October 2017 — Fourth State Hearing on Controversial SNWA Water Pipeline Concludes

Related Background Documents
August, 2017 —GBWN's Rebuttal to Southern Nevada Water Authority’s Evidence Reports presented to the office of the Nevada State Engineer on behalf of Pprotestants White Pine County, Great Basin Water Network, et al. [Download Report 58 Page PDF]

January 18, 2018 — GBWN documents "Remand Hearing before the Nevada State Enginner

June 17, 2017 — GBWN documents "Remand Hearing before the Nevada State Enginner

Nevada State Engineer Remand Hearing Support Documents — SE Website



Public Comment Letters

Readers Note: Below are examples of written public comments submitted at the above referenced hearing; in all, some 72 public comment letters were submitted and are posted here on the State Engineer's website.


  • Judy Treichel [Las Vegas - 3 pages]
  • Jeff Fontaine, NRWA [4 pages]
  • John B. Walker [Minden - 4 pages]
  • Abigail Johnson [Carson City - 2 pages]

  • Press Accounts
    September 25, 2017 — Southern Nevada water agency opens hearing on pipeline — Las Vegas Review Journal

    September 28, 2017 — Ruling on Southern Nevada water agency’s pipeline project months away — Las Vegas Review Journal

    September 29, 2017 — Ranchers criticize Southern Nevada water agency’s pipeline plan — Las Vegas Review Journal

    October 13, 2017 — Latest round of hearings conclude — Ely Times [Print PDF]

    Background: What happened at the hearing & What's Next! The Nevada State Engineer's Office concluded its latest round of hearings on the controversial plan by Southern Nevada Water Authority to take groundwater from eastern Nevada and pipe it over 250 miles to Las Vegas. The two-week proceeding by the state's top water official comes after a state district court sided with White Pine County, Great Basin Water Network, and allies, finding that the previous 2013 rulings on the same applications granted more water than was available. The court also found SNWA did not have specific plans to monitor and mitigate predicted impacts, or guarantee that senior water rights and the environment would be protected.

    White Pine County and Great Basin Water Network, along with the Goshute, Ely Shoshone, and Duckwater Shoshone Tribes and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, presented evidence critical of the project to the State Engineer in this most recent hearing.

    The $15 billion project has been predicted to have devastating impacts to both senior water rights and the environment over a large area in eastern Nevada with potential impact in western Utah. Spring Valley, which lies to the west of Great Basin National Park in White Pine County, is among those targeted. "Time and time again, we've shown that neither science nor law supports this disastrous proposal," said Gary Perea, a White Pine County Commissioner. "There is not enough water available in these valleys to support a multi-billion dollar pipeline. The only way for the State Engineer to protect senior water rights and stunning habitat from irreversible harm is to deny these water rights applications."

    This latest remand hearing is the fourth round of hearings on water rights applications filed in 1989. Previous State Engineer decisions granting water to SNWA under the applications were overturned in court on a variety of due process, legal, and scientific grounds. The first week of hearings allowed SNWA to make their case, with opponents presenting evidence in the second week.

    Before the State Engineer makes a decision, he's asked all parties to draft a proposal for how they'd like him to rule [See GBWN's proposal dated 01/19/18 — 30 Page PDF]. A decision is not expected until February at the earliest, which will then likely go back to the court for review.

    Attorneys Iris Thornton and Simeon
    Herskovits after the Spring CDD
    Remand Hearing ended on Oct 6.
    Attorney Simeon Herskovits, who has represented White Pine County and Great Basin Water Network in both state and federal challenges to the pipeline proposal, said "Once again SNWA has failed to come forward with any meaningful science or evidence that changes the basic fact that their groundwater export project is fundamentally unsound and unsustainable. On a practical level, if the State Engineer were to approve SNWA's water rights applications, every senior water rights owner and every groundwater dependent natural resource in the affected area would be threatened with ultimate destruction."

    Public comment was taken in-person on September 29th at the Legislative Building in Carson City. All 13 who spoke were in opposition to the proposed pipeline and more opponents plan to submit written public comments urging the State Engineer to deny SNWA's applications. Las Vegas casinos, developers, labor groups, and business associations are expected to provide written comments in support of the project.

    "We encourage anyone who couldn't be at the hearing to mail written comments to the State Engineer," said Abby Johnson of Great Basin Water Network. Address public comments to: Deputy Administrator Susan Joseph-Taylor at the Office of the State Engineer, 901 S. Stewart Street, Suite 2002, Carson City, NV 89701. Comments must be received by 5:00 pm on October 20.

    Emailed public comments will not be accepted. Written comments are limited to five pages, focused on the subjects of the hearing: the amount of water available in Spring Valley so that pumping will not result in groundwater mining; the amount of available water in Cave, Dry Lake and Delamar valleys; a mitigation plan with triggers and thresholds to protect senior water rights and the environment; and the addition of Millar and Juab Counties in Utah to the monitoring and mitigation plans.


    Great Basin Water Network is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization working for sustainable water policies that protect the Great Basin's watersheds for current and future residents - human, animal, and plant. GBWN brings disparate communities together to preserve the West's environment, communities, and cultures.

    See more coverage — GBWN's Fall 2017 Newsletter

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