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Improving the Federal Response to Western Drought: Five Areas for Reform

Leon Szeptycki, Peter B. Moyle, Jeffrey Mount, Jay R. Lund, Douglas Kenney, Ellen Hanak, Brian Gray, Greg Gartrell, Richard Frank, Bonnie Colby, Caitrin Chappelle | January 26th, 2016


The federal government is deeply involved in western water. It is the largest landowner, major supplier of irrigation, principal supporter of the farm sector, primary source of water information, and chief environmental regulator. For more than a century, western states have relied on a complex partnership with numerous federal agencies to manage water. The latest widespread drought has revealed both strengths and weaknesses in the federal role. To weather a warmer and possibly drier future, and to prepare for and respond to drought more effectively , the states and the federal government must address these weaknesses and work together to strengthen their partnership.

Timely solutions are critical, given the growing vulnerability of the region’s residents, businesses, and environment to drought . This report identifies a suite of federal actions that can help weste rn states better manage drought . These reforms are, by design, modest and pragmatic. They focus on enhancing existing federal capacities, rather than implementing sweeping initiatives that would require time-consuming new funding or legislation.

Keywords

climate change, drought, planning and management