Operation of the Truckee River and Other Reservoirs, 53180-53187 [E8-21177]
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53180
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 179 / Monday, September 15, 2008 / Proposed Rules
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Superfund, Water
pollution control, Water supply.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321(c)(2); 42 U.S.C.
9601–9657; E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757, 3 CFR,
1991 Comp., p. 351; E.O. 12580, 52 FR 2923;
3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 193.
Dated: September 5, 2008.
Donald S. Welsh,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. E8–21306 Filed 9–12–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
43 CFR Part 419
RIN 1006–AA48
Operation of the Truckee River and
Other Reservoirs
Bureau of Reclamation,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Reclamation is
proposing this rule to comply with the
requirements of the Truckee-CarsonPyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement
Act. The Settlement Act requires that
the operating agreement negotiated with
the States of California and Nevada for
the operation of Truckee River
Reservoirs (the five Federal reservoirs in
the Truckee River basin) be promulgated
as a Federal Regulation.
DATES: Comments must be received by
Reclamation no later than November 14,
2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by 1006–AA48, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Search on docket identification number
BOR–2008–0006 when submitting
comments on this rule.
• Mail: Kenneth Parr, Bureau of
Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza St., Carson
City, NV 89701.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kenneth Parr, Bureau of Reclamation,
705 N. Plaza St., Carson City, NV 89701;
telephone (775) 882–3436; or for a copy
of the TROA, visit the TROA Web site
at https://www.usbr.gov/mp/troa/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
205(a)(2) of the Truckee-Carson-Pyramid
Lake Water Rights Settlement Act, title
II of Public Law 101–618, November 16,
1990 (Settlement Act or Act), directs the
Secretary of the Interior (Secretary) to
negotiate an operating agreement that
must:
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• Satisfy all applicable dam safety
and flood control requirements;
• Provide for the enhancement of
spawning flows available in the Lower
Truckee River for the Pyramid Lake
fishery (endangered cui-ui, and
threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout) in
a manner consistent with the Secretary’s
responsibilities under the Endangered
Species Act, as amended (ESA);
• Carry out the terms, conditions, and
contingencies of the Preliminary
Settlement Agreement between the
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe (Pyramid
Tribe) and Sierra Pacific Power
Company (Power Company), as
modified by the Ratification Agreement
of the United States (PSA);
• Ensure that water is stored in and
released from Truckee River Reservoirs
to satisfy the exercise of water rights in
conformance with the Orr Ditch and
Truckee River General Electric decrees,
except for any rights voluntarily
relinquished by the parties to the
operating agreement; and
• Minimize the Secretary’s costs
associated with operation and
maintenance of Stampede Reservoir.
The Act further provides that the
following may be addressed in the
operating agreement:
• Administration of the operating
agreement;
• Means of assuring compliance with
PSA;
• Operations of Truckee River system
that will not change;
• Operations and procedures for
using Federal facilities to meet the
Secretary’s responsibilities under ESA;
• Methods of reducing likehood that
Lake Tahoe will drop below its natural
rim and improving the efficient use of
Lake Tahoe during extreme drought
situations;
• Procedures for managing and
operating Federal reservoirs;
• Procedures for operating Federal
reservoirs for instream beneficial uses;
• Operation of non-Federal reservoirs
in the Truckee River basin to the extent
owners of affected storage rights become
parties to the operating agreement; and
• Procedures and criteria for
implementing California’s allocation of
Truckee River water.
The Truckee River Operating
Agreement (TROA) will, among other
things: (1) Enhance conditions for
threatened and endangered fishes in the
Truckee River and its tributaries; (2)
increase municipal and industrial (M&I)
water supplies to provide drought
protection for the Truckee Meadows
(the Cities of Reno and Sparks, Nevada,
metropolitan area); (3) improve river
water quality downstream from the City
of Sparks and below Derby Dam; (4)
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enhance stream flows and recreational
opportunities in the Truckee River
basin; and (5) provide procedures for
implementing the interstate allocation
of Lake Tahoe basin and Truckee River
basin waters between Nevada and
California. While the Settlement Act
also confirms the allocation of the
waters of the Carson River and its
tributaries between California and
Nevada represented by the Alpine
Decree, TROA by its terms does not
affect the Carson River.
Section 205(a)(9) of the Settlement
Act requires the Secretary to satisfy the
requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act. Because the
State of California is a mandatory
signatory party, it is also necessary to
comply with the California
Environmental Quality Act.
Consequently, the Department of the
Interior and the California Department
of Water Resources jointly prepared an
Environmental Impact Statement/
Environmental Impact Report (EIS/EIR).
The Final EIS/EIR concludes that TROA
will:
• Provide better conditions for
threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout and
endangered cui-ui in many reaches of
the Truckee River and its tributaries;
• Provide greater potential for
enhancing riparian vegetation along
some reaches of the Truckee River in
median hydrologic conditions and along
all mainstem and tributary reaches
under dry and extremely dry hydrologic
conditions; and
• Enhance riparian habitat along
some mainstem and tributary reaches
under wet and median hydrologic
conditions and along most mainstem
reaches in dry and extremely dry
hydrologic conditions.
Section 205(a)(9) also provides that
the Secretary may not become a party to
TROA if the Secretary determines that
the effects of TROA, together with
cumulative effects, are likely to
jeopardize any threatened or
endangered species or be adverse to
designated critical habitat of such
species. The Final EIS/EIR concludes
that implementation of TROA will not
adversely affect LCT or cui-ui, but in
fact is likely to benefit both species. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
concurred in that determination through
the consultation process required by
Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act
of the 1973, as amended, 16 U.S.C. Sec.
1531 at et seq.
Since TROA is the result of
negotiations and agreement among at
least the five mandatory signatory
parties and must be promulgated as a
Federal regulation, the regulation we are
proposing today would incorporate by
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reference the agreement exactly as
negotiated. After extensive discussions
with the Office of the Federal Register,
we have determined that incorporating
TROA by reference is the best method
to preserve the integrity of the Code of
Federal Regulations while
accommodating the negotiating parties
and the requirements of the Act.
Incorporation by reference is a workable
solution because the agreement is
readily available to all of the concerned
parties and will be easy for other
interested parties to consult on various
websites or at Reclamation’s offices.
I. Background
The United States has been
extensively involved in litigation over
Federal and Indian rights to the use of
the waters of the Truckee River in
California and Nevada since the early
1900’s. In 1913 the United States filed
a suit claiming rights to the use of such
waters for multiple purposes, including
supply for the first Reclamation Project
in the nation and for use on the Pyramid
Lake Paiute Indian reservation. The
subject matter of Truckee River
litigation over the years has involved
Indian trust and reserved rights,
domestic and municipal uses of water
stored in Federal projects, a proposed
California/Nevada compact for an
interstate allocation of the River’s water,
Endangered Species Act claims, and
rights for use in irrigation projects.
Multiple lawsuits concerning those
subjects became very active in the early
1970s and continued significantly until
the early 1990s. By that time, it had
become clear that the only hope for
resolution of the many conflicts over the
use of Truckee River water was through
a regional settlement which would
provide for cooperative uses of the
water stored in Federal reservoirs on the
Truckee River to meet the demands and
right of all users. Efforts to effect
changes in those rights through
litigation had proven completely
unavailing.
In November of 1990, Congress
enacted the Settlement Act to provide
authorization for measures which if
carried out would serve to resolve many
of the longstanding disputes and
Federal litigation among multiple
parties concerning the rights to use of
the waters of the Truckee and Carson
Rivers in Nevada and California. Those
parties include the States of Nevada and
California and other parties to the
negotiated agreement which constitutes
this rule.
The Truckee River originates at the
outlet of Lake Tahoe in California and
flows to Pyramid Lake, a terminal desert
lake in northwestern Nevada. The flow
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of the Truckee River was first regulated
in 1870 by construction of a private
timber crib dam at the outlet of Lake
Tahoe. A number of dams, Federal and
private, have since been constructed on
tributaries to the Truckee River in
California to create water storage and
flood control reservoirs and regulate
river flow. Flows of the river have
historically been utilized for diverse
purposes, including generation of
hydropower, irrigation of agricultural
lands, and municipal and industrial
water supplies.
Newlands Project
The Newlands Federal Reclamation
Project was authorized in 1902 and
constructed under the Federal
Reclamation Act, 32 Stat. 388. Derby
Diversion Dam diverts water from the
Truckee River through the Truckee
Canal for use on the Newlands Project’s
Truckee Division. Truckee River water
diverted at Derby Dam is also stored in
Lahontan Reservoir in the Carson River
basin as a supplemental source of water
for the Carson Division of the Newlands
Project.
