Water sales to cities tempt the West's
struggling farm industry.
By Seth Hettena
Associated Press
(Updated Sunday, February 22, 2004, 7:53
AM)
ROCKY FORD, Colo. -- Ron Aschermann
could barely eke out a living raising melons, cucumbers, tomatoes or other
crops on his 300-acre farm. But quitting the business will earn him more than
$1.2 million.
Aschermann and scores of other farmers on the high
plains of southeastern Colorado are selling water, which once helped produce
melons, to the Denver suburb of Aurora. The prairie will retake land that has
long known the plow.
"Yeah, it's not a healthy thing to do for the area,
but let me tell you: Farming is not that great anymore, either. These rural
communities in almost any state you want to go into, they're all getting
smaller," said Aschermann, a 60-year-old whose family has farmed in the area
since 1911. "The best dollar for the asset right now is the water."
The same thing is happening across the West as the
nation's fastest-growing region shifts more water from farms to thirsty cities.
Billions of gallons changed hands last year in eight Western states, and even
more will flow in years to come.
California recently approved a 75-year shift of water
from desert farms to San Diego, the biggest transfer of its kind in U.S.
history.
Colorado's Arkansas River Valley serves as a
cautionary example for the West's burgeoning water market. For a one-time
payment of $18 million, Aurora bought water to flush toilets and grow flowers
at new homes, and a faded farm region will be dealt another blow.
What was once the pride of Rocky Ford -- a 13-mile
ditch that settlers dug by hand shortly after the Civil War -- will be nearly
drained. When the water leaves, more jobs and local businesses are expected to
dry up as well.
"Westwide, over the next 25 to 50 years, you will
clearly see additional examples of what's happening in the Arkansas Valley,"
said Bennett Raley, a Denver water lawyer who is now the Bush administration's
point man for Western water issues.
Across the river from Rocky Ford, Carl McClure, the
65-year-old president of the local farmers union, offers a tour of what
happened to a neighboring county that sold most of its water to Colorado
Springs and other cities. McClure noses his pickup past Crowley County's closed
railroad stations, empty storefronts and a shuttered car dealership. An alfalfa
field has disappeared beneath the Arkansas Valley Correctional Facility.
"This is what replaces farms, when you take the water
away," McClure said, gazing at the prison's floodlights and chain-link
fence.
Down the road is the newer Crowley County Correctional
Facility. Together, the two prisons house more than 2,000 inmates, nearly half
the county's population and much of its growth.
"It can be very depressing," McClure said. "Crowley
County is a prime example of what shouldn't happen."
It's a fate that California's Imperial Valley, the
state's poorest region, hopes to avoid. In October, the desert farm region
agreed to ship some of its supply to San Diego for $3.5 billion -- the biggest
sale of its kind in U.S. history.
Imperial found itself under extraordinary pressure to
sell. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation threatened to take away some water that it
deemed the desert farmers were wasting.
The water sale is designed to give Imperial and its $1
billion-a-year farm economy a measure of financial security, but many worry
about the future of the valley. Farmers flood desert fields to produce huge
amounts of alfalfa, a thirsty, low-value crop. The question on many minds is
whether growers will be tempted to farm water rather than land.
"It's much easier to go to the mailbox and pick up a
check than it is to go out there and put in a 60-, 70-, 80-hour week," said
John Pierre Menvielle, a third-generation farmer in Heber, who has been raising
crops in the valley for 32 years.
Farm towns in California have gone under when they
lost their water to cities. The Owens Valley, in the high desert east of the
Sierra, became a dust bowl when Los Angeles quietly acquired its water and
flushed it down an aqueduct to the city 90 years ago.
Modern-day water speculators still stalk the waterways
of the West. Denver investors bought up Rocky Ford's sugar beet refinery and
sold the water associated with it to Aurora 20 years ago.
A decade later, brothers Lee and Edward Bass, oil
barons from Houston, quietly bought up Imperial Valley land and then tried
unsuccessfully to sell the water out from under it.
So what's the answer for the 450,000 farms in the
West? Squeezed by rising equipment costs, depressed crop prices and a brutal
drought, farmers are finding it harder to hang on. Farms use as much as 95% of
the water in some areas of the West.
Many believe that water markets offer a way to get
water to cities without completely wiping out farms.
Over the past decade, Northern California rice farmers
have sold stakes of their water supply to Los Angeles over years. Instead of
viewing it as a threat to their survival, growers say selling water offers them
a financial cushion if the price of rice collapses.
"I truly believe that it could be a beneficial part of
a farmers' mix at a small level," said rice grower Don Bransford.
Similarly, a market has evolved for water from the
massive Colorado-Big Thompson Project, which brings water over and through the
Rockies to northeastern Colorado through a series of dams, tunnels and pipes.
Cities have paid as much as 6 cents a gallon for Big Thompson water, some of
the state's and the West's highest prices.
Towns in Texas lease large amounts of Rio Grande water
through well-functioning markets; developers have set up a system to buy
Truckee River water for new homes in and around Reno, Nev.; and Albuquerque,
N.M., has been buying up water rights from farmers, according to the Water
Strategist, a Claremont publication that tracks sales.
Brent M. Haddad, associate professor of environmental
studies at the University of California at Santa Cruz, and the author of
"Rivers of Gold," takes a different view of water markets.
"The bell tolls when you create water markets because
all this is going to do is shrink the number of farms," Haddad said. "What
we're talking about is a means of moving from farms to cities."
Turn on the tap in Aurora and out comes water that
once grew crops. Once the Rocky Ford water sale is approved by a judge, water
that once flowed on the Aschermann farm for three generations will start
flowing into the city.
"They're going to drink it. They're going to have
parks. They're going to grow flowers. They're going to have baseball diamonds
and football fields. They're going to have all those things," Aschermann said.
"When you can't make it on the farm, what else do you do?"
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