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The
Governance Committee of the Platte River Cooperative Agreement
The
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service's Instream Flow Recommendations
for the Central Platte River
Q:
What are the Fish and Wildlife Service’s target flows for
the central Platte River?
A:
Prior to the Cooperative Agreement, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(FWS) developed recommendations for flows that it believes are needed
at different times of the year for endangered species and other
wildlife. The recommendations vary season by season and year by
year depending on whether wet, dry or “normal” conditions
exist.
The
table below summarizes the flow recommendations that were developed
by the FWS in March 1994 for a “normal” year:
| USFWS
Instream Flow Targets for the Central Platte River
"Normal Year" |
| Dates |
Target
Flow |
Species |
| Jan.
1 - Jan. 31 |
1,000
cfs* |
Fish
community, bald eagle |
| Feb.
1 - March 22 |
1,800
cfs |
Sandhill
crane, fish community, bald eagle |
| March
23 - May 10 |
2,400
cfs |
Whooping
crane, fish community, piping plover, least tern, sandhill crane |
| May
11 - Sept. 15 |
1,200
cfs |
Fish
community, least tern, piping plover |
| Sept.
16 - Sept. 30 |
1,000
cfs |
Fish
community |
| Oct.
1 - Nov. 15 |
1,800
cfs |
Whooping
crane, fish community |
| Nov.
16 - Dec. 31 |
1,000
cfs |
Fish
community, bald eagle |
| *Cubic
feet per second |
The
FWS believes that the studies on which it based its current flow
recommendations were the best scientific information available at
that time on species needs. However, new and better science will
be developed through the Cooperative Agreement effort or during
implementation of a future Program and has the potential to reduce
the flow recommendations.
Q:
What are “pulse flows”?
A:
“Pulse flows” are higher natural flow events now occurring
that the FWS would like to preserve. The FWS believes that “pulse
flows” are needed between February 1 and March 31, and May
1 to June 30 in some years to maintain wet meadows, the river channel,
least tern and piping plover nesting habitat and pallid sturgeon
habitat. They include very high flow events (above 12,000 cubic
feet per second (cfs) and in come cases above 16,000 cfs) that last
a few days and more moderate flows of 3,000-3,600 cfs lasting for
a week to a month.
Q:
Would Program water be used to create “pulse flows”
which could cause or aggravate out of bank flooding?
A:
The FWS has committed never to use Environmental Account water to
create short duration, very high flow events. While the FWS would
like such pulse flows to continue to occur naturally, it has no
plans to augment flows to raise them to or near 8,000 cfs or any
higher flow rate. In fact, both the Environmental Account Plan and
the Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District’s
license forbid releases that would cause or aggravate flows above
the flood stages as established by the National Weather Service.
This means that Environmental Account releases from Lake McConaughy,
in combination with other releases and other North Platte flows,
cannot exceed 3,750 cfs, which is flood stage on the North Platte
River at North Platte (the lowest flood stage). Similarly, Environmental
Account releases from Lake McConaughy, in combination with other
releases and other Platte River flows cannot exceed 8,200 cfs, the
flood stage for the Platte River at Grand Island, or any other flood
stage on the Platte River. Thus, while the FWS may occasionally
use the Environmental Account to enhance naturally occurring, longer,
lower flow pulses to make them more like the recommended 3,000-3,600
cfs “pulse flows,” bank overflow will only occur because
of natural high flow events.
Q:
What is the 417,000 acre-feet number people hear about and what
does it mean?
A:
The 417,000 acre-feet (a-f) number is the average annual amount
of water needed to eliminate “shortages” in existing
flows compared to those that the FWS recommends. The recommended
flows are a combination of the target flows listed in the table
above plus some water for the lowest level of “pulse flows”
described in the previous question (see graph).