In 1967, the Secretary of the Interior
issued regulations called Operating
Criteria and Procedures (OCAP),
referred to in the rule as Truckee Canal
Diversion Criteria, to limit diversions of
Truckee River water to the Newlands
Project, 32 FR 3098, February 21, 1967.
Revised versions of OCAP have been in
effect since that time.
Court Decrees
Three Federal court actions, United
States v. Truckee River General Electric
Co., No. 14861 (N. D. Calif. 1915), now
designated Case No. 68-cv-643 (E. D.
Calif.) (TRGE), United States v. Orr
Water Ditch Company, et al., In Equity
No. A3, Case No. 73-cv-00003 (D. Nev.
1944) (Orr Ditch), and United States v.
Alpine Land and Reservoir Co., et al.,
Civ. No. D–183, Case No. 73-cv-183 (D.
Nev. 1980) (Alpine) were brought to
confirm a water supply for the
Newlands Project and (in Orr Ditch) for
use on the Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian
Reservation. Each case resulted in a
decree setting forth the relative water
rights in the Truckee River and Carson
River basins, respectively.
The TRGE Decree in 1915 granted the
United States an easement for, and the
right to operate, Lake Tahoe Dam. It also
required that releases of water be
maintained to satisfy, but not exceed,
certain flows in the Truckee River at
Floriston, California (Floriston Rates).
Floriston Rates are rates of flow in the
Truckee River at the California-Nevada
State border of 300 to 500 cubic feet per
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second (cfs) depending on month and
elevation of water in Lake Tahoe.
The 1944 Orr Ditch Decree
determined the relative rights to use
Truckee River water in Nevada and for
Power Company’s run-of-the-river
hydroelectric power plants. Floriston
Rates, when maintained, satisfy water
rights confirmed by the Orr Ditch
Decree. The Orr Ditch Decree also
confirmed water rights to the United
States for use on the Pyramid Lake
Paiute Indian Reservation (claims 1 and
2), to the United States for use on the
Newlands Project subject to water duties
and regulations of the Secretary of the
Interior (claim 3), and to the United
States for the use of the top six feet of
Lake Tahoe as a reservoir (claim 4). The
Orr Ditch Decree further recognized the
1935 Truckee River Agreement (TRA),
an operating agreement for the Truckee
River among Power Company, TruckeeCarson Irrigation District (TCID),
Washoe County Water Conservation
District (WCWCD or Conservation
District), the United States Department
of the Interior, and individual Truckee
River water users (parties of the fifth
part) as binding among those parties.
The 1980 Alpine Decree determined
the rights, relative priorities, and water
duties for all Carson River water users
in California and Nevada.
Reservoirs
There are five Federal reservoirs in
the Truckee River basin, collectively
referred to as Truckee River Reservoirs.
They are: The reservoir formed by the
dam at the outlet of Lake Tahoe, which
regulates the top six feet of the lake;
Boca Reservoir on the Little Truckee
River, constructed in 1937 and operated
under contract by WCWCD; Prosser
Creek Reservoir, constructed on Prosser
Creek in 1967, as part of the Washoe
Project; Stampede Reservoir,
constructed on the Little Truckee River
in 1970, also as part of the Washoe
Project; and Martis Creek Reservoir, a
United States Army Corps of Engineers
flood control facility, constructed on
Martis Creek in 1971.
The 1959 Tahoe-Prosser Exchange
Agreement (TPEA), executed by parties
to TRA, provides for an exchange of
water between Lake Tahoe and Prosser
Creek Reservoir to maintain a minimum
flow in the Truckee River immediately
downstream from Lake Tahoe when
releases from Lake Tahoe would not
otherwise be required. This exchange
protects water for Floriston Rates while
providing flows downstream from Lake
Tahoe for fish purposes.
The water in Stampede Reservoir is
dedicated for the benefit of Pyramid
Lake fishes (endangered cui-ui and
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threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout) by
determination of the Secretary. The
Secretary’s determination was upheld
by the Federal courts in Carson-Truckee
Water Conservancy District v. Watt, 537
F. Supp. 106 (D. Nev. 1982), aff’d 741
F. 2d 257 (9th Cir. 1984).
Martis Creek Reservoir is operated by
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
exclusively for flood control purposes.
In addition to the Federal reservoirs,
there are two private reservoirs in the
Truckee River basin: Donner Lake,
formed by a dam on Donner Creek, and
Independence Lake, formed by a dam on
Independence Creek. Both Donner and
Independence creeks are tributary to the
Truckee River. The water right for
Donner Lake is owned by TCID and the
Truckee Meadows Water Authority
(Water Authority) as tenants in
common. The water rights for
Independence Lake are owned by Water
Authority.
Settlement Act
The Settlement Act was enacted and
signed into law in 1990, in part to
facilitate the resolution of disputes and
settlement of litigation over use of
Truckee River water among multiple
parties, including the States of Nevada
and California. Section 204 of the Act
provides for an interstate allocation of
waters of the Lake Tahoe and Truckee
River basins between California and
Nevada similar to the interstate
allocation negotiated by the two states
in the 1960s and confirms the allocation
of waters of the Carson River and its
tributaries between the states
represented by the Alpine Decree.
Section 205(a) of the Act directs the
Secretary to negotiate an agreement for
operation of Truckee River Reservoirs
with California and Nevada, and other
parties as determined appropriate, to
among other things, implement the
provisions of the PSA. Because the Act
directs that the negotiated agreement
(TROA) implement the PSA, the
Pyramid Tribe and Water Authority are
mandatory signatories of the negotiated
agreement along with the United States,
California, and Nevada. Subsequent to
the Settlement Act, Power Company on
June 11, 2001, sold its water utility
business to Water Authority and
assigned to Water Authority all of its
rights and responsibilities under the
PSA and TROA. Accordingly, Water
Authority is now the mandatory
signatory party to TROA.
Water Quality Settlement Agreement
Also subsequent to the Settlement
Act, the 1996 Truckee River Water
Quality Settlement Agreement (WQSA)
was entered into by the cities of Reno
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and Sparks, Nevada, Washoe County,
Nevada, the United States Department
of the Interior, the United States
Department of Justice, the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, the
Nevada Division of Environmental
Protection, and the Pyramid Tribe. In
settlement of certain litigation over the
proposed expansion of the Truckee
Meadows Water Reclamation Facility,
WQSA established a program to
purchase and dedicate Truckee River
water rights for stream flow purposes by
the United States and the Truckee
Meadows communities (Reno-Sparks
metropolitan area) in Nevada. The
purpose of the water rights purchase
program is to improve water quality in
the Truckee River, particularly below
Derby Dam. A final Environmental
Impact Statement on the Federal water
rights acquisition portion of WQSA was
published in October 2002, and a
Record of Decision was issued in
December 2002. Water made available to
serve the dedicated water rights may, to
the extent possible, be stored in Truckee
River Reservoirs and will be managed
for water quality purposes by the
dedicating parties and by the Pyramid
Tribe. TROA accommodates
implementation of the WQSA and
provides for the storage of Water Quality
Credit Water in Truckee Reservoirs.
II. Overview of Rule
Main Provisions of the Negotiated
Agreement
The negotiated agreement (TROA),
which constitutes the rule, will be
incorporated by reference. It provides
the framework, rules, and procedures
for the operation of Truckee River
Reservoirs, Independence Lake, and
Donner Lake, to the extent Donner Lake
is made available, and for management
of flows in the Truckee River, with more
flexibility than is available under
current operations. It also provides for
implementation of the interstate
allocation of waters of the Lake Tahoe
and Truckee River basins between
California and Nevada, as provided in
sections 204 and 210(a)(2) of the Act.
The maintenance of Floriston Rates and
Reduced Floriston Rates is the basic
foundation of TROA.
TROA retains most current
procedures and management authorities
for operating Truckee River Reservoirs,
including maintaining the storage
priorities for project water (water
associated with the license or permit for
a particular reservoir) and water
dedicated to maintenance of Floriston
Rates. Applicable flood control and
safety of dams requirements will
continue to be in effect. Perhaps most
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importantly, Truckee River Reservoirs
will continue to be operated to satisfy
the exercise of water rights in
conformance with the Orr Ditch and
TRGE decrees, except for any water
rights that are voluntarily relinquished
by the signatory parties. The Federal
Water Master will continue to assure
that Truckee River operations satisfy the
exercise of water rights recognized by
the Orr Ditch Decree.
