HR-644-116
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 557.
What it does
This bill would ratify a water rights settlement agreement among the Navajo Nation, the United States, and the state of Utah. It would formally grant the Navajo Nation the legal right to use water from sources within Utah near or inside the Navajo Reservation, up to a specified annual depletion limit. It would also establish a federal trust fund, managed by the Department of the Interior, to fund the planning, construction, operation, and maintenance of Navajo water infrastructure projects.
Who benefits
Members of the Navajo Nation living in Utah, who would gain legally recognized and federally protected water rights. The Navajo Nation tribal government, which would gain authority to allocate, distribute, and lease those water rights on or off the reservation. Navajo communities lacking reliable water infrastructure, which would gain access to a dedicated federal trust fund for water development projects. The United States government and the state of Utah, which would gain legal finality and certainty by resolving a long-standing water rights dispute.
Who is hurt
Existing water users in Utah — including agricultural operations, municipalities, and other water rights holders — who may face reduced access to water supplies if Navajo Nation allocations draw from shared sources. Utah state water management agencies, which would cede some authority over water allocation decisions affecting reservation lands to the federal trust framework. Taxpayers who fund the federal trust fund established to finance Navajo water infrastructure projects.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Navajo Nation has gone without legally secure water rights for generations, leaving tribal communities among the most water-insecure in the United States. They contend that this settlement would fulfill longstanding federal treaty and trust obligations to the Navajo people by converting uncertain claims into enforceable rights protected from forfeiture or abandonment. Supporters also argue that a negotiated settlement is far more efficient than prolonged litigation, which could cost all parties — the tribe, the state, and the federal government — far more in time and money. They maintain that the trust fund would enable the Navajo Nation to build the water infrastructure needed for basic health, economic development, and self-determination, and that resolving this dispute provides legal certainty that benefits all water users in the region.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that ratifying this settlement could reduce water availability for existing Utah water users, including farmers and municipalities that have built their operations around current allocations, potentially harming agricultural livelihoods and local economies. They contend that the federal trust fund represents a significant expenditure of taxpayer dollars for infrastructure that serves a limited population, and question whether the funding levels and oversight mechanisms are adequate to ensure accountability. Some opponents may argue that the annual depletion limits are insufficiently defined or enforceable, creating future uncertainty for all water users in the basin. Others may contend that the waivers and releases required by the settlement could extinguish legitimate Navajo legal claims that might otherwise yield greater benefits for tribal members through continued litigation.