HR-1444-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Gabe Vasquez (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would ratify a negotiated water rights settlement between the Pueblo of Zuni, the state of New Mexico, and other parties, formally defining Zuni's water rights in the Zuni River Stream System. It would establish a Zuni Tribe Settlement Trust Fund and provide federal funding to carry out the settlement's terms. The bill would also withdraw certain federal lands surrounding the Zuni Salt Lake from mineral development, require the Bureau of Land Management to manage those lands for cultural and water-quality protection, and direct the Department of the Interior to take additional surrounding land into trust for the benefit of the Pueblo of Zuni.
Who benefits
The Pueblo of Zuni (approximately 12,000 enrolled members), who would receive legally defined water rights and protections for a sacred cultural site. Downstream water users who gain legal certainty from a settled, rather than litigated, allocation of water rights. New Mexico state and local governments that would resolve long-standing legal uncertainty over water allocation in the Zuni River basin. Environmental and cultural preservation interests benefiting from the withdrawal of federal land from mineral development near the Zuni Salt Lake.
Who is hurt
Mining, oil, and gas companies that would lose access to mineral development opportunities on the withdrawn federal lands. Competing water users in the Zuni River Stream System whose allocations may be constrained by the formally recognized Zuni water rights. Federal taxpayers who would fund the settlement trust fund. Potentially other tribes or water rights claimants in the region whose relative priority could be affected by the settlement's terms.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that negotiated water rights settlements are far more efficient and durable than prolonged litigation, which can take decades and cost all parties far more than a settlement fund. They contend that the Pueblo of Zuni holds senior water rights under the prior appropriation doctrine and federal reserved rights law, and that formally recognizing those rights provides legal certainty that benefits all water users in the basin. They further argue that the Zuni Salt Lake is a site of profound religious and cultural significance to the Zuni people, and that withdrawing surrounding federal land from mineral development fulfills longstanding federal trust responsibilities to tribal nations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the settlement's trust fund represents a federal expenditure whose cost to taxpayers has not been fully justified against the alternative of continued litigation, and that the land withdrawal forecloses potentially significant mineral development on federal lands without adequate economic analysis. They contend that defining Zuni's water rights through legislation rather than adjudication bypasses the established state water court process, potentially setting a precedent that undermines New Mexico's authority to administer its own water law. They also argue that taking additional land into federal trust for the tribe removes it from local tax rolls and state jurisdiction, imposing indirect costs on surrounding communities.