How TROA Would Be Different From
Current Operations
TROA Provides for the Establishment of
Credit Water
Article Seven of TROA prescribes
rules and procedures that provide
opportunities for signatory parties, as
authorized by changes to water rights
under applicable State law, to retain in
storage as credit water in Truckee River
Reservoirs, Independence Lake, and
Donner Lake, to the extent Donner Lake
is made available, all or a portion of the
water that the party would otherwise be
entitled to divert for use downstream
under the party’s water rights. A person
initially not a signatory to TROA could
also have an opportunity to store credit
water, to the extent storage space is
available, by agreeing to be bound by
the same rules as a signatory party. Any
party storing credit water will be
required to have a storage contract with
the owner of the reservoir in which the
credit water will be stored unless
otherwise provided in TROA.
Two of the various categories of credit
water, M&I Credit Water and Fish Credit
Water, will be created as provided for in
the PSA. M&I Credit Water will be
established by Water Authority for use
as a drought supply. Fish Credit Water
will be established by the United States
and Pyramid Tribe for the benefit of
Pyramid Lake fishes. A portion of Fish
Credit Water can also be designated as
Joint Program Fish Credit Water, a
category of credit water which will be
managed by California for purposes of
stream flow and reservoir levels in
California.
TROA establishes priorities for each
category of credit water and accounting
procedures relative to its storage,
release, spill, evaporation, and
exchange. Relative priorities for various
types of credit water and credit water
operations are important for
administration of TROA when
concurrent uses or potentially
conflicting operations are scheduled or
requested.
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TROA Provides for Exchanges of Credit
Water
Article Eight of TROA provides for
water, particularly credit water, to be
exchanged among Truckee River
Reservoirs, Independence Lake, and
Donner Lake, to the extent Donner Lake
is made available, in accordance with
prescribed rules and limitations. An
exchange of water between reservoirs
can be accomplished in several ways.
The provisions for exchanging water
greatly enhance and increase the
flexibility of system operations. The
increased flexibility provided by TROA
through the various categories of credit
water and opportunities for exchanges
facilitates more efficient use of the
existing available water supply to more
effectively serve the many, and often
competing, beneficial uses.
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Other Provisions of TROA
Article Two of TROA establishes an
Administrator to administer its
provisions and a Special Hearing Officer
to resolve disputes which may arise
under TROA. The Administrator is
responsible, among other things, for:
Implementing the provisions of TROA
and operating the designated reservoirs
consistent with stated general
operational principles set out in Article
One; integrating the operational
schedules submitted by the parties
under Article Eleven; and accounting
for the various categories of water under
procedures developed by the
Administrator under Article Three. The
Federal Water Master under the Orr
Ditch Decree will retain full authority to
ensure that Orr Ditch Decree water
rights are fully enforced, and the
Administrator will have authority and
responsibility to provide an acceptable
remedy if the Orr Ditch water rights of
a person not signatory to TROA are
adversely affected by a TROA operation.
TROA provides that the Federal Water
Master for the Orr Ditch Decree in office
when TROA enters into effect will be
the first TROA Administrator, and the
names of any subsequent nominees for
the position of Administrator must be
submitted to the Orr Ditch Court for
approval. TROA recognizes that
disputes arising under the Orr Ditch
Decree remain subject to the jurisdiction
of the Orr Ditch Court and the Federal
Water Master.
TROA also:
• Incorporates in Article Four the
miscellaneous provisions of the PSA not
included elsewhere in TROA;
• Provides in Article Five for
operation of water to maintain Floriston
Rates and of project water used for the
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benefit of threatened and endangered
Pyramid Lake fishes;
• Sets forth in Article Six the
procedures for implementing and
accounting for the Truckee River basin
and Lake Tahoe basin allocations;
• Establishes under Article Nine
criteria for beneficial uses of water in
California for stream flows and reservoir
levels for fish and wildlife, and for
recreation;
• Establishes in Article Ten criteria
for the design and location of water
wells in the Truckee River basin in
California;
• Sets forth in Article Twelve
conditions which must be satisfied for
TROA to enter into effect, identifies
other provisions of the Act which
become effective when TROA enters
into effect, and establishes a date by
which TROA, and the other provisions
of the Act contingent upon TROA, must
enter into effect;
• Makes clear in Article Thirteen that
TROA is the basis of reservoir
operations, provides for a periodic
review of such operations, and that any
future change to TROA will require the
same process used for its original
negotiation; and
• Includes in Article Fourteen
standard statements required in any
contract or agreement signed by the
United States or the State of California,
identification of responsible parties to
receive notices, and criteria for future
assignments of interests.
III. Procedural Requirements
1. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O.
12866)
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this rule is
not a significant rule and has not
reviewed it under the requirements of
Executive Order 12866. We have
evaluated the impacts of the rule as
required by E.O. 12866 and have
determined that it is not a significant
regulatory action. The results of our
evaluation are given below.
(1) This rule will not have an annual
effect of $100 million or more on the
economy. It will not adversely affect in
a material way the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local or tribal governments or
communities.
TROA is a mechanism negotiated by
its signatories to facilitate more
flexibility in water use and storage and
more effective coordination of reservoir
operations on the Truckee River. The
increased flexibility and more effective
coordination of operations will provide
a more stable water supply for Reno,
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53183
Sparks, and Washoe County, Nevada,
will enhance stream flow in the Truckee
River below Derby Dam for threatened
and endangered fishes, and will
improve water quality.
The credit water and exchange
provisions of TROA allow parties to
more efficiently use the water resource
and, more particularly, realize more
efficient and effective utilization of their
own water rights. Historically, senior
water right holders could not always
fully divert the water to which they
were entitled under their water right
because of their inability to use or store
the water when available. At times some
junior water right holders, including
those on the Newlands Project, have
been able to benefit from this water,
although most has ultimately flowed to
Pyramid Lake. The additional storage
options made available under TROA
will permit senior water right holders to
more fully exercise their water rights.
To the extent the exercise of senior Orr
Ditch Decree water rights under TROA
makes less water available to junior
water right holders than has in the past
been available because the senior rights
could not be fully exercised, there is no
unlawful injury to junior water right
holders, including those on the
Newlands Project.
The total cost of implementing TROA
is estimated to be approximately $15.8
million annually ($2.1 million for
storage fees, O&M, and administration;
$1.4 million in lost income from water
transfers; and approximately $12.3
million annually for the purchase of
water rights until 10,000 acre feet of
water rights have been acquired to meet
future water demand). Operation of the
Federal reservoirs under TROA will
result in new storage contracts which
will reflect average storage and
operation costs of approximately $1.5
million annually. The administration
costs associated with implementing
TROA by the Administrator is estimated
to be $600,000 annually to be shared by
the Federal government and the States
of California and Nevada. Under TROA
irrigation water rights acquired by Water
Authority and others are to be
transferred in accordance with
applicable State law to meet water
conservation and water quality
objectives. This reduction of irrigation
water rights results in a loss of
approximately 100 jobs and the loss of
$1.4 million in personal income. Water
rights will also be purchased from
willing sellers to meet future water
demand. The cost of such purchases is
approximately $12.3 million annually
based on current market value of water
rights. Because TROA implementation
actions rely on market mechanisms, any
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reductions in economic activity or
productivity, including employment or
income reductions occasioned by the
sale of irrigation water rights and
reduced agricultural activity, will be
fully compensated by the monetary or
other compensation derived from the
sale of the water rights.
One of the benefits of TROA would be
the avoided costs to the water users in
the area of developing additional water
storage facilities to meet increasing
water demands in the region. The
construction costs and O&M for new
water storage facilities to meet that
demand would be approximately $5
million annually. In addition to the
avoided costs from implementing
TROA, there is the additional benefit of
supporting the Reno-Sparks economy by
providing the storage capacity for M&I
water demand in the future. It is
estimated that in 2033, through the
operation of TROA, the stored M&I
water will support approximately
74,000 jobs and approximately $2.6
billion in associated personal income
annually. There are also the annual
nonmonetary benefits of improving
water quality, improving fish and
wildlife habitat, and meeting Indian
trust responsibilities. Accordingly,
TROA is not an economically significant
rule under E.O. 12866.
(2) This rule will not create a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfere
with an action taken or planned by
another Federal agency. Bureaus within
the U.S. Department of the Interior are
the only Federal agencies directly
affected by the agreement. For instance,
all TROA actions are specifically
subordinated to Army Corps of
Engineers (Corps) flood control criteria
so that the Corps is free to adjust them
as necessary apart from this regulation.
