OCR Text |
Show CHAPTER I Acre-feet Priority Description Annually 1 Palo Verde irrigation District - ) gross area of 104,500 acres ) 2 Yuma Project (Reservation Division) - ) not exceeding a gross area of 25,000 acres ) 3,850,000 3(a) Imperial Irrigation District and lands in ) Imperial and Coachella Valleys to be served ) byAAC ) 3(b) Palo Verde Irrigation District-16,000 acres of ) mesa lands ) 4 Metropolitan Water District and/or City of Los Angeles and/or others on coastal plain 550,000 5(a) Metropolitan Water District and/or City of Los Angeles and/or others on coastal plain 550,000 5(b) City and/or County of San Diego 112,000 6(a) Imperial Irrigation District and lands in ) Imperial and Coachella Valley ) 300,000 6(b) Palo Verde Irrigation District-16,000 acres of ) mesa lands ) TOTAL 5,362,000 The Secretary of the Interior placed the California Seven Party Agreement of August 18, 1931, in effect by general regulations dated September 28, 1931. The provisions of the Seven Party Agreement were also incorporated by the Secretary in substantially the same form in each of the subsequent California water delivery contracts entered into by the Secretary. Note that the first three California priorities total 3.85 maf/yr and are for agricultural uses. Note also that the first four California priorities total 4.4 maf and equate to that quantity to which California is held by its Limitation Act. The 4.4 maf is also the quantity accorded a priority over the Central Arizona Project by Section 301 (b) of the Colorado River Basin Project Act (see Part M.; see Appendix 1 D.I for text of California Seven Party Agreement). E. Water Delivery Contracts For Colorado River Water in the Lower Colorado River Basin During the period 1930-1934 the Secretary of the Interior, pursuant to the Boulder Canyon Project Act, executed contracts on behalf of the United States with five California agencies (Imperial Irrigation District, Palo Verde Irrigation District, The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, Coachella Valley County Water District and the City of San Diego) for the delivery of water from Lake Mead, subject to the availability thereof, for use in California under the Compact and Project Act. As noted in D. above, the priorities assigned to each contractor and the quantities of water to be made available therefor under these contracts could, in the aggregate, call for the delivery of 5,362,000 acre-feet of water per year. There is no water delivery contract with the State of California itself similar to those with the States of Nevada and Arizona. By contracts dated March 30, 1942, and January 3, 1944, made by the Secretary of the Interior with the State of Nevada, the United States agreed to deliver to Nevada from Lake Mead storage so much water as might be necessary to supply the State with a total quantity of water from the Colorado River System not to exceed 300,000 acre-feet per year, subject to the availability thereof for use in Nevada under the Compact and Project Act. The State of Arizona entered into a contract with the Secretary of the Interior on February 9, 1944, wherein the United States agreed to deliver annually to Arizona and its water users from storage in Lake Mead so much water as mioht be necessarv for irrigation and domestic uses in Arizona of a maximum of |