Texas Police News.jpg
                  

  


 

Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado Announce Agreement After Years of Dispute Over the Lower Rio Grande River
Austin
   
 
More Today's News:
ߦ   Mother Who Drowned Her Two Children Sentenced to 40 Years
ߦ   Western North Carolina Dog Fighters Sentenced to Federal Prison
ߦ   'Oldest and Longest Serving Peace Officer in the World' Passes At The Age of 99
ߦ   Car stolen with child alone inside
ߦ   City to remember fallen firefighter on Saturday
ߦ   Cornyn, Houston leaders applaud $124M in federal funds granted for Texas police de-escalation training
ߦ   Driver charged in Galveston golf cart deaths back in jail, police say
ߦ   Friendswood Police Activity Report
ߦ   Grant Funding Announced By COPS
ߦ   Just released: Correctional Populations in the United States, 2021 – Statistical Tables and Probation and Parole in the United States, 2021
ߦ   Man Convicted of Use of Firearm in Connection with Murder and Robbery
ߦ   Police Chief Murdered
ߦ   Police News Links
ߦ   Public comments requested on the reinstatement, with change, of BJS data collection: Annual Survey of Jails
ߦ   Ringleader Of Street Takeover Gang Arrested
ߦ   Speaker Phelan unveils first slate of Texas House priorities for 88th Legislature
ߦ   Stafford Man Gets 45 Years in Prison for Killing Mother, Injuring Father in Shooting
ߦ   Texas City raid nets ounces of fentanyl-laced heroin, police allege
ߦ   Texas Schools Must Install Window Security Film
ߦ   Woman arrested in Santa Fe Confederate flag dispute vows complaint

 
Search Archives:

AUSTIN – Attorney General Paxton has announced a historic agreement with the states of New Mexico and Colorado that, if accepted by a Special Master and approved by the United States Supreme Court, would guarantee that the resources of the Lower Rio Grande River are justly distributed among the states.  

 

Texas, Colorado, and New Mexico entered into the Rio Grande Compact in 1938 to equitably apportion the waters of the Rio Grande among the three states. The proposed agreement announced this week would resolve any disputes the states have about their obligations under the Compact.  

 

The dispute, which focuses on a stretch of the Rio Grande between Elephant Butte Dam and Hudspeth County, Texas, was submitted to the United States Supreme Court when Texas filed a lawsuit in 2013 to ensure that New Mexico water users stopped unfairly syphoning water from the river before it reaches Texas.   

    

The federal government has announced its objection to the settlement that Texas, New Mexico, and Colorado just struck. These states are currently in the process of requesting that the Special Master and ultimately the United States Supreme Court approve the settlement over the objection of the federal government. 

  

“I’ve continued to fight to ensure our state has the legal access to the Rio Grande River that we’re owed, and that we can responsibly use the river’s resources to limit the damage of droughts and help Texas farmers,” said Attorney General Paxton. “This agreement helps protect the resources of all the states involved, and I encourage the federal government to reconsider its objection to this important agreement.” 

Post a comment
Name/Nickname:
(required)
Email Address: (must be a valid address)
(will not be published or shared)
Comments: (plain text only)
Printer Friendly Format  Printer Friendly Format    Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend    RSS Feed  RSS Feed
© 1999-2023 The Police News. All rights reserved.