In addition, TROA specifically provides
that any use of the Corps’ Martis Creek
Reservoir for a TROA purpose, e.g., for
conservation or credit water storage,
would require a written agreement with
the Corps. Upon TROA taking effect,
Section 206(c) of the Settlement Act,
which pertains to water use on the U.S.
Naval Air Station, Fallon, Nevada, shall
also become effective. This is a
consequence of the Settlement Act, and
not a direct effect of the provisions of
TROA.
(3) This rule does not alter the
budgetary effects of entitlements, grants,
user fees, or loan programs or the rights
or obligations of their recipients. The
rule is a negotiated agreement, and it
directly affects only the signatories of
that agreement.
(4) OMB has determined that this rule
does not raise novel legal or policy
issues. TROA explicitly incorporates or
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accommodates all relevant laws and
judicial decisions. By law TROA cannot
have an adverse effect on any other
person’s water rights under the Orr
Ditch or Truckee River General Electric
decrees, and any modifications to those
decrees necessary to implement TROA
must be approved by the two courts
with jurisdiction over the two decrees
before TROA can become effective.
TROA is required to be consistent with
the decision in Pyramid Lake Paiute
Tribe v. Morton, 354 Fed. Supp. 252
(D.D.C. 1973) and cannot be
inconsistent with the Secretary’s
responsibilities under the Endangered
Species Act.
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior
certifies that this document will not
have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
The rule will not affect a substantial
number of small entities. TROA directly
affects only its signatories. While TCID
may be considered a small entity, TROA
neither directly affects TCID or the
water rights of the individual water
right holders on the Newlands Project.
Specifically, the parties likely to be
directly affected by TROA are:
• U.S. Department of the Interior;
• State of California;
• State of Nevada;
• Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe;
• Truckee Meadows Water Authority;
• Washoe County Water Conservation
District;
• City of Reno, Nevada;
• City of Sparks, Nevada;
• City of Fernley, Nevada;
• Washoe County, Nevada;
• Sierra Valley Water Company;
• Carson-Truckee Water Conservancy
District;
• North Tahoe Public Utilities
District; and
• Truckee Donner Public Utilities
District.
Sierra Pacific Power Company will
join in the execution of TROA for a
limited purpose through a Special
Joinder.
Water operations of Water Authority,
Conservation District, City of Reno, City
of Sparks, and Washoe County, Nevada,
are all intertwined within one
geographic area in western Nevada. The
criterion for a small entity is less than
50,000 population. All of these entities
are located within Washoe County,
Nevada. The population of Washoe
County is approximately 346,000 people
(2000 Census). The Reno-Sparks
division of Washoe County has a
population of approximately 256,000.
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Only if Conservation District, a taxing
authority water purveyor of M&I and
irrigation water supplies, were
considered a separate entity would it be
considered small as it has 33,000 people
within its taxing jurisdiction; Water
Authority serves 77,000 customers. The
City of Fernley, in Lyon County, with a
population of approximately 8,600
(2000 Census), would be considered
small.
Carson-Truckee Water Conservancy
District’s office is located in Reno,
Nevada, and the District has no service
population. It is authorized under
Nevada State statutes to collect fees and
taxes to do conservation work.
North Tahoe Public Utility District,
Tahoe Vista, Placer County, California,
has a service population of 5,300 and,
therefore, is considered a small entity. It
consists of the Sewer and Water
Department, Recreation and Parks
Department, North Tahoe Beach Center,
and the North Tahoe Community
Conference Center.
Truckee Donner Public Utilities
District, Truckee, California, is a nonprofit utility providing electric and
water service in the Truckee area. The
District serves 12,000 electric customers
and 12,000 water service connections. It
is considered a small entity.
Sierra Valley Water Company is a
small water purveyor in Sierra and
Plumas Counties, California. It provides
domestic and irrigation water to 29
customers. It is, therefore, considered
small.
Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian
Reservation is located in Washoe
County, with approximately 1,734 tribal
members residing on the reservation.
Indian tribes are not covered by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Power Company’s service territory
covers approximately 50,000 square
miles in northern Nevada including the
cities of Reno, Sparks, and the Lake
Tahoe area of northeastern California. It
is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sierra
Pacific Resources. It employs in excess
of 1,100 people and services
approximately 500,000 electric and gas
customers. It has assets in excess of $2.5
billion and revenue in excess of $1
billion. It is not, therefore, considered a
small entity.
Of the most likely signatories, only
five are considered to be small entities,
and all who enter into TROA will be
willing signatories. There is, therefore,
not a significant effect on a substantial
number of small entities.
3. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This rule is not a major rule under 5
U.S.C. 804(2), the Small Business
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Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act.
This rule:
a. Does not have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more.
b. Will not cause a major increase in
costs or prices for consumers,
individual industries, Federal, State, or
local government agencies, or
geographic regions. The availability of
additional water management options is
expected in the long term to lower
overall operation costs.
c. Does not have significant adverse
effects on competition, employment,
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of U.S.-based enterprises to
compete with foreign-based enterprises.
TROA has only regional effects and will
not have national or international
implications.
4. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule does not impose an
unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments in the aggregate, or
on the private sector, of more than $100
million per year. The rule does not have
a significant or unique effect on State,
local, or tribal governments or the
private sector. The costs of the new
water management opportunities made
available by the agreement will only
accrue to the signatories, and the costs
will be small relative to the benefits and
will apply only if a signatory avails
itself of the options under the
agreement. Therefore, a statement
containing the information required by
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.
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5. Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in Executive Order
12630, the rule does not have significant
takings implications. The provisions of
the agreement are accepted voluntarily
by the signatories and the exercise of
water rights under existing decrees is
expressly provided for. Therefore, this
rule will not result in a taking of private
property, and a takings implication
assessment is not required.
6. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in Executive Order
13132, this rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
The States of California and Nevada are
signatories to TROA and participated
fully in negotiations that culminated in
the agreement. TROA would have two
principal effects on the governments of
the States of California and Nevada.
First, when TROA enters into effect,
an allocation of the waters of the Lake
Tahoe and Truckee River basins, and
confirmation of the allocation of the
Carson River and its tributaries
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represented by the Alpine Decree,
automatically enters into effect in a
manner similar to an interstate compact.
Generally, these allocations limit the
amount of water that can be used or
diverted from Lake Tahoe basin for use
within the basin under procedures of
the two States, and the amount of water
that can be used or diverted from the
California portions of the Truckee River
basin and the Carson River and its
tributaries under relevant decrees and
procedures of the State of California.
The balance of the water of these two
rivers that flows into Nevada can be
allocated pursuant to the water
allocation procedures of the State of
Nevada and various court decrees.
Generally, these allocations were
negotiated by and agreed to by the two
States and, though not required by law
to do so, both States have voluntarily
abided by their provisions pending
passage of Public Law 101–618,
initially, and pending implementation
of TROA, subsequently. TROA merely
aids in the implementation of the
allocation of the waters of the Lake
Tahoe and Truckee River basins
provided for in the Settlement Act. By
signing TROA, the two States will,
effectively, be binding themselves to
this interstate allocation.
Secondly, there are modest (i.e.,
expected to be approximately $600,000
in total) financial requirements for
funding the annual administration of
TROA. Subject to the limits on the
authority in the constitutions of the two
States to commit future appropriations,
it is reasonable to expect the two States
to pay their allocated shares of the
funding. By signing TROA, the two
States would be signaling their intention
to secure funding for their shares of the
administration of TROA. Neither of
these effects is considered to rise to the
level of significance requiring a
Federalism Assessment. The rule, which
governs only the responsibilities of the
signatories, does not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. The rule provides
for the application of State law in its
implementation in the same manner as
does the Settlement Act. Therefore, a
Federalism Assessment is not required.
7. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the
requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule:
a. Does not unduly burden the
judicial system.
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53185
b. Meets the criteria of section 3(a)
requiring that all regulations be
reviewed to eliminate errors and
ambiguity and be written to minimize
litigation; and
c. Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2)
requiring that all regulations be written
in clear language and contain clear legal
standards.
8. Consultation With Indian Tribes (E.O.
13175)
Under the criteria in Executive Order
13175, we have evaluated this rule and
determined that it has no potential
effects, within the requirements of the
Executive Order, on Federally
recognized Indian tribes.
Indian trust resources are legal
interests in property or natural
resources held in trust by the United
States for Indian Tribes or individuals.
The Secretary of the Interior is the
trustee for the United States on behalf
of Indian Tribes. Examples of trust
resources are lands, minerals, hunting
and fishing rights, and water rights.
