Current:Home > reviewsNevada high court ruling upholds state authority to make key groundwater decisions -InfiniteWealth
Nevada high court ruling upholds state authority to make key groundwater decisions
View
Date:2025-04-21 18:54:56
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevada’s top water official has authority to decide how underground supplies are allocated, the state Supreme Court said this week, in a ruling that could kill a long-stalled proposal to build a sprawling master-planned city north of Las Vegas and boost chances of survival for an endangered species of fish native only to natural springs in the area.
The unanimous ruling Thursday by the state high court followed oral arguments in August about whether the state engineer could protect the Muddy River drainage basin and habitat of the endangered Moapa dace by considering several aquifers beneath a vast area including parts of Clark and Lincoln counties as a single underground basin.
“We hold that the State Engineer has authority to conjunctively manage surface waters and groundwater and to jointly administer multiple basins,” the ruling said.
The legal language established a precedent seen as crucial to regulating pumping rights and water use in the nation’s driest state amid climate change and ongoing drought in the U.S. Southwest.
The state had appealed the case to the seven-member court after a judge in Las Vegas sided with developers planning an immense master-planned community called Coyote Springs. The lower court judge rejected a decision by then-State Engineer Tim Wilson to combine six water basins and part of another into just one, all subject to the same regulations.
Wilson cited groundwater tests that over two years produced rapid widespread depletion of underground stores in an area supplying the Muddy River in an order in 2020 that limited the amount of water that could be drawn from the aquifer.
The Muddy River basin feeds the Virgin River and an arm of Lake Mead, the Colorado River reservoir behind Hoover Dam, which serves as a crucial source of water and hydropower for a seven-state region including 40 million residents and vast agricultural lands.
The basin also feeds warm springs that are the only home to the Moapa dace, a finger-length fish that environmentalists including the Center for Biological Diversity have been fighting for decades to protect.
“The state engineer made the right call in ordering that groundwater and surface water be managed together for the benefit of the public interest, including wildlife,” Patrick Donnelly, regional director for the organization, said in a statement hailing the state Supreme Court decision. “The Moapa dace is protected by the Endangered Species Act, and that means the state can’t take actions that would drive the species toward extinction.”
Meanwhile, water supply questions have stalled Coyote Springs developers’ plans to build from scratch what would become one of Nevada’s largest cities — once envisioned at more than 150,000 homes and businesses covering an area almost three times the size of Manhattan.
Coyote Springs’ original investors included Harvey Whittemore, a renowned Nevada lobbyist and developer who later was imprisoned 21 months for funneling illegal campaign contributions to then-Sen. Harry Reid. The Democratic party leader said he was unaware of the scheme and was not accused of wrongdoing. He died in 2021.
The site about 60 miles (96 kilometers) from Las Vegas today has a monument marking an entrance and a golf course that opened in 2008, but no homes.
The Supreme Court ruling did not end the legal fight. It sent the case it back to Clark County District Court to decide whether the state engineer gave proper notice before deciding what the justices termed “the absence of a conflict to Muddy River rights.”
veryGood! (115)
Related
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Fuming over setback to casino smoking ban, workers light up in New Jersey Statehouse meeting
- Ring In The Weekend With The 21 Best Sales That Are Happening Right Now
- UNC-Chapel Hill names former state budget director as interim chancellor
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- One fourth of United Methodist churches in US have left in schism over LGBTQ ban. What happens now?
- The IBAMmys: The It's Been A Minute 2023 Culture Awards Show
- Cambodia welcomes the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s plan to return looted antiquities
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Comedian Kenny DeForest Dead at 37 After Bike Accident in NYC
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Jake Paul oozes confidence. But Andre August has faced scarier challenges than Paul.
- Salaam Green selected as the city of Birmingham’s inaugural poet laureate
- Is Costco going to raise membership fees for Gold Star and Executive members?
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- A Thai senator linked to a Myanmar tycoon is indicted for drug trafficking and money laundering
- Messi's busy offseason: Inter Miami will head to Japan and Apple TV reveals new docuseries
- The EU’s drip-feed of aid frustrates Ukraine, despite the promise of membership talks
Recommendation
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Family hopeful after FBI exhumes body from unsolved 1969 killing featured in Netflix’s ‘The Keepers’
Reeves appoints new leader for Mississippi’s economic development agency
Airbnb agrees to pay $621 million to settle a tax dispute in Italy
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
2023 Arctic Report Card proves time for action is now on human-caused climate change, NOAA says
Derek Hough Shares Video Update on Wife Hayley Erbert After Life-Threatening Skull Surgery
Federal judge denies cattle industry’s request to temporarily halt wolf reintroduction in Colorado