suggests that Congress add additional language to clarify that the United States is entitled to recoup or obtain credit for its contributions to settlement in the case that the settlement fails.

Conclusion

The Aamodt settlement is the product of a great deal of effort by many parties and reflects a desire by the people of the State of
New Mexico
, Indian and non-Indian, to settle their differences through negotiation rather than litigation.Settlement of the underlying litigation and related claims in this case would fulfill a long-standing federal goal of restoring to the
Pueblos
the water rights and water resources necessary for their economic and cultural future. This settlement would accomplish this goal by stabilizing chronic groundwater deficits in the basin without causing harm to local water users.Overall, the proposed settlement would provide some innovative mechanisms for managing water in
PojoaqueRiver basin to satisfy the
Pueblos
' current and future water needs while minimizing disruption to the non-Indian water users.

The Administration wants to avoid continued and unproductive litigation which, even when finally concluded, may leave parties injured by and hostile to its results.Neither the
Pueblos
nor their non-Indian neighbors benefit from continued friction in the Rio Pojoaque basin.We believe settlement can be accomplished in a manner that protects the rights of the
Pueblos
and also ensures that the appropriate costs of the settlement are borne proportionately.While we have some remaining concerns with the bill, the Administration is committed to working with Congress and all parties concerned in developing a settlement that the Administration can fully support.In addition, we would like to work with Congress to identify and implement clear criteria for going forward with future settlements on issues including cost-sharing and eligible costs.

Madam Chairwoman, this concludes my statement.I would be pleased to answer any questions the Subcommittee may have.

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