Indian trust resources have been
assessed in consultation with the
following tribes during the development
of TROA: Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe—
Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation in
Nevada; Reno-Sparks Indian Colony—
Reno and Hungry Valley, in Nevada;
Fallon Paiute Shoshone Tribe—Fallon
Paiute-Shoshone Reservation and Fallon
Colony in Nevada; and Washoe Tribe of
Nevada and California—colonies in
Nevada and in California with cultural
interests at and near Lake Tahoe.
For the Pyramid Tribe, flow in the
Truckee River below Derby Dam and
discharge to Pyramid Lake will increase
slightly under TROA. With increased
flow and the increased capacity to
manage Truckee River water, TROA
will: Assist in improving lower river
water quality; enhance slightly the
elevation of Pyramid Lake; enhance the
riparian canopy; assist in stabilizing the
lower river; enhance recreational
opportunities at Pyramid Lake; enhance
spawning opportunities for cui-ui and
LCT; and enhance river habitat for
Pyramid Lake fishes. In addition, the
exercise of Truckee River agricultural
and M&I water rights below Derby Dam,
including those of the Pyramid Tribe,
will continue to be satisfied. For RenoSparks Indian Colony, TROA will have
no effect on the exercise of Truckee
River water rights. The Fallon Paiute
Shoshone Tribe will receive a full water
supply with the same frequency as at
present. TROA will have no effect on
flows of the Carson River or on
resources of the Washoe Tribe.
The Federal Government negotiated
TROA on a government-to-government
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basis with the Pyramid Tribe, as well as
with the States of California and
Nevada. As a result, TROA incorporates
the principles of sovereignty for each
sovereign signatory.
survey requiring peer review under the
Data Quality Act (Pub. L. 106–554).
9. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule is not a significant energy
action under the definition in Executive
Order 13211. A Statement of Energy
Effects is not required.
Analysis contained in the Final EIS/
EIR shows that under TROA,
hydropower generation and gross
revenues are about 3.5 percent less
under wet hydrologic conditions than
under current conditions due to the
increased conservation and improved
water quality applications of TROA;
about 6.0 percent less in median
hydrologic conditions, and about 55.0
percent greater in dry hydrologic
conditions. Net reduced hydroelectric
power generation, if any, resulting from
implementation of TROA would be
compensated consistent with the
provisions of the Agreement.
This rule does not contain any
requirement for information collection
by a Federal entity or Federal employee,
and a submission under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) is not required.
There are several provisions of TROA
which require information to be
submitted by the signatory parties to the
TROA Administrator. With respect to
the Paperwork Reduction Act, it is
important to note that the TROA
Administrator is not a Federal employee
and the Office of the TROA
Administrator is not a Federal entity.
The signatory parties have agreed to
provide to the Administrator the
information requested and necessary for
proper implementation and
administration of TROA. Thus, even
though there are requirements to
provide information contained in the
negotiated TROA and, as required by
Congress, are provisions of the rule, the
information is not sought or requested
by a Federal employee or a Federal
agency. Accordingly, the subject
provisions are not information
collection requirements for purposes of
the Paperwork Reduction Act.
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10. National Environmental Policy Act
This rule does not constitute a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment. The
Final EIS/EIR has concluded that
implementation of TROA would not
significantly affect the quality of the
human environment and that no
unavoidable adverse impacts are
expected as a result of implementing
TROA. No mitigation measures are
identified or required. Because of
exchanges and storage agreements that
are components of TROA, a more
assured long-term drought water supply
for Truckee Meadows would be
obtainable, and improved flow
conditions would be possible for
Pyramid Lake fishes and aquatic species
in general. California’s allocation of
water for M&I purposes in the long run
would be assured and could be utilized
in the short run to improve
environmental conditions in the
Truckee River. Compliance with NEPA
will be completed before the final rule
is issued.
11. Data Quality Act
In developing this rule we did not
conduct or use a study, experiment, or
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12. Effects on Energy Supply (E.O.
13211)
13. Clarity of This Regulation
We are required by Executive Orders
12866 and 12988 and by the
Presidential Memorandum of June 1,
1998, to write all rules in plain
language. This means that each rule we
publish must:
a. Be logically organized;
b. Use the active voice to address
readers directly;
c. Use clear language rather than
jargon;
d. Be divided into short sections and
sentences; and
e. Use lists and tables wherever
possible.
If you feel that we have not met these
requirements, send us comments by one
of the methods listed in the
‘‘ADDRESSES’’ section. To better help us
revise the rule, your comments should
be as specific as possible. For example,
you should tell us the numbers of the
sections or paragraphs that are unclearly
written, which sections or sentences are
too long, the sections where you feel
lists or tables would be useful, etc.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
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List of Subjects in 43 CFR Part 419
Agriculture, Irrigation, Natural
resources, Endangered and threatened
species, Reclamation, Reservoirs, Water
resources, Water supply, Incorporation
by reference.
Dated: August 28, 2008.
Kameran L. Onley,
Acting Assistant Secretary—Water and
Science.
For the reasons given in the preamble,
the Bureau of Reclamation proposes to
add to title 43 of the Code of Federal
Regulations a new part 419 to read as
follows:
PART 419—OPERATION OF THE
TRUCKEE RIVER AND OTHER
RESERVOIRS
Sec.
419.1 What is the purpose of this part?
419.2 What are the definitions used in this
part?
419.3 What general principles govern
implementation of the TROA?
419.4 What are the specific provisions
governing operations of the reservoirs?
Authority: Pub. L. 101–618 (104 Stat. 3289,
3294).
§ 419.1
What is the purpose of this part?
(a) This part satisfies the requirement
of section 205(a)(5) of the TruckeeCarson-Pyramid Lake Water Rights
Settlement Act (Settlement Act) that the
negotiated agreement for operation of
Truckee River Reservoirs be
promulgated as a Federal regulation.
The Truckee River Operating Agreement
(TROA), which is incorporated by
reference into this part, is the agreement
negotiated pursuant to section 205(a).
The Director of the Federal Register
approves this incorporation by reference
in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and
1 CFR part 51. You may obtain a copy
of TROA from the Area Manager,
Bureau of Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza St.,
Carson City, NV 89701. You may
inspect a copy at Bureau of
Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza St., Carson
City, NV 89701, or at the Office of the
Federal Register, 800 North Capitol
Street, NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC.
(b) This part implements the
Settlement Act by providing for
operation of the Truckee River
Reservoirs and other reservoirs in a
manner that:
(1) Implements California’s allocation
of Truckee River basin water and the
Nevada and California allocations of
Lake Tahoe basin water;
(2) Enhances fish, wildlife, and
recreational beneficial uses of water in
the Truckee River basin;
(3) Carries out the terms, conditions,
and contingencies of the Preliminary
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Settlement Agreement, as modified by
the Ratification Agreement;
(4) Ensures that water is stored in,
released from, and passed through
Truckee River Reservoirs to satisfy the
exercise of water rights in conformance
with the Orr Ditch Decree and Truckee
River General Electric Decree, except for
rights voluntarily relinquished by any
persons, or transferred under State law;
(5) Provides for the enhancement of
spawning flows available in the Lower
Truckee River for Pyramid Lake Fishes
in a manner consistent with the
Secretary’s responsibilities under the
Endangered Species Act, as amended;
(6) Satisfies all applicable dam safety
and flood control requirements; and
(7) Minimizes the Secretary’s costs
associated with operation and
maintenance of Stampede Reservoir.
§ 419.2 What are the definitions used in
this part?
Act means the Truckee-CarsonPyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement
Act of 1990, title II, Pub. L. 101–618
(104 Stat. 3289, 3294).
Administrator means the individual
appointed in accordance with sections
2.A.2 through 2.A.3 of the Truckee River
Operating Agreement, incorporated by
reference into this part.
Preliminary Settlement Agreement
means that Agreement between the
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe and Sierra
Pacific Power Company of May 23,
1989, as subsequently modified and
ratified by the United States.
TROA means the Truckee River
Operating Agreement, which is
incorporated by reference into this part.
Truckee River basin means the area
which naturally drains into the Truckee
River and its tributaries and into
Pyramid Lake, including Pyramid Lake,
but excluding the Lake Tahoe basin.
§ 419.3 What general principles govern
implementation of the TROA?
The following are general operational
principles which provide a framework
for the Administrator in implementing
the TROA. These general principles are
intended to be consistent with the
specific provisions of TROA, but if they
conflict with those specific provisions,
the specific TROA provisions control.
