
Prescott plans to import four billion gallons of groundwater a year, pumped from the aquifer that feeds the Verde River. There’ll be some hefty decisions to make along the way.
“I’m the Decider!” President Bush once declared in his own unique idiom. Prescott has its own Deciders, and clamoring for the City Council’s decisions are critical questions around importing water from the Big Chino aquifer. The pipeline project has been long years in the planning, but as the targeted July, 2009 first pumping date looms, pressure on the Deciders increases.
What they’re dealing with is no small garden hose. The City’s current plan envisions a 30-mile pipeline to carry up to 12,400 acre-feet of groundwater per year, running from the Big Chino Water Ranch through Paulden to the Chino Valley wellfield, Prescott’s current water source. Prescott Valley contracts for 45 percent of that water and shares in the $170 million project cost. Pumping on the projected scale will remove unprecedented volumes of water from the Big Chino aquifer, with uncertain but potentially destructive effects on the Verde River headwaters it feeds.
Council members have to make their best guesses given what they know. On each of the pipeline funding steps along the way, Councilman Bob Luzius has been the lone member voting against the step. Why? It’s no simple story of opposition to importing water from the Big Chino, and in mid-March, at least one of the darkest clouds over the pipeline, from Luzius’s perspective, finally received the attention he has always advocated.