This article explains the importance of water originating on national forests to Western states\u27 economies and the environment, focusing on a controversial 1997 report by a badly divided congressionally-created task force that decided, on a 4-3 vote, that the Forest Service lacked the authority to condition rights-of-way permits authorizing water diversions consistent with national forest land plans. The conflict that gave rise to the report concerned diversions to Colorado cities, which the agency sought to condition in order to leave sufficient water instream to protect fish populations and aquatic habitat (so-called bypass flows ). The article examines the bypass flow issue, which originated in the Poudre River Basin, and the task fo...
The Article focuses on the U.S. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit progr...
This article reviews the troubled history of the “Waters of the United States” Rule of the Clean Wat...
In 1861, the Ohio Supreme Court adopted the Absolute Use Rule to govern groundwater, essentially all...
Lawsuits offer an arcane and fundamental way of making basic water law and policy. The tortured cour...
This casenote addresses a decision of the Colorado Water Court interpreting whether the federal rese...
4 For example, according to statistics from "Ten Rivers in America's Future," approximately 75 perc...
The reserved water rights doctrine is — and always has been — a controversial doctrine in Western wa...
This article investigates the proposed designation of the North Coast rivers under WSRA. It chronicl...
Freshwater ecosystems need adequate streamflow to supply clean water for humans and maintain healthy...
Under the 10th Amendment, the United States Constitution allows states to control land use within th...
The Reclamation Act of 1902 delegated to the states the power to control the use of water developed ...
Wetlands regulation in the United States has a tumultuous history. The early European settlers viewe...
On the Missouri River, tensions have run high ever since the Corps of Discovery explored the river’s...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
Since its initial passage in 1972, the Clean Water Act has attempted to restore and protect our Nati...
The Article focuses on the U.S. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit progr...
This article reviews the troubled history of the “Waters of the United States” Rule of the Clean Wat...
In 1861, the Ohio Supreme Court adopted the Absolute Use Rule to govern groundwater, essentially all...
Lawsuits offer an arcane and fundamental way of making basic water law and policy. The tortured cour...
This casenote addresses a decision of the Colorado Water Court interpreting whether the federal rese...
4 For example, according to statistics from "Ten Rivers in America's Future," approximately 75 perc...
The reserved water rights doctrine is — and always has been — a controversial doctrine in Western wa...
This article investigates the proposed designation of the North Coast rivers under WSRA. It chronicl...
Freshwater ecosystems need adequate streamflow to supply clean water for humans and maintain healthy...
Under the 10th Amendment, the United States Constitution allows states to control land use within th...
The Reclamation Act of 1902 delegated to the states the power to control the use of water developed ...
Wetlands regulation in the United States has a tumultuous history. The early European settlers viewe...
On the Missouri River, tensions have run high ever since the Corps of Discovery explored the river’s...
The story of water in the American West shows that political intervention is unnecessary. Local inst...
Since its initial passage in 1972, the Clean Water Act has attempted to restore and protect our Nati...
The Article focuses on the U.S. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit progr...
This article reviews the troubled history of the “Waters of the United States” Rule of the Clean Wat...
In 1861, the Ohio Supreme Court adopted the Absolute Use Rule to govern groundwater, essentially all...