Operations should meet all of the
following criteria:
(a) Be conducted, consistent with the
TROA and applicable legal
requirements, so that the available water
supply in the Truckee River basin
satisfies, to the maximum extent
possible, multiple beneficial purposes,
including municipal and industrial,
irrigation, fish, wildlife, water quality,
and recreation purposes.
(b) Satisfy vested and perfected rights
to use the water of the Truckee River
and its tributaries, to the extent that
water rights are scheduled to be
exercised, and to the extent that water
is lawfully available. This includes, but
is not limited to, the exercise of water
rights under the provisions of the Orr
53187
Ditch Decree, except as expressly
provided in the Settlement Act and the
TROA.
(c) Maintain minimum releases and,
to the extent practicable consistent with
existing water rights and the TROA,
maintain enhanced minimum releases,
preferred stream flows, and reservoir
recreation levels as described in Article
Nine of the TROA.
(d) Comply with applicable flood
control requirements for Prosser Creek,
Stampede, Boca, and Martis Creek
Reservoirs.
(e) Comply with all applicable dam
safety requirements.
(f) Use the integrated schedules
developed by the Administrator through
coordination with the scheduling
parties.
(g) Respond to declared Federal, State,
or local water-related emergencies
presenting a clear and immediate danger
to public health, life, property, or
essential public services involving an
upset or other unexpected occurrence to
facilities and resources addressed in the
TROA.
§ 419.4 What specific provisions govern
operations of the reservoirs?
The specific provisions governing
operations of the Truckee River
Reservoirs and other reservoirs are
contained in the TROA. The following
table shows the location of the
provisions in the TROA.
Provisions governing . . .
Are in the following sections of the TROA . . .
Recitals, Definitions .........................................................................................................................
Recitals 1 through 9, Definitions (1) through
(106).
Sections 1.A through 1.F
Satisfaction of provisions of law, general operational principles, protection of water rights, imported water, remaining water of the Truckee River, and emergencies.
Administration ..................................................................................................................................
Accounting, reporting, forecasting, and monitoring ........................................................................
Incorporation of certain provisions of the preliminary settlement agreement .................................
Operation of Floriston Rate and Project Water ..............................................................................
Truckee River and Lake Tahoe Basin Allocation and Accounting .................................................
Credit Water Establishment, Storage, and Conversion ..................................................................
Priorities and Rules for Operations Following Impoundment or Accumulation of Water in Reservoirs.
Beneficial Uses of Water for Instream Flows and Recreation in California ...................................
Design of Water Wells in the Truckee River Basin in California ....................................................
Scheduling .......................................................................................................................................
Effectiveness of the TROA .............................................................................................................
Relation of TROA to Settlement Act, Adjustments to Operations and Changes to Agreement ....
Miscellaneous areas .......................................................................................................................
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
2.A
3.A
4.A
5.A
6.A
7.A
8.A
through
through
through
through
through
through
through
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
Sections
9.A through 9.F.
10.A through 10.H.
11.A through 11.H.
12.A and 12.B.
13.A through 13.E.
14.A through 14.Q.
[FR Doc. E8–21177 Filed 9–12–08; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
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2.C.
3.E.
4.G.
5.E.
6.E.
7.H.
8.V.
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 179 (Monday, September 15, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 53180-53187]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-21177]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Reclamation
43 CFR Part 419
RIN 1006-AA48
Operation of the Truckee River and Other Reservoirs
AGENCY: Bureau of Reclamation, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Bureau of Reclamation is proposing this rule to comply
with the requirements of the Truckee-Carson-Pyramid Lake Water Rights
Settlement Act. The Settlement Act requires that the operating
agreement negotiated with the States of California and Nevada for the
operation of Truckee River Reservoirs (the five Federal reservoirs in
the Truckee River basin) be promulgated as a Federal Regulation.
DATES: Comments must be received by Reclamation no later than November
14, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by 1006-AA48, by one of
the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. Search on docket
identification number BOR-2008-0006 when submitting comments on this
rule.
Mail: Kenneth Parr, Bureau of Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza
St., Carson City, NV 89701.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kenneth Parr, Bureau of Reclamation,
705 N. Plaza St., Carson City, NV 89701; telephone (775) 882-3436; or
for a copy of the TROA, visit the TROA Web site at https://www.usbr.gov/
mp/troa/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 205(a)(2) of the Truckee-Carson-
Pyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement Act, title II of Public Law 101-
618, November 16, 1990 (Settlement Act or Act), directs the Secretary
of the Interior (Secretary) to negotiate an operating agreement that
must:
Satisfy all applicable dam safety and flood control
requirements;
Provide for the enhancement of spawning flows available in
the Lower Truckee River for the Pyramid Lake fishery (endangered cui-
ui, and threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout) in a manner consistent
with the Secretary's responsibilities under the Endangered Species Act,
as amended (ESA);
Carry out the terms, conditions, and contingencies of the
Preliminary Settlement Agreement between the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe
(Pyramid Tribe) and Sierra Pacific Power Company (Power Company), as
modified by the Ratification Agreement of the United States (PSA);
Ensure that water is stored in and released from Truckee
River Reservoirs to satisfy the exercise of water rights in conformance
with the Orr Ditch and Truckee River General Electric decrees, except
for any rights voluntarily relinquished by the parties to the operating
agreement; and
Minimize the Secretary's costs associated with operation
and maintenance of Stampede Reservoir.
The Act further provides that the following may be addressed in the
operating agreement:
Administration of the operating agreement;
Means of assuring compliance with PSA;
Operations of Truckee River system that will not change;
Operations and procedures for using Federal facilities to
meet the Secretary's responsibilities under ESA;
Methods of reducing likehood that Lake Tahoe will drop
below its natural rim and improving the efficient use of Lake Tahoe
during extreme drought situations;
Procedures for managing and operating Federal reservoirs;
Procedures for operating Federal reservoirs for instream
beneficial uses;
Operation of non-Federal reservoirs in the Truckee River
basin to the extent owners of affected storage rights become parties to
the operating agreement; and
Procedures and criteria for implementing California's
allocation of Truckee River water.
The Truckee River Operating Agreement (TROA) will, among other
things: (1) Enhance conditions for threatened and endangered fishes in
the Truckee River and its tributaries; (2) increase municipal and
industrial (M&I) water supplies to provide drought protection for the
Truckee Meadows (the Cities of Reno and Sparks, Nevada, metropolitan
area); (3) improve river water quality downstream from the City of
Sparks and below Derby Dam; (4) enhance stream flows and recreational
opportunities in the Truckee River basin; and (5) provide procedures
for implementing the interstate allocation of Lake Tahoe basin and
Truckee River basin waters between Nevada and California. While the
Settlement Act also confirms the allocation of the waters of the Carson
River and its tributaries between California and Nevada represented by
the Alpine Decree, TROA by its terms does not affect the Carson River.
Section 205(a)(9) of the Settlement Act requires the Secretary to
satisfy the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act.
Because the State of California is a mandatory signatory party, it is
also necessary to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act.
Consequently, the Department of the Interior and the California
Department of Water Resources jointly prepared an Environmental Impact
Statement/Environmental Impact Report (EIS/EIR). The Final EIS/EIR
concludes that TROA will:
Provide better conditions for threatened Lahontan
cutthroat trout and endangered cui-ui in many reaches of the Truckee
River and its tributaries;
Provide greater potential for enhancing riparian
vegetation along some reaches of the Truckee River in median hydrologic
conditions and along all mainstem and tributary reaches under dry and
extremely dry hydrologic conditions; and
Enhance riparian habitat along some mainstem and tributary
reaches under wet and median hydrologic conditions and along most
mainstem reaches in dry and extremely dry hydrologic conditions.
Section 205(a)(9) also provides that the Secretary may not become a
party to TROA if the Secretary determines that the effects of TROA,
together with cumulative effects, are likely to jeopardize any
threatened or endangered species or be adverse to designated critical
habitat of such species. The Final EIS/EIR concludes that
implementation of TROA will not adversely affect LCT or cui-ui, but in
fact is likely to benefit both species. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service has concurred in that determination through the consultation
process required by Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act of the
1973, as amended, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1531 at et seq.
Since TROA is the result of negotiations and agreement among at
least the five mandatory signatory parties and must be promulgated as a
Federal regulation, the regulation we are proposing today would
incorporate by
[[Page 53181]]
reference the agreement exactly as negotiated. After extensive
discussions with the Office of the Federal Register, we have determined
that incorporating TROA by reference is the best method to preserve the
integrity of the Code of Federal Regulations while accommodating the
negotiating parties and the requirements of the Act. Incorporation by
reference is a workable solution because the agreement is readily
available to all of the concerned parties and will be easy for other
interested parties to consult on various websites or at Reclamation's
offices.
