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The EARIP stakeholders met Thursday and
took the first of many steps in the process of establishing a plan to
protect federally listed endangered species while balancing the region’s
need for water. The chair and members of the EARIP Science Subcommittee
presented preliminary findings from their report that analyzes
endangered species’ needs in relation to spring flow rates and aquifer
levels, and they answered many questions from the stakeholders. The full
report will be completed at the end of December 2009.
The information presented at the meeting
Thursday is available on the EARIP website at
http://earip.tamu.edu/Meetings.aspx?MeetingType=EARIPmeetings. Click
on the Science Subcommittee Presentation at the end of the list for the
November 12 meeting.
Robert Gulley, EARIP Program Manager,
said, “The Science Subcommittee’s work is an initial step in a lengthy
process established over the past two years by EARIP stakeholders. The
flows are a starting point but they do not dictate any particular
action. The numbers do point out the complexity of discussions coming in
the next few months, and do highlight the need to work together to come
up with creative solutions.”
The second step of the process was also
accomplished at this meeting when the stakeholders approved seeking a
peer review of the Science Subcommittee report by independent
scientists. A Request for Proposals will be sent out in December.
The group also began the third step in
the process by discussing possible alternatives for protecting species.
Discussion of these alternatives will continue and intensify on December
1 when the EARIP holds a two day retreat in Kerrville. The Science
Subcommittee will be one of many technical resources that will inform
these discussions.
Other actions taken Thursday include
unanimous approval of funding for an aquifer study to evaluate recharge
alternatives for spring flow supplementation, which allows exploration
of non-pumping actions as part of the solution. The group also learned
that a Guadalupe River gains and losses study will be funded by the
Corps of Engineers. The stakeholders declined to fund a third proposed
study, about whooping crane foods and marsh connectivity.
The 2010 EARIP operating budget of
$239,848 was approved, with stakeholders contributing these funds for
the EARIP’s third year, including Edwards Aquifer Authority, Guadalupe
Blanco River Authority, San Antonio River Authority, San Antonio Water
System, Texas Department of Agriculture, Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality, and Texas Parks and Wildlife plus many others.
EARIP stakeholders include water
utilities, cities, groundwater conservation districts, agricultural
users, industrial users, environmental organizations, individuals, river
authorities, downstream and coastal communities, and state and federal
agencies. For additional information, the EARIP website is
http://earip.tamu.edu.
Contact:
Dr. Robert Gulley, Program Manager
210-222-0711 or 210-632-4083(C)
E-mail: rlgulley@ag.tamu.edu
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