Current:Home > ContactA Rural Arizona Community May Soon Have a State Government Fix For Its Drying Wells -FundGuru
A Rural Arizona Community May Soon Have a State Government Fix For Its Drying Wells
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:00:25
Lisa Glenn has seen what happens when a rural desert community’s groundwater aquifer is pushed past its breaking point.
For 57 years, she’s lived in Willcox, Arizona, where farms dot the landscape. But over the past decade, as new industrial farming operations moving into the area drove a surge in groundwater pumping, her neighbors’ wells have run dry. Others have seen their land sink as the underground water supplies shrank.
“I know one woman whose house is basically split in two by subsidence,” she said.
For decades, she’s watched groups try to protect the aquifer by going to the legislature and advocating for laws that safeguard the water supplies of rural communities like hers. But time and again, they failed.
Explore the latest news about what’s at stake for the climate during this election season.
Other people concerned about the future of the community have moved away.
“How can we have ignored this?” she asked. “To watch neighbors and acquaintances’ businesses be so harmed by what is going on, and their future be harmed, because we have allowed just a few big players to pump all they wanted—it’s been wrong from the get-go.”
But finally, change may be coming. The Arizona Department of Water Resources announced Wednesday that, for the first time ever, it was beginning the process of creating an Active Management Area within the boundaries of the Willcox groundwater basin, setting the stage to finally regulate groundwater in the region where dozens of wells have run dry over the past decade. “It’s a chance to fix it, to move us into a place where we can assure that this basin will thrive for generations to come,” Glenn said. “I am very hopeful.”
It’s a significant attempt by the state to rein in the overconsumption of groundwater that has plagued rural Arizona for decades and that, in the face of climate-driven drought, is becoming harder to ignore. AMAs are the one tool the state currently has to deal with water shortages in rural Arizona.
In more developed parts of the state, like Phoenix, groundwater is strictly regulated, with aquifers managed to prevent more water from being pumped out than can be replenished by rain and surface water each year. But in rural stretches of Arizona where agriculture thrives—and uses most of the state’s water supply—there are often no rules even to require monitoring of groundwater pumping, let alone the amount of water being taken out of an aquifer.
In the drought-stricken state, the Willcox area east of Tucson has perhaps best defined the water woes.
“Willcox is at the epicenter of the crisis and it is in a state where they’re desperate for action,” said Haley Paul, Arizona policy director for the National Audubon Society, who also serves on the governor’s water council. “I think it’s encouraging to see the department using its existing authorities to protect and manage groundwater in this region because we know it is one of the most severely impacted places in Arizona.”
Over the past decade, Willcox residents have seen large-scale agricultural operations move into the area, where no groundwater regulations exist, allowing unlimited quantities of water to be pumped for free, but at the cost of their aquifer.
Dozens of residential wells have run dry as the aquifer has been drawn down 400 feet below the average well depth so that most wells no longer reach the water table. Fissures have cracked open the earth, the land subsiding by nearly three inches a year as the underground water supporting it was pumped out. Between 1940 and 2015, 5.7 million acre feet of water has been sucked from the ground, nearly double the amount that the state gets from the Colorado River in wet years and enough for nearly 15 million homes. In 2022, the basin saw a deficit of 108,428-acre feet more water being pumped out of the aquifer than was replenished by rain or other sources, about the same amount of water Tucson uses each year.
Nearly all of the water is used by industrial agricultural and dairy operations that moved to the basin in the past 10 years. In 2015, Riverview LLP, a Minnesota-based dairy company, moved into the area, which residents say was a major turning point for the basin, though wells had already begun to run dry and the decline of the aquifer began to accelerate in 2005.
“If all pumping stopped today, it would take over 280 years for the aquifer to recover,” said Ryan Mitchell, the state water department’s chief hydrologist in a recent presentation on the condition of the groundwater.
Since Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, took office, she’s made addressing Arizona’s water challenges a top priority, stopping new groundwater pumping in the Phoenix metropolitan area and forming a bipartisan Water Policy Council to come up with plans to update the state’s groundwater management, which requires the state legislature to pass new laws. At the time, Hobbs said if the legislature wouldn’t act, she would.
Her water council came up with a plan, but legislation to implement it stalled, with state Republicans in the Arizona legislature preventing the bills from even being heard in committee. The state legislature passed some water bills that the governor signed into law this year, but she vetoed others, arguing they would cause more harm than good. That’s left rural Arizona with no new path for groundwater regulation, despite the pleas of local leaders, residents, water experts and environmentalists. The only way forward was for the state water department’s director to begin the process to create a new Active Management Area, which is outlined in the original 1980 law and has now begun.
“For too long, politicians have stuck their heads in the sand and refused to take action to fix the problems Arizonans face,” Hobbs said in a post on X (formerly Twitter) regarding the water department’s announcement. “I won’t.”
Though Republicans in the legislature have failed to move the needle, experts, advocates and Willcox residents said, local leaders in rural communities have been advocating for change. In a statement in response to the announcement, Willcox Mayor Mike Laws said that “while there are a range of views on the AMA, the urgency of addressing our water challenges cannot be overstated” and “with no legislative solutions in place, the Governor and the Arizona Department of Water Resources have acted with the tools available to them.”