The
417,000 a-f figure was calculated using actual flows from the past
(1943 to 1994). During that period, there were some years when the
recommended flows were met much of the time and other years when
they were seldom met. Even in months where average flows were well
above the recommended flows, day-to-day variations in flows often
meant that flows fell short of the recommendations on some days.
Looking only at the days when flows fell short and averaging the
annual “shortages” results in the 417,000 a-f figure.
Days when flows were higher than the recommended flow were not used
to offset the shortages, because in the past, the excess water just
flowed on downstream. But if that excess water could somehow be
saved and put into the river on days when flows are below the recommendations,
shortages could be reduced without increasing the annual river flows.
The
problem therefore is largely one of timing, not of total supply.
To the extent methods are found to re-time the water that is now
in the river, additional water will not be needed.
Q:
How could flows be brought closer to target flows?
A:
If flows throughout the Platte River Basin could be re-timed or
re-regulated (moved from periods when flows are higher than recommended
to times when flows are lower than recommended), flow recommendations
could be met much more often. For example, the three proposed Program
water projects (the Nebraska Plan’s Environmental Account
in Lake McConaughy, the Pathfinder Modification in Wyoming and the
Tamarack Plan in Colorado) would bring flows about 70,000 a-f closer
to the recommendations by re-regulating flows without increasing
the annual flow at all. Additional re-regulation projects, water
conservation and new water supply opportunities can bring flows
even closer to the recommendations.
Q:
Has the Fish and Wildlife Service changed its position on requiring
target flows because of the Cooperative Agreement and proposed Program?
A:
Yes. Before there was a Cooperative Agreement, the FWS was proceeding
project-by-project seeking mitigation based on its recommended target
flows and seeking to reduce shortages to the target flows by 417,000
a-f. In the proposed Program, the FWS has agreed to an incremental,
adaptive management approach. During the first 10- to 13-year increment
of the proposed Program, the goal is to provide 130,000 to 150,000
a-f per year to move flows closer to the FWS’s recommended
flows. New and better science will be developed through the Cooperative
Agreement effort or implementation of a future Program and has the
potential to change the flow recommendations.
Q:
How would the Fish and Wildlife Service proceed under the Endangered
Species Act if there were not a Cooperative Agreement?
A:
If there were no Cooperative Agreement, there would instead be individual,
full-blown, project-by-project consultations under the Endangered
Species Act. The FWS would base its consultations on the current
target flows and seek measures to reduce or eliminate the 417,000
a-f “shortage” to its recommended flows, unless new
scientific information demonstrated that a change to these target
flows was needed. This approach would likely result in project delays
and would be more likely to result in inequity and litigation.
Q:
Have all the other signatories and participants in the Cooperative
Agreement agreed to the Fish and Wildlife Service’s pre-Cooperative
Agreement recommendations?
A:
No. Many of the participants have conducted their own studies of
the river and species and some have reached conclusions which do
not agree with those reached by the FWS. All three of the states
that signed the Cooperative Agreement and many of the other participants
disagree with some or all of the FWS’s views. The unique feature
of the Cooperative Agreement is that the parties have been able
to set aside fundamental conflicts about species needs, target flows
and even the Endangered Species Act itself to make a plan that will
reevaluate the science while beginning to take steps to benefit
habitats.
In
embracing the Cooperative Agreement process, the participants have
concluded that, whether or not they agree with the FWS, project-by-project
litigation would be likely without a Program. Such litigation --
particularly in opposition to a federal agency considered to have
expertise -- carries a risk that it will not be successful. The
proposed Program also responds to new information about the complex
relationships among flow, habitat and species recovery. Court orders
would not.
Q:
Where can the general public make its views known and obtain information
on the latest developments?
A:
The general public can make its views known and obtain information
on the Cooperative Agreement and Program by contacting Governance
Committee members and subcommittee chairs, attending committee meetings,
contacting Dale Strickland, the Governance Committee’s executive
director (toll-free phone number: (877) 634-1773), or checking the
Governance Committee’s web site at http://www.platteriver.org
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