"A megadrought would present a major risk to water resources in the American West, which are distributed through a complex series of local, state and regional water-sharing agreements and laws. Virtually every drop of water flowing in the American West is legally claimed, sometimes by several users and the demand is expected to increase as population grows."
Senator José Rodriguez' egregious mistake in working with El Paso County Water Improvement District's Chuy Reyes to deny voting rights to citizen on water issues will cost us - probably for a generation or more.
Read NY Times opinion piece, Hundred-Year Forecast: Drought, by scientists, Christopher R. Schwalm, Christopher A. Williams and Kevin Schaefer.
In May I asked the Water Improvement District for copies of the following records:
- 2008 List of Eligible
Voters: provide name, address, owner number of each eligible voter at
EPWID in 2008;
- 2012 List of Eligible
Voters: provide name, address, owner number of each eligible voter at
EPWID as of April 2012.
- 2012 Registered Voters:
provide name, address, voter number and owner number of registered voters
at EPWID as of May 1, 2012;
- Letters, Instructions,
Certificates to Eligible, Registered Voters: please provide a copy of all
letters, instructions, certificates or other information that EPWID has
mailed to eligible or registered voters in 2012.
- Lobbyists, Attorneys
Fees: please send a copy of all lobbyists and attorney fees statements
together with amounts paid by EPWID to lobbyists or attorneys from January
2010 to present.
Instructions for voting also made voting very difficult. With looming megadrought, who controls the water from the river? Not El Pasoans but a select few elite, privileged voters.
Subsequent questions by email to Chuy Reyes (July 8 and August 2) have gone unanswered although Mr. Reyes acknowledged by email receiving the questions in an email dated July 8, 2012.
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