PLF Fights For
Water Rights In The West
October 2004
By: Andrew
T. Lloyd
In the last few years, Pacific Legal
Foundation’s
Western Water Law Project has
been sending federal, state, and local
regulators and environmentalists a powerful
message that PLF will enforce through legal
precedent: Where the government takes water
rights away from ranchers, farmers, and even
from entire water districts for a public
benefit, it has to pay for it.
Indeed, in 2001, the Court of Federal
Claims embraced the arguments filed by PLF and
recognized that government diversion of water
away from the Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage
District in central California to benefit the
winter-run chinook salmon constituted a
regulatory “taking” no different in kind than
the government taking of private land by
eminent domain to build a highway bypass
across a cornfield.
Water storage districts in the San Joaquin
Valley of California contain many hundreds of
thousands of acres of highly productive
agricultural land. The principal purpose of
these water districts is to acquire and
distribute water, including water from the
State Water Project, to water users within the
district. In 1992, the National Marine
Fisheries Service, acting under authority of
the federal Endangered Species Act, required
water that would otherwise have been delivered
by the districts to the water users to be used
instead for the benefit of the Sacramento
winter-run chinook salmon. As a result, the
amount of water delivered to the users was
reduced by many thousands of acre feet. This
reduction in water was repeated with similar
results in 1993 and 1994.
The plaintiffs in this
case (Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage
District v. United States) brought a
lawsuit against the federal government
claiming that their property—their contractual
right to use water—had been taken without just
compensation in violation of the U.S.
Constitution. PLF’s Western Water Law
Project filed a friend of the court brief
to support the district’s case, and on April
30, 2001, the Court of Federal Claims ruled in
favor of the plaintiffs. Following a separate
trial for damages this past December, the same
court awarded some $26 million in damages and
interest—the biggest such award for water
rights to date.
There are other, similar water rights cases
coming up through the courts, too, including a
billion dollar claim stemming from the water
taken from Klamath Basin farmers by the
federal government to support the habitat of
two sucker fish in the Upper Klamath Lake and
the southern Oregon-northern California
population of coho salmon in the Klamath
River.
Apart from providing compensation for the
holders of valid water rights, these victories
serve a second important purpose by forcing
the government—and the bureaucracy—to feel
some part of the enormous sting it visits on
landowners. Too often, when the government
does not have to lay out compensation for
environmental regulations, bureaucrats have
little reason to resist being turned into the
tool of environmental excess.
Brushing aside the rule of law, not to
mention common sense, one environmental
lobbyist recently bemoaned that these damage
awards forced a choice between “bankrupting
the taxpayers and bankrupting environmental
protection”—as if those were the only two
constituencies. Yet, over its 30-year history,
PLF has ably demonstrated that sound
environmental regulation cannot ignore the
rights of individuals and the protection of
their health, safety, welfare, and their
constitutionally protected private property
rights, which include water rights.
When these interests are given the highest
priority by government, private owners retain
incentives to search out ways to improve the
efficient use of their lands—and this inures
to the benefit of everyone and the
environment. But when government diminishes
security in a property right (like water), it
usually means the affected land will be used
less productively, thus imperiling
environmental interests.
While we can take some comfort in recent
decisions affirming the right to be
compensated when water rights are taken by
government regulation, environmental activists
are cleverly changing their tactics. Instead
of using the Endangered Species Act, as they
have been, to force the government to take
water outright—and then leaving the taxpayers
to pick up the tab—environmentalists are now
using the ESA to make it impossible for
irrigators to get to their water in the first
place.
PLF’s Western Water Law Project is
well aware of this tactical shift and will
engage big-government environmentalists. We
intend to fight this effort in every corner,
because to lose this fight would be to allow
environmentalists to conspire with state and
federal governments to make an end-run around
the Takings Clause of the Constitution,
wreaking economic havoc in the western states
where water is scarce and water rights
invaluable.
Although these access cases are emerging
around the United States, we first saw this
approach played out in a recent case that PLF
argued before the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals (Okanogan County v. National Marine
Fisheries Service). There PLF’s Northwest
Center fought in support of Okanogan County
and various landowner and water user
associations in litigation against the
National Marine Fisheries Service and the U.S.
Forest Service. Citing requirements under the
ESA, the federal agencies refused to allow
Washington’s Methow River Valley farmers to
continue using the irrigation ditches crossing
federal lands that had been employed for
decades.
PLF fought hard against the misguided
application of the ESA and bureaucratic
overreach. Unfortunately, the federal appeals
court allowed the District Court ruling—which
focused on the language of a Forest Service
permit, rather than the near destruction of
the underlying permit rights. The U.S. Supreme
Court refused to hear the case last May, but
we remain undaunted and will search out other
cases until we get the High Court’s attention.
Through your financial support, PLF’s
Western Water Law Project will fight
tirelessly to vindicate the water rights which
form the backbone of America’s agricultural
economy and rural way of life.
Andrew T. Lloyd is a PLF attorney and
director of the Western Water Law Project. |