HR-1323-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Teresa Leger Fernandez (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would formally recognize, authorize, and confirm a negotiated water rights settlement agreement between the Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo, the State of New Mexico, and other parties, resolving the pueblo's claims to water from the Rio Chama Stream System. It would establish a dedicated trust fund to finance water production, treatment, and delivery infrastructure for the pueblo. The bill would also specify the pueblo's water rights going forward and outline which legal claims the pueblo and the federal government would waive, release, or retain as part of the settlement.
Who benefits
Members of the Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo, who would receive legally confirmed water rights and infrastructure funding. Other water users in the Rio Chama Stream System (including farmers, municipalities, and other tribes) who would gain legal certainty by resolving a long-standing competing claim. The State of New Mexico, which would have a settled, enforceable water allocation framework. Federal and state courts, which would be relieved of complex, costly water rights litigation. Water infrastructure contractors and engineers who would be hired to build or upgrade facilities funded by the trust.
Who is hurt
Other water rights holders in the Rio Chama Stream System who may receive a smaller or less certain allocation as a result of the pueblo's confirmed rights. Taxpayers who fund the federal contribution to the settlement trust fund. Parties who held claims against the pueblo or the United States related to these water rights and would see those claims waived or extinguished under the settlement. Environmental groups or downstream users who may have preferred different allocation terms than those negotiated.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that negotiated tribal water settlements are the most efficient and durable way to resolve water rights disputes that can otherwise persist in litigation for decades, consuming public resources and leaving all parties in legal uncertainty. They contend that confirming the pueblo's water rights fulfills longstanding federal trust responsibilities to Native American tribes and that the infrastructure trust fund would deliver tangible improvements in water access for a community that has historically lacked reliable water delivery systems.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federally funded tribal water settlements can set costly precedents and that the trust fund represents a federal expenditure that benefits a narrow group of recipients at broader taxpayer expense. They contend that other water users in the Rio Chama basin — including agricultural operations and municipalities — may face reduced allocations or increased legal constraints on their own water use as a direct result of the pueblo's newly confirmed rights, without having had adequate input into the settlement terms.