I. Background
The United States has been extensively involved in litigation over
Federal and Indian rights to the use of the waters of the Truckee River
in California and Nevada since the early 1900's. In 1913 the United
States filed a suit claiming rights to the use of such waters for
multiple purposes, including supply for the first Reclamation Project
in the nation and for use on the Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian
reservation. The subject matter of Truckee River litigation over the
years has involved Indian trust and reserved rights, domestic and
municipal uses of water stored in Federal projects, a proposed
California/Nevada compact for an interstate allocation of the River's
water, Endangered Species Act claims, and rights for use in irrigation
projects. Multiple lawsuits concerning those subjects became very
active in the early 1970s and continued significantly until the early
1990s. By that time, it had become clear that the only hope for
resolution of the many conflicts over the use of Truckee River water
was through a regional settlement which would provide for cooperative
uses of the water stored in Federal reservoirs on the Truckee River to
meet the demands and right of all users. Efforts to effect changes in
those rights through litigation had proven completely unavailing.
In November of 1990, Congress enacted the Settlement Act to provide
authorization for measures which if carried out would serve to resolve
many of the longstanding disputes and Federal litigation among multiple
parties concerning the rights to use of the waters of the Truckee and
Carson Rivers in Nevada and California. Those parties include the
States of Nevada and California and other parties to the negotiated
agreement which constitutes this rule.
The Truckee River originates at the outlet of Lake Tahoe in
California and flows to Pyramid Lake, a terminal desert lake in
northwestern Nevada. The flow of the Truckee River was first regulated
in 1870 by construction of a private timber crib dam at the outlet of
Lake Tahoe. A number of dams, Federal and private, have since been
constructed on tributaries to the Truckee River in California to create
water storage and flood control reservoirs and regulate river flow.
Flows of the river have historically been utilized for diverse
purposes, including generation of hydropower, irrigation of
agricultural lands, and municipal and industrial water supplies.
Newlands Project
The Newlands Federal Reclamation Project was authorized in 1902 and
constructed under the Federal Reclamation Act, 32 Stat. 388. Derby
Diversion Dam diverts water from the Truckee River through the Truckee
Canal for use on the Newlands Project's Truckee Division. Truckee River
water diverted at Derby Dam is also stored in Lahontan Reservoir in the
Carson River basin as a supplemental source of water for the Carson
Division of the Newlands Project.
In 1967, the Secretary of the Interior issued regulations called
Operating Criteria and Procedures (OCAP), referred to in the rule as
Truckee Canal Diversion Criteria, to limit diversions of Truckee River
water to the Newlands Project, 32 FR 3098, February 21, 1967. Revised
versions of OCAP have been in effect since that time.
Court Decrees
Three Federal court actions, United States v. Truckee River General
Electric Co., No. 14861 (N. D. Calif. 1915), now designated Case No.
68-cv-643 (E. D. Calif.) (TRGE), United States v. Orr Water Ditch
Company, et al., In Equity No. A3, Case No. 73-cv-00003 (D. Nev. 1944)
(Orr Ditch), and United States v. Alpine Land and Reservoir Co., et
al., Civ. No. D-183, Case No. 73-cv-183 (D. Nev. 1980) (Alpine) were
brought to confirm a water supply for the Newlands Project and (in Orr
Ditch) for use on the Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian Reservation. Each case
resulted in a decree setting forth the relative water rights in the
Truckee River and Carson River basins, respectively.
The TRGE Decree in 1915 granted the United States an easement for,
and the right to operate, Lake Tahoe Dam. It also required that
releases of water be maintained to satisfy, but not exceed, certain
flows in the Truckee River at Floriston, California (Floriston Rates).
Floriston Rates are rates of flow in the Truckee River at the
California-Nevada State border of 300 to 500 cubic feet per second
(cfs) depending on month and elevation of water in Lake Tahoe.
The 1944 Orr Ditch Decree determined the relative rights to use
Truckee River water in Nevada and for Power Company's run-of-the-river
hydroelectric power plants. Floriston Rates, when maintained, satisfy
water rights confirmed by the Orr Ditch Decree. The Orr Ditch Decree
also confirmed water rights to the United States for use on the Pyramid
Lake Paiute Indian Reservation (claims 1 and 2), to the United States
for use on the Newlands Project subject to water duties and regulations
of the Secretary of the Interior (claim 3), and to the United States
for the use of the top six feet of Lake Tahoe as a reservoir (claim 4).
The Orr Ditch Decree further recognized the 1935 Truckee River
Agreement (TRA), an operating agreement for the Truckee River among
Power Company, Truckee-Carson Irrigation District (TCID), Washoe County
Water Conservation District (WCWCD or Conservation District), the
United States Department of the Interior, and individual Truckee River
water users (parties of the fifth part) as binding among those parties.
The 1980 Alpine Decree determined the rights, relative priorities,
and water duties for all Carson River water users in California and
Nevada.
Reservoirs
There are five Federal reservoirs in the Truckee River basin,
collectively referred to as Truckee River Reservoirs. They are: The
reservoir formed by the dam at the outlet of Lake Tahoe, which
regulates the top six feet of the lake; Boca Reservoir on the Little
Truckee River, constructed in 1937 and operated under contract by
WCWCD; Prosser Creek Reservoir, constructed on Prosser Creek in 1967,
as part of the Washoe Project; Stampede Reservoir, constructed on the
Little Truckee River in 1970, also as part of the Washoe Project; and
Martis Creek Reservoir, a United States Army Corps of Engineers flood
control facility, constructed on Martis Creek in 1971.
The 1959 Tahoe-Prosser Exchange Agreement (TPEA), executed by
parties to TRA, provides for an exchange of water between Lake Tahoe
and Prosser Creek Reservoir to maintain a minimum flow in the Truckee
River immediately downstream from Lake Tahoe when releases from Lake
Tahoe would not otherwise be required. This exchange protects water for
Floriston Rates while providing flows downstream from Lake Tahoe for
fish purposes.
The water in Stampede Reservoir is dedicated for the benefit of
Pyramid Lake fishes (endangered cui-ui and
[[Page 53182]]
threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout) by determination of the Secretary.
The Secretary's determination was upheld by the Federal courts in
Carson-Truckee Water Conservancy District v. Watt, 537 F. Supp. 106 (D.
Nev. 1982), aff'd 741 F. 2d 257 (9th Cir. 1984).
Martis Creek Reservoir is operated by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers exclusively for flood control purposes.
In addition to the Federal reservoirs, there are two private
reservoirs in the Truckee River basin: Donner Lake, formed by a dam on
Donner Creek, and Independence Lake, formed by a dam on Independence
Creek. Both Donner and Independence creeks are tributary to the Truckee
River. The water right for Donner Lake is owned by TCID and the Truckee
Meadows Water Authority (Water Authority) as tenants in common. The
water rights for Independence Lake are owned by Water Authority.
Settlement Act
The Settlement Act was enacted and signed into law in 1990, in part
to facilitate the resolution of disputes and settlement of litigation
over use of Truckee River water among multiple parties, including the
States of Nevada and California. Section 204 of the Act provides for an
interstate allocation of waters of the Lake Tahoe and Truckee River
basins between California and Nevada similar to the interstate
allocation negotiated by the two states in the 1960s and confirms the
allocation of waters of the Carson River and its tributaries between
the states represented by the Alpine Decree. Section 205(a) of the Act
directs the Secretary to negotiate an agreement for operation of
Truckee River Reservoirs with California and Nevada, and other parties
as determined appropriate, to among other things, implement the
provisions of the PSA. Because the Act directs that the negotiated
agreement (TROA) implement the PSA, the Pyramid Tribe and Water
Authority are mandatory signatories of the negotiated agreement along
with the United States, California, and Nevada. Subsequent to the
Settlement Act, Power Company on June 11, 2001, sold its water utility
business to Water Authority and assigned to Water Authority all of its
rights and responsibilities under the PSA and TROA. Accordingly, Water
Authority is now the mandatory signatory party to TROA.
Water Quality Settlement Agreement
Also subsequent to the Settlement Act, the 1996 Truckee River Water
Quality Settlement Agreement (WQSA) was entered into by the cities of
Reno and Sparks, Nevada, Washoe County, Nevada, the United States
Department of the Interior, the United States Department of Justice,
the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the Nevada Division
of Environmental Protection, and the Pyramid Tribe. In settlement of
certain litigation over the proposed expansion of the Truckee Meadows
Water Reclamation Facility, WQSA established a program to purchase and
dedicate Truckee River water rights for stream flow purposes by the
United States and the Truckee Meadows communities (Reno-Sparks
metropolitan area) in Nevada. The purpose of the water rights purchase
program is to improve water quality in the Truckee River, particularly
below Derby Dam. A final Environmental Impact Statement on the Federal
water rights acquisition portion of WQSA was published in October 2002,
and a Record of Decision was issued in December 2002. Water made
available to serve the dedicated water rights may, to the extent
possible, be stored in Truckee River Reservoirs and will be managed for
water quality purposes by the dedicating parties and by the Pyramid
Tribe. TROA accommodates implementation of the WQSA and provides for
the storage of Water Quality Credit Water in Truckee Reservoirs.
II. Overview of Rule
Main Provisions of the Negotiated Agreement
The negotiated agreement (TROA), which constitutes the rule, will
be incorporated by reference. It provides the framework, rules, and
procedures for the operation of Truckee River Reservoirs, Independence
Lake, and Donner Lake, to the extent Donner Lake is made available, and
for management of flows in the Truckee River, with more flexibility
than is available under current operations. It also provides for
implementation of the interstate allocation of waters of the Lake Tahoe
and Truckee River basins between California and Nevada, as provided in
sections 204 and 210(a)(2) of the Act. The maintenance of Floriston
Rates and Reduced Floriston Rates is the basic foundation of TROA.
TROA retains most current procedures and management authorities for
operating Truckee River Reservoirs, including maintaining the storage
priorities for project water (water associated with the license or
permit for a particular reservoir) and water dedicated to maintenance
of Floriston Rates. Applicable flood control and safety of dams
requirements will continue to be in effect. Perhaps most importantly,
Truckee River Reservoirs will continue to be operated to satisfy the
exercise of water rights in conformance with the Orr Ditch and TRGE
decrees, except for any water rights that are voluntarily relinquished
by the signatory parties. The Federal Water Master will continue to
assure that Truckee River operations satisfy the exercise of water
rights recognized by the Orr Ditch Decree.
How TROA Would Be Different From Current Operations
TROA Provides for the Establishment of Credit Water
Article Seven of TROA prescribes rules and procedures that provide
opportunities for signatory parties, as authorized by changes to water
rights under applicable State law, to retain in storage as credit water
in Truckee River Reservoirs, Independence Lake, and Donner Lake, to the
extent Donner Lake is made available, all or a portion of the water
that the party would otherwise be entitled to divert for use downstream
under the party's water rights. A person initially not a signatory to
TROA could also have an opportunity to store credit water, to the
extent storage space is available, by agreeing to be bound by the same
rules as a signatory party. Any party storing credit water will be
required to have a storage contract with the owner of the reservoir in
which the credit water will be stored unless otherwise provided in
TROA.
Two of the various categories of credit water, M&I Credit Water and
Fish Credit Water, will be created as provided for in the PSA. M&I
Credit Water will be established by Water Authority for use as a
drought supply. Fish Credit Water will be established by the United
States and Pyramid Tribe for the benefit of Pyramid Lake fishes. A
portion of Fish Credit Water can also be designated as Joint Program
Fish Credit Water, a category of credit water which will be managed by
California for purposes of stream flow and reservoir levels in
California.
TROA establishes priorities for each category of credit water and
accounting procedures relative to its storage, release, spill,
evaporation, and exchange. Relative priorities for various types of
credit water and credit water operations are important for
administration of TROA when concurrent uses or potentially conflicting
operations are scheduled or requested.
[[Page 53183]]
TROA Provides for Exchanges of Credit Water
Article Eight of TROA provides for water, particularly credit
water, to be exchanged among Truckee River Reservoirs, Independence
Lake, and Donner Lake, to the extent Donner Lake is made available, in
accordance with prescribed rules and limitations. An exchange of water
between reservoirs can be accomplished in several ways. The provisions
for exchanging water greatly enhance and increase the flexibility of
system operations. The increased flexibility provided by TROA through
the various categories of credit water and opportunities for exchanges
facilitates more efficient use of the existing available water supply
to more effectively serve the many, and often competing, beneficial
uses.
Other Provisions of TROA
Article Two of TROA establishes an Administrator to administer its
provisions and a Special Hearing Officer to resolve disputes which may
arise under TROA. The Administrator is responsible, among other things,
for: Implementing the provisions of TROA and operating the designated
reservoirs consistent with stated general operational principles set
out in Article One; integrating the operational schedules submitted by
the parties under Article Eleven; and accounting for the various
categories of water under procedures developed by the Administrator
under Article Three. The Federal Water Master under the Orr Ditch
Decree will retain full authority to ensure that Orr Ditch Decree water
rights are fully enforced, and the Administrator will have authority
and responsibility to provide an acceptable remedy if the Orr Ditch
water rights of a person not signatory to TROA are adversely affected
by a TROA operation. TROA provides that the Federal Water Master for
the Orr Ditch Decree in office when TROA enters into effect will be the
first TROA Administrator, and the names of any subsequent nominees for
the position of Administrator must be submitted to the Orr Ditch Court
for approval. TROA recognizes that disputes arising under the Orr Ditch
Decree remain subject to the jurisdiction of the Orr Ditch Court and
the Federal Water Master.
TROA also:
Incorporates in Article Four the miscellaneous provisions
of the PSA not included elsewhere in TROA;
Provides in Article Five for operation of water to
maintain Floriston Rates and of project water used for the benefit of
threatened and endangered Pyramid Lake fishes;
Sets forth in Article Six the procedures for implementing
and accounting for the Truckee River basin and Lake Tahoe basin
allocations;
Establishes under Article Nine criteria for beneficial
uses of water in California for stream flows and reservoir levels for
fish and wildlife, and for recreation;
Establishes in Article Ten criteria for the design and
location of water wells in the Truckee River basin in California;
Sets forth in Article Twelve conditions which must be
satisfied for TROA to enter into effect, identifies other provisions of
the Act which become effective when TROA enters into effect, and
establishes a date by which TROA, and the other provisions of the Act
contingent upon TROA, must enter into effect;
Makes clear in Article Thirteen that TROA is the basis of
reservoir operations, provides for a periodic review of such
operations, and that any future change to TROA will require the same
process used for its original negotiation; and
Includes in Article Fourteen standard statements required
in any contract or agreement signed by the United States or the State
of California, identification of responsible parties to receive
notices, and criteria for future assignments of interests.
III. Procedural Requirements
1. Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866)
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
rule is not a significant rule and has not reviewed it under the
requirements of Executive Order 12866. We have evaluated the impacts of
the rule as required by E.O. 12866 and have determined that it is not a
significant regulatory action. The results of our evaluation are given
below.
(1) This rule will not have an annual effect of $100 million or
more on the economy. It will not adversely affect in a material way the
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or State, local or tribal governments or communities.
TROA is a mechanism negotiated by its signatories to facilitate
more flexibility in water use and storage and more effective
coordination of reservoir operations on the Truckee River. The
increased flexibility and more effective coordination of operations
will provide a more stable water supply for Reno, Sparks, and Washoe
County, Nevada, will enhance stream flow in the Truckee River below
Derby Dam for threatened and endangered fishes, and will improve water
quality.
The credit water and exchange provisions of TROA allow parties to
more efficiently use the water resource and, more particularly, realize
more efficient and effective utilization of their own water rights.
Historically, senior water right holders could not always fully divert
the water to which they were entitled under their water right because
of their inability to use or store the water when available. At times
some junior water right holders, including those on the Newlands
Project, have been able to benefit from this water, although most has
ultimately flowed to Pyramid Lake. The additional storage options made
available under TROA will permit senior water right holders to more
fully exercise their water rights. To the extent the exercise of senior
Orr Ditch Decree water rights under TROA makes less water available to
junior water right holders than has in the past been available because
the senior rights could not be fully exercised, there is no unlawful
injury to junior water right holders, including those on the Newlands
Project.
The total cost of implementing TROA is estimated to be
approximately $15.8 million annually ($2.1 million for storage fees,
O&M, and administration; $1.4 million in lost income from water
transfers; and approximately $12.3 million annually for the purchase of
water rights until 10,000 acre feet of water rights have been acquired
to meet future water demand). Operation of the Federal reservoirs under
TROA will result in new storage contracts which will reflect average
storage and operation costs of approximately $1.5 million annually. The
administration costs associated with implementing TROA by the
Administrator is estimated to be $600,000