For the record, the people
behind Wind River Resources, who are
trying to take 70% of the area's water
from a small piece of land in Beaver Dam
Wash for great personal profit of $4 to
$6 Million per year while the
Arizona community becomes a dust bowl,
are not "Nevada builders", but
opportunists who operate in Nevada -
one employed as a real estate broker and
land speculator in Mesquite; the other
as a used car dealer and small "local
joint" casino owner in Las Vegas.
Nevada builder wants
Arizona town's water
Mark Shaffer
©Copyright -
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 24, 2006 12:00 AM
The tiny community of Littlefield,
sandwiched in the northwestern corner of
the state on Interstate 15 between
Nevada and Utah, has never been much
more than a pit stop for those racing to
Nevada's casinos.
There is a bar, a school, a convenience
store and cottonwood-lined Beaver Dam
Wash that slinks through the community
of about 1,500 residents.
But the groundwater beneath the wash is
the subject of intense concern among the
locals in what one state official called
an unprecedented attempt by corporate
interests in Nevada to take water from
Arizona.
Wind River Resources, a Nevada
corporation, has filed an application
with the Arizona Department of Water
Resources to pump as much as 14,000
acre-feet annually from the Muddy Creek
aquifer to quench the thirst of rapidly
growing Mesquite, Nev. An acre-foot is
326,000 gallons.
The casino town near the Arizona line
has an estimated population of 15,000,
but recent land trades that brought
federal Bureau of Land Management land
into the private domain, allowing it to
be developed, is expected to rapidly
increase Mesquite's size.
On top of that, Wind River Resources
wants to blend imported Arizona water
with Mesquite's groundwater, which has
high levels of arsenic, and possibly
export some of that water back to
Arizona, according to the application
with the Water Resources Department.
"This falls very squarely into the
category of a bad idea," said Kris
Mayes, a member of the Arizona
Corporation Commission, which regulates
many water companies in rural parts of
the state. "Arizona's groundwater should
stay in Arizona. . . . I believe this
unprecedented proposal has the potential
to negatively impact at least one water
company regulated by this commission."
According to state statutes, water can
be taken out of Arizona for a
"reasonable and beneficial" use in
another state with a permit of not more
than 50 years if approved by the
director of water resources.
A public hearing will be held by the
Water Resources Department at
Littlefield in late November, said Jack
Lavelle, a department spokesman. Mayes
said she wants the Corporation
Commission to become an official
intervener in the case and hold a town
hall meeting in the Beaver Dam area
about the water proposal.
In a letter to the Water Resources
Department, Phoenix attorney Maxine
Becker wrote that any delays in the
hearing beyond mid-December would be a
"significant hardship" for Wind River
Resources and those living in Mesquite,
"who are in need of certainty of their
future water supply."
But Bob Frisby, president of Beaver Dam
Water Co., said the real hardship would
be on the Arizona side if the
groundwater left for Nevada.
"They are trying to evaporate this
community," Frisby said. "We have a lot
of potential for growth here along I-15,
and the water in Arizona should be used
for that so we can incorporate and grow
and contribute to the tax base of
Arizona, not export it all to Nevada."
Jack Riley, a Las Vegas developer who
bought 2,000 acres along 1-15 near
Littlefield, said he wants to build a
master-planned community.
"I bought that in large part because of
all the excellent groundwater so near
the surface on the Arizona side," Riley
said. "So now we're up against a group
who has made out in their filings with
the Water Resources Department like no
one lives there and it's just a desert
wasteland that Mesquite should be able
to use as it sees fit."
Meanwhile, Mike Winters, general manager
of the Virgin Valley Water District in
Mesquite, which provides water to the
city, said he would welcome the water if
Wind River provided the infrastructure
to deliver it.
"We have access to 12,000 acre-feet of
water we are permitted annually and are
currently using 5,500 acre-feet for the
19,000 customers we are delivering water
to now," Winters said.
"We can serve 40,000 to 45,000 people
here with water supplies we know we can
get."
Winters said the only reason Mesquite
officials are looking at the Arizona
water is because "they (Wind River) said
they could deliver it for us over the
long term to the state line with their
equipment."
"Our cost analysis showed our own water
would be cheaper any other way," he
added.