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 For Immediate Release, August 3, 2012 Contact: Rob Mrowka, (702) 249-5821 or [email protected] BLM  Analysis Reveals Massive Damage From Las Vegas Water Grab LAS VEGAS— The Bureau of Land Management today released  its long-anticipated final environmental impact statement for the pipeline right-of-way for the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s “groundwater development project.” The project envisions unsustainably  siphoning more than 37.1 billion gallons of groundwater per year from at least  four valleys in central Nevada and pumping it 300 miles to the Las Vegas  Valley. 
              
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                    | Moapa dace photo courtesy USGS. Photos  are available for media use. |  |  “The federal  government’s own scientists are confirming this Las Vegas water project would  be an epic environmental disaster,” said Rob Mrowka, a Nevada-based ecologist with  the Center for Biological Diversity. “It’s really no exaggeration to say that  the natural, cultural and social heritage of central Nevada is at grave risk  from this project.” The impact statement  discloses that more than 137,000 acres of wildlife habitat will be permanently  destroyed or changed because of the lowering of groundwater tables — by up to  200 feet in many areas. This will drive declines in species like mule deer,  Rocky Mountain elk, sage grouse and Bonneville cutthroat trout. Most at risk  will be species associated with the springs and wetlands that will dry up as  the water beneath them is sucked away. “Some of Nevada’s  rarest and most unique species rely on wetlands and springs,” said Mrowka.  “They’ve evolved over tens of thousands of years in response to isolation and  fragmentation of habitat that occurred after ice ages. The Las Vegas water grab  could undo all that and put them on a very real path toward extinction.” Scientific research  reveals that many of these species are often found in only one or two springs. As  the springs are dewatered and flows are altered and eventually stopped, at  least 25 species of Great Basin springsnails will be  pushed to, or over, the edge of extinction. Also affected will be 14 species of  desert fish such as the Moapa dace and White River  springfish; frogs and toads will fare little better, with four species severely  threatened by the dewatering.  Other impacts from  the project disclosed in the BLM’s impact statement today include ground-level  subsidence in excess of five feet on over 240 square miles and tens of  thousands of tons of new dust generated from dewatered and denuded lands. The impact statement  envisions a multilayered scheme of monitoring to detect impacts, followed by  mitigation measures to reduce the impacts. This approach is flawed in several ways.  First, it places the Water Authority in the driver’s seat to do the monitoring  and then faithfully report and address it — a scenario that defies reason and  credibility. Second, it assumes that any observed impacts can be successfully  addressed, while sound science suggests that the lag time between pumping and  observation of the impact makes this virtually impossible.  Finally, it assumes  that the Water Authority will have adequate funds available to conduct the  monitoring and successfully mitigate damage. Experiences from a similar  situation in the Owens Valley of California reveal  that tens of millions of dollars are spent annually to mitigate just one  problem: dust. “Given the $15.5 billion price tag of just constructing and  financing the pipe, promises to mitigate the impacts are frankly laughable,”  Mrowka said. The public and  elected officials now have at least 30 days to provide further comment and  input to the BLM before a final decision is issued.  “This is a critical  time for the Southern Nevada Water Authority, its Board and all elected  officials to take action to put the brakes on this disastrous and unneeded  project,” said Mrowka. “There’s still time for the Authority to table the  project and begin the much-needed dialogue with the community on better options  for meeting the Las Vegas Valley’s future water needs — high among them  sensible growth management.” The Center for Biological Diversity is a  national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 375,000 members  and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild  places. |