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Feds Tell 9th Circ. Tribal Interests Must End Water Dispute
Law360 (July 1, 2021, 7:22 PM EDT) The federal government on Thursday urged the Ninth Circuit to dismiss a challenge by irrigation districts to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation s plan for allocating water near the California-Oregon border, saying that tribal interests and circuit precedent dictate the result.
To rule in favor of the irrigation districts in the fight over how the Klamath Irrigation Project allocates water to tribes and nontribal groups would require upending the court s 2019 ruling in Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment v. Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Reclamation Bureau said. To do that, the court would likely need to revisit its precedent, the government.
Bank Holiday Weather Forecast LIVE-The hot summer gives way to a high temperature of 23 degrees Celsius this weekend
With the temperature soaring above 20 degrees Celsius, the UK will start baking this weekend, ending the wet and windy weather that plagued May.
London and Central England May be as high as 23C (73F)-The hottest since the bank holiday weekend at the end of March-The showers finally made way for the bright sun.
At the same time, the temperature in the southeast, northwest and Wales is expected to reach 20 degrees Celsius.
This Metropolitan Office May 30 (Sunday) has been designated as the date in the calendar Warm weather During the holidays, there was a blue sky, and there was no rain and warm temperatures during the bank holidays that day and Monday.
黄海 救援 |鱼雷|无人机|黄海_新浪科技_新浪网 sina.com.cn - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sina.com.cn Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Fears of a massive salmon die-off this summer in Sacramento River water conflict
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An entire run of endangered winter-run chinook salmon, as well as the fall-run salmon that make up the core of the California fishery, are in danger of being wiped out this year if the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation keeps diverting water to farmers at its current rate.
With state water resources constrained by the extreme drought, that’s the alarm that environmental, fishing and tribal groups are sounding after reports show the Sacramento River will reach dangerous temperatures during spawning season, based on federal scientific scenarios that analyze the bureau’s planned water releases. They warn of a massive die-off as bad as during the last drought, when 95% of winter-run chinook salmon eggs and young fish were wiped out in 2014 and 2015.