Irrelevant
Well-known member
Require a parking permit at river access sites. Revenues used to purchase (or lease) irrigated ag lands along the river for their water rights. Convert them to a habitat type beneficial use and leave them in stream. Allow public access on the purchased ag (now dry). Chip away at the problem.
Does MT have any kind of growth management act, requiring the State/Counties/Cities to plan for growth? The access to water, as part of the development process, can be tied to legally available water, thus before a building permit is issued there has to be proof of a water right. Many WA counties manage their own reserves for single family domestic. Kittitas Co, just east of the cascades from Seattle, purchased a few ag farms, then converted the water to domestic use. So when you build, you now have to buy a water right from them, they packages, indoor only; indoor + 2,500 sq ft lawn; indoor + 7,000 sq ft lawn. And it costs about double the market rate (to pay for future increases in water right costs); then all water use is metered and you pay a fine for over use.
Another small town around here charged 25k for a water meter connection. Those fees where used to pay for water resource project to increase the water supplies in their very small watershed.
Solutions abound.
Political will to implement them is usually what's lacking.
Does MT have any kind of growth management act, requiring the State/Counties/Cities to plan for growth? The access to water, as part of the development process, can be tied to legally available water, thus before a building permit is issued there has to be proof of a water right. Many WA counties manage their own reserves for single family domestic. Kittitas Co, just east of the cascades from Seattle, purchased a few ag farms, then converted the water to domestic use. So when you build, you now have to buy a water right from them, they packages, indoor only; indoor + 2,500 sq ft lawn; indoor + 7,000 sq ft lawn. And it costs about double the market rate (to pay for future increases in water right costs); then all water use is metered and you pay a fine for over use.
Another small town around here charged 25k for a water meter connection. Those fees where used to pay for water resource project to increase the water supplies in their very small watershed.
Solutions abound.
Political will to implement them is usually what's lacking.