“We recognize the concerns many residents and stakeholders have raised, and we are committed to ensuring that our community’s voice is heard throughout this process,” Laws said. “Our focus remains on securing a sustainable future for our water supply and ensuring the long-term economic vitality of our region.”
Under Arizona’s current laws, 80 percent of the state has no regulations overseeing aquifers, leading agriculture operations to pump unlimited amounts of water. That’s left some communities like Willcox vulnerable to unsustainable groundwater use, experts say.
In the most populated parts of the state, the 1980 Groundwater Management Act created Active Management Areas to achieve sustainable yields from aquifers those areas depend on, meaning no more water could be pumped out than flowed in. Under the law, groundwater in the five AMAs is monitored and all new developments need to have the water department certify that they have enough water to supply the new homes for 100 years, though some exemptions exist. In some rural parts of the state, Irrigation Non-Expansion Areas (INAs) require the reporting of groundwater pumping and restrict the development of new users of irrigated water, like farms.
However, creating new active management areas is rare. Voters in Douglas, which neighbors Willcox, voted to create an AMA in 2022. A similar proposal for Willcox at the time failed, but locals there continued to push for some kind of groundwater management.
“This is long overdue, but better now than never,” said Kathleen Ferris, a senior research fellow at Arizona State University’s Kyl Center for Water Policy, who previously directed the Arizona Department of Water Resources when the state’s groundwater laws were passed in 1980. “It is really important that the Department of Water Resources takes these actions because we need to protect these groundwater supplies.”
The Arizona Department of Water Resources will have a public hearing on November 22 “to present factual data and receive comments and evidence on whether the Director should designate an active management area” in Willcox, the department announced in a press release. Ferris said after that, the department’s director, Tom Buschatzke, will have 30 days to release the department’s findings from that process and make a decision on whether to create the new AMA. During that time, no new land or plots that have sat idle in the past five years can be put into production for agriculture.
The department’s designation of an AMA limits future pumping and establishes mandatory conservation requirements for the area, but would establish grandfathered groundwater rights for current users and can be appealed.
Locals like Glenn are optimistic the process will finally lead to regulation of the area’s scarce water resources. The legislature has failed them, Glenn said, and the only path forward—for now—is creating an AMA for Willcox. She hopes the process will pave the way to stopping the overuse of groundwater across Arizona.
“The whole state is in crisis,” she said.
About This Story
Perhaps you noticed: This story, like all the news we publish, is free to read. That’s because Inside Climate News is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not charge a subscription fee, lock our news behind a paywall, or clutter our website with ads. We make our news on climate and the environment freely available to you and anyone who wants it.
That’s not all. We also share our news for free with scores of other media organizations around the country. Many of them can’t afford to do environmental journalism of their own. We’ve built bureaus from coast to coast to report local stories, collaborate with local newsrooms and co-publish articles so that this vital work is shared as widely as possible.
Two of us launched ICN in 2007. Six years later we earned a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, and now we run the oldest and largest dedicated climate newsroom in the nation. We tell the story in all its complexity. We hold polluters accountable. We expose environmental injustice. We debunk misinformation. We scrutinize solutions and inspire action.
Donations from readers like you fund every aspect of what we do. If you don’t already, will you support our ongoing work, our reporting on the biggest crisis facing our planet, and help us reach even more readers in more places?
Please take a moment to make a tax-deductible donation. Every one of them makes a difference.
Thank you,
David Sassoon
Founder and Publisher
Vernon Loeb
Executive Editor
Share this article
- Republish
veryGood! (1413)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Nebraska latest Republican state to expand Medicaid to cover postpartum care for low-income mothers
- Pennsylvania state trooper lied to force ex-girlfriend into psych hospital for 5 days, DA says
- Sen. Bob Menendez pleads not guilty to federal charges in bribery case
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Giant panda Fan Xing leaves a Dutch zoo for her home country China
- The Mega Millions jackpot is up for grabs again, this time for $230M. See winning numbers
- WGA ends strike, releases details on tentative deal with studios
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Winner of $1.6 billion Mega Millions jackpot claims prize in Florida
Ranking
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- France’s sexual equality watchdog says violent porn is sowing seeds for real-world sexual violence
- Travis Kelce breaks silence on Taylor Swift appearance at Chiefs game
- Britain approves new North Sea oil drilling, delighting the industry but angering critics
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Rece Davis addresses Ryan Day-Lou Holtz feud, says OSU coach 'really mad at Jim Harbaugh'
- Plans for Poland’s first nuclear power plant move ahead as US and Polish officials sign an agreement
- More than half of Americans say they don't have enough for retirement, poll shows
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Man serving sentence for attacking parents fails to return to halfway house and considered escapee
How Landon Barker Really Feels About Dad Travis Barker and Kourtney Kardashian Expecting a Baby Boy
Israel strikes militant sites in Gaza as unrest continues, no casualties
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Takeaways from AP report on Maui fire investigation
Montana judge blocks enforcement of law to ban gender-affirming medical care for minors
Remains found of Colorado woman Suzanne Morphew, who went missing on Mother’s Day 2020