It was back in March but I just saw it:

http://www.santafenewmexican.com/opinion/my_view/reader-view-state-loses-from-one-way-water-dialogue/article_4662cd14-b808-5cfb-b82d-f611b9895d9d.html

The New Mexico Water Dialogue held its annual gathering on Jan. 7 at the
Indian Pueblo Cultural Center in Albuquerque. I’ve been attending their
meetings for several years as a student of New Mexico water governance.
This year the presentations had a different tone, like a jilted lover in a
telenovela. It takes two to dialogue, and I had the feeling that the group
was exhausted after years of singing to a tone-deaf state.

Maybe it was the title, “Planning: How Can It Make a Difference?” The title
warns of the bad mood to come. If it isn’t going to make a difference, why
bother planning at all? Regional water planning is going on all over the
state. At the rollout meeting in Albuquerque — I was there — planning
seemed more like directions from on high to follow what had been
pre-planned. The process looked top-down and underfunded. There was no
promise that the recommendations by the regional groups would be taken
seriously. And that, apparently, is how it’s turning out.

Consider two of the hottest water issues in the state right now — the
Santolina development and the proposed Gila River diversion. Several
speakers raised serious questions, as yet unanswered, about the assumptions
about water on which those projects are based. And yet the approvals keep
on keepin’ on.

Or consider the panel of New Mexican scientists appointed by the
Legislature to report on climate change. Warmer on average is one
well-supported conclusion. That means, over the long haul, more
evapotranspiration, less snowmelt, and more groundwater use. Did this
inspire any proposals for water governance reform? No. The Legislature did
not renew the project.

It’s a cliché now, what with climate change and the Anthropocene, that both
bottom-up and top-down have to be part of water management, with a
continual conversation and shared power between the two. At the moment in
New Mexico, judging from the day of presentations, the top is hermetically
sealed so that the bottom has no way up.

The three main water policy authorities in the state are all filled by
executive appointment. Legislation last year proposed that thought should
be given to whom the appointees represent and what their qualifications
are. Water policy, never mind climate change, requires long-term
nonpartisan thinking, not authority that shifts with the political winds.
That proposed bill never made it to the House floor.

I left the meeting mid-afternoon, desperately seeking a positive conclusion
to the day. My feeling wasn’t that New Mexico water governance is an Edsel
in a Tesla world. It was that more people are saying exactly that, loud and
clear, in well-crafted arguments, based on solid evidence and good logic.

It would take a lengthy article to go down the list of presenters, detail
their experience and qualifications, and summarize their criticisms and
calls for action. You can see some of it for yourself if you go to the New
Mexico Water Dialogue webpage (
http://allaboutwatersheds.org/new-mexico-water-dialogue).

The good news was that so many distinguished water professionals agree on
the bad news and have good ideas for how to address it. I remembered a
quote, attributed to Gandhi, that goes something like this. “There go my
people. I must follow them, for I am their leader.” New Mexico water
governance needs a pair of running shoes, or maybe water wings would be a
better metaphor. It has a lot of catching up to do.

*Mike Agar is still trying to figure out New Mexico water. He has written
several pieces on the topic for the now dormant New Mexico mercury
(www.newmexicomercury.com <http://mercury.com/>). More information on him
and his work at www.ethknowworks.com <http://ethknowworks.com/>.*
_______________________________________________________________________
stephen.gue...@simtable.com <stephen.gue...@simtable.com>
CEO, Simtable  http://www.simtable.com
1600 Lena St #D1, Santa Fe, NM 87505
office: (505)995-0206 mobile: (505)577-5828
twitter: @simtable
============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com

Reply via email to