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With Drought The New Normal In The West, States Scramble To Prepare

Original article can be found at 泭
Originally published on May 22, 2016 By All Things Considered泭

As the Colorado River dries out, the seven states that rely on this body of water risk water scarcity. Colorado state historian Patty Limerick discusses preparations for water scarcity in the West.泭

Transcript:泭

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:泭

Now were going to take the conversation closer to home. Water is becoming a major topic of concern in the American West. Just take the Colorado River. Forty million people in seven states depend upon it for drinking, farming and recreation, and the strain on the river is showing. For the last decade, the Colorado River has been completely dry by the time it completes its 1,400 mile journey to the Sea of Cortez.泭

Thats just one reason were heading to Colorado on Tuesday for our live event series. And one of the people well meet up with there is Patty Limerick. Shes the faculty director for the Center for the American West in Boulder, and shes also the Colorado state historian. Patty, thanks so much for joining us.泭

PATTY LIMERICK: Oh, what a pleasure. Thanks so much for having me.泭

MARTIN: Now you have a saying that I want to introduce everybody to. You call the last 100 years in the American West, quote, the era of improbable comfort made possible by a truly astonishing but taken for granted infrastructure, unquote. Its catchy. But unpack that for me.泭

LIMERICK: Oh, thank you. In my opinion, thats just a wonderful way of saying after initial encounters of Euro-Americans with this region, they just thought, its too dry for conventional American settlement. It cant happen here. Then all kinds of ingenuity and hard work kicked in, and this place became a very comfortable place to live.泭

You turn on a faucet, you get water. You turn on a switch, you get electricity. Its just a its a remarkable transformation. And so if you look before this era and if you look at the future, that is implausible and improbable comfort. And it is not guaranteed for the ages. In fact, this is a time of great reckoning.泭

MARTIN: Do I take that to mean that you believe that era is now over? And if so, why? Is it because of climate change, or is it because of demand?泭

LIMERICK: Yeah, I think its petering out more than ended. I think a whole bunch of factors certainly climate change and as the managers of, well, most water utilities say its not that were moving from one determined, defined state of precipitation to another one. The past no longer really give us our bearings. We dont know that theres not going to be a new, stable normal. Its really a state of continued uncertainty. Ive been in this area for 32 years, and I would say I see change.泭

MARTIN: Now a World Bank report said that lack of water could give rise to a lot of interpersonal conflict. In your state, conflicts have already arisen with the eastern and western parts of the state sometimes in conflict over water rights. I mean, do you is that something that you see?泭

LIMERICK: I think its an open question. I would say theres a very strong streak of collaboration. And the state of Colorado has a state water plan for the first time in its history. It was a very long process. And they squabbled, they fought, but then they reached some kind of report that they could all stand behind. Now having that as a written document is pretty different from having a new this is how we conduct ourselves and this is how water is allocated.泭

MARTIN: So what I think I hear you saying is that conflict isnt the only choice. What you also see米

LIMERICK: No.泭

MARTIN: 再re new pathways to collaboration around this because people are understanding just how crucial it is. So, Patty, before we let you go, why should people in other parts of the country care about this?泭

LIMERICK: Because you can have droughts in the southeast. Georgia and Alabama those states have squabbled over water during periods of drought. And bedrock most important water quality can create a problem of scarcity. I dont want to take us off track, but Flint, Mich. is the place to remember to think its not just the West.泭

MARTIN: Patty Limerick is the Colorado state historian and the faculty director of the Center for the American West in Boulder. She will be joining me in Fort Collins, Colo., on Tuesday for our live event. Its called The Future of Water. Its a conversation about a lot of the things that weve been talking about and more. You can start joining the conversation right now if you care to. Our hashtag is #nprh20. Thats on Tuesday in Fort Collins, Colo. Patty, thank you so much for joining us.泭

LIMERICK: Oh, thank you. I cant wait until Tuesday.泭