Solution to declining water supply
Tiffany Sukola | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 12 years, 2 months AGO
MOSES LAKE - Federal and state environmental officials identified a solution to remedy a decline in groundwater resources in the Odessa subarea.
The Bureau of Reclamation and the state Department of Ecology released their Odessa Subarea Special Study Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) recently. Officials from the two agencies identified a preferred alternative that would serve farmlands both north and south of Interstate 90 by enlarging the East Low Canal and developing a distribution system to deliver that surface water. The water supply would come from the Columbia River by way of Banks Lake, according to the document.
According to Joye Redfield-Wilder, of the Department of Ecology, the preferred alternative identified in the FEIS is the most feasible solution, both economically and environmentally.
Their recommendation for how to best address the declining groundwater supply in the area was filed with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA will make their final record of decision within the next 30 days.
According to Department of Ecology officials, farmers in the Odessa subarea have relied on groundwater from the Columbia River to irrigate their crops. However, groundwater is being withdrawn faster than the aquifer's ability to refill.
The loss of irrigation water in the area could cost $1.6 billion a year in lost revenue for farmers, in addition to thousands of agricultural jobs.
The study, which began in 2005, identifies several ways to replace groundwater currently used for irrigation with surface water to lands within the Columbia Basin Project.
The FEIS examines several alternatives to using groundwater, and their environmental consequences, designed to deliver surface water to lands in the Odessa subarea which currently are irrigated with groundwater.
Individual copies of the FEIS can be requested by calling 509-575-5848.
ARTICLES BY HERALD STAFF WRITER
Bird removal helps fish in Wanapum pool
EPHRATA - A project to move Caspian terns off an island at the Potholes is paying dividends in steelhead survival around Wanapum and Priest Rapids dams.
Quarter of county residents burdened by housing costs
OLYMPIA - About 25 percent of households in Grant County are paying more than they can reasonably afford to for housing expenses, according to recent data from the state Affordable Housing Advisory Board.
EDC lunch to highlight Latino business contributions
Effect of Latino-owned businesses on economy to be discussed
MOSES LAKE- The economic contributions of Latino-ran businesses in the state will be the topic of the Grant County Economic Development Council's next luncheon in January.