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Page 12 - ஸ்யாக் பிராங்கல் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

What about us? Ute Tribe asks as Utah moves to protect its share of the Colorado River

What about us? Ute Tribe asks as Utah moves to protect its share of the Colorado River. Brian Maffly © Francisco Kjolseth (Francisco Kjolseth | Tribune file photo) Hite Crossing Bridge stretches over the Colorado River as it flows into Lake Powell near Hite Marina on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021. The Ute Indian Tribe worries that the newly proposed Colorado River Authority of Utah could deprive the tribe of its rights to the river s water. Citing decades of conflict with the state over water, the Ute Indian Tribe is upset with a freshly passed bill that would set up a new state agency to advance Utah’s interests in the Colorado River, potentially at the expense of the tribe’s more senior rights.

Colorado River Authority Bill Moves To Full Senate, Some Still Concerned About Transparency

Around 60% of Utahns rely on water from the Colorado River. A Senate committee unanimously approved a bill Thursday to create Utah’s Colorado River Authority, which would be tasked with helping the state renegotiate its share of the river. Originally the bill allowed broad reasons to close meetings and protect records. It’s since been changed twice to come more into compliance with the state’s open meeting and record laws. Critics of the bill said it’s still not enough. Mike O’Brien, an attorney with the Utah Media Coalition, said having a narrower scope for open meetings and records exemptions makes the bill better than when it was first introduced. But he wishes it would follow laws already there.

Utah behind the times and needs watchdog to guard interest in Colorado River, official says

Utah ‘behind the times’ and needs watchdog to guard interest in Colorado River, official says Amy Joi O Donoghue © Chuck Wing, Deseret News The Colorado River flows from Page Arizona and the Glen Canyon Dam on April 1, 2018. SALT LAKE CITY Utah House Speaker Brad Wilson says the state needs to do everything it can to protect its share of water in the drought-challenged Colorado River, and the creation of a new entity would foster that protection. “Sixty percent of the water used in Utah comes from the Colorado River,” the Republican from Kaysville told members of the House Democratic Caucus on Tuesday.

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