URGENT: Make sure Colorado's Water Plan protects rivers!
Whether you are a resident or a visitor, you undoubtedly love to paddle in Colorado. So how do we
preserve the rivers that we know and love? When it comes to the future of recreation and river
health, the Colorado Water Plan is the focus. This plan offers a strategic vision: a
productive economy that supports vibrant and sustainable cities, productive agriculture, a strong
environment, and a robust recreation industry. This plan is being developed with your input and
the work of basin roundtables, local governments, water providers, and other stakeholders,
including American Whitewater. It represents a set of collaboratively developed policies and
desired actions that all Coloradans and their elected officials can support and to which they can
adhere.
Comments on the final draft of the Colorado Water Plan will be accepted through September
17, 2015.
Your input will help determine if Colorado sets its sights on the fundamental values of
protecting healthy watersheds, rivers and streams. The quality and quantity of our water supply,
both now and in the future, are critical to supporting and protecting Colorado’s
river-based recreation, ecosystems, fish and wildlife habitats, and environment as a whole.
Whether you are a resident or visitor, you know Colorado has experienced severe drought
followed by severe flooding, just in the past year. The variability in our water supply
underscores the already pressing need for strategic decisions about conservation and responsible
use to ensure a secure water future for years to come - for fish and wildlife, recreation, and
people. Colorado’s Water Plan can establish key conservation, water management and
mitigation strategies that can be utilized to meet our future water needs and protect our
environment, but not without your input. If left unchecked, the Colorado Water Plan will
fast-track new dams, pipelines, and development projects that will impact recreation and
environmental health.
You can provide input two ways:
General Comments:
To submit general comments or input to be considered in the development of Colorado's Water
Plan, please complete this form. Upon completion of your form, it will be emailed to the
Colorado Water Conservation Board at cowaterplan@state.co.us for consideration. You will be
asked to list which river basin your input corresponds to, and which constituent group your input
most closely aligns with (presumably, recreation). Please note that all input submitted
through this form will be considered publicly at a CWCB Board meeting. Depending on the
date of submission, input has or will be reviewed at the next scheduled CWCB Board meeting.
A formal CWCB response to your input will also be included in the Board packet
corresponding to the date of form submission and will be posted online here. Please email
cowaterplan@state.co.us if you have any questions
regarding input submitted.
Recreation-Environment Specific Comments:
When you have specific comments on how the plan addresses recreation and the environment, we have
linked to the State’s
Guide for Submitting Input Related to the Environment and Recreation in order to help
our members provide effective input to be incorporated into Colorado’s Water Plan. In
most instances this document directs constituents to formally submit information to their Basin
Roundtable by email so that the input can be incorporated into that basin's Basin
Implementation Plan. If you would like your input to be considered during the Basin
Implementation Plan process, it is suggested that you contact your local Basin Roundtable for
information on related timelines. Contact information for the Basin Roundtables can be
accessed via that basin's webpage on the CWCB Basin
Roundtable webpage. Please also copy cowaterplan@state.co.us when you email input to your
Roundtable.
I. Provide Input on Water Demand by Sector
Colorado’s Water Plan will illustrate Colorado’s significant municipal, industrial,
agricultural, environmental, and recreational water needs. You can provide your Basin
Roundtable with information about environmental and recreational water needs that can help ensure
recreation and the environment are not being under-valued.
Input on this item will inform Section 3. Water Demand by Sector of the Draft Colorado’s
Water Plan Framework.
Suggested talking points:
- Recreational water needs are currently overlooked and under-evaluated in the
CWP. We ask that the State show leadership in assigning Roundtables a specific set of metrics for
development, and that the state partner with stakeholders like American Whitewater to assess
demands for recreation - both in defining flows that support recreational opportunities, and in
developing a quantitative baseline for assessing the impact or enhancement to recreational
opportunities from any future actions. Currently, only the Yampa and Colorado river basins
are pursuing this metric (boatable days), and it is critical that as future inter-basin exchanges
or projects are evaluated across the state, that a common metric for evaluating any change to
recreation be implemented statewide.
- Without a common (state-wide) assessment of recreation demands or a
recreation-specific set of terms, both descriptive and evaluative, the CWP will not be a
sufficient tool for outlining our states water future.
- Stronger leadership from the state to direct the Basin Roundtables to
undertake specific assessments of Boatable days, can make any inter-basin or statewide
discussions about river-health and recreation more productive and effective. - simply by assuring
that the west slope and east slope are speaking the same language when it comes to recreational
needs.
II. Provide Input on Nonconsumptive Goals and Measurable Outcomes
American Whitewater helped identify several potential goals and measurable outcomes that are
included in the State’s
Nonconsumptive Toolbox. Non-Consumptive refer to uses that do not remove water from the river
- specifically the environment or recreation. We encourage you to provide your Basin
Roundtable with any input on existing goals and outcomes for in-stream needs, or work with your
Basin Roundtable to identify additional goals and outcomes for recreational and environmental
needs in your Basin Implementation Plan. 
You can also provide information to the CWCB about
goals and outcomes that cross basin lines (ex. Arkansas and Colorado Rivers) that may be
necessary to protect Colorado’s environment and recreation economy.
Please recommend these for inclusion in Colorado’s Water Plan regardless of whether they appear in individual BIPs. 


Input on this item will inform Chapter 2. Overview of Each Basin of the Draft Colorado’s Water Plan Framework. 

III. Provide Input on Nonconsumptive Projects and Methods 
In 2010, thousands of existing and
planned environmental and recreational projects and methods were identified. About half of the
environmental and recreation focus area streams have planned or existing protections.

- You can help your Basin Roundtable to identify additional planned rec and enviro projects or methods, or provide the CWCB with information that identifies rec and enviro gaps (needs that are not expected to be met in the future). This information will be provided to the appropriate Basin Roundtable(s). We encourage you to share this information directly with the Basin Roundtables(s) as well.
- Identify new or amended local and/or state policies that need to be in place to ensure that Colorado can fill its Enviro and recreational gap.
- Provide Basin Roundtables and the CWCB with suggestions for how to continue to identify and refine environmental and recreational gaps and identify projects and methods to meet those gaps for updated versions of the BIPs and Colorado’s Water Plan. 
Input on this item will inform Section 5.5. Meeting the Consumptive & Nonconsumptive Gaps and Section 5.9 Environmental & Recreational Projects and Methods of the Draft Colorado’s Water Plan Framework. 

IV. Provide Input on Watershed Health/Management
Background: Colorado’s Water Plan will draw much of this information from the Basin
Implementation Plans. There is tremendous opportunity for multi-purpose projects that protect
critical infrastructure, water quality, human health and safety, and the environment.
AW believes that Stream Management Plans will be how the Colorado Water Plan has impact on our
rivers. If our SMP’s ( Stream Management Plans) do not include recreational flow
needs, or assess boatable days, these plans will not sufficiently protect recreation or river
health. American Whitewater has developed a tool that can be easily integrated into SMPS
anywhere in the state, and we would encourage the public to advocate for the inclusion of this
tool into every Basin Plan and Stream Management Plan. Boatable days are not
prescriptive. This metric helps us quantitatively asses the enhancements or impacts that
future projects may have on recreational opportunities, and needs to become a widely accepted
metric in water management discussions.
V. Provide Input on the Framework on More Efficient Water Project Permitting Processes
Background: Colorado’s Water Plan will seek greater efficiency and effectiveness in the
project permitting process so that important issues are “front-loaded” for discussion
and resolution.
This is an opportunity to inform your Basin Roundtable and/or the CWCB of ideas on how water
project permitting processes can be made more efficient without undermining environmental
protections. AW would suggest that the Water Plan help front-load the evaluation of
flow-dependent recreational needs (defined boatable flows) and on evaluating the shift in the
number of opportunities (boatable days) under any proposed project and permit.
Incorporating recreation-specific metrics has been effective in finding the best path forward for
proposed projects, and ensures that existing recreation has a seat at the table when final
decisions are being made.
How Your Input will be Used: Input on this item will inform Section 5.10 Framework on More
Efficient Water Project Permitting Processes of the Framework.
VI. Provide Input on Funding and Financing
Background
Colorado’s Water Plan will indicate how the CWP can be implemented from a funding
perspective and demonstrate that doing so would be beneficial for the vibrancy of the state. If
additional funds beyond current resources are needed, Colorado’s Water Plan will also
demonstrate how such funds could be acquired. Please note that Appendix E within the
Nonconsumptive Toolbox includes a table of the most prominent or commonly accessed funding
sources for nonconsumptive projects and methods in Colorado. In addition, included within
Appendix C of the No and Low Regrets Action Plan is a list of potential funding options for
meeting consumptive and nonconsumptive needs.
Nathan Fey
1601 Longs Peak Ave.
Longmont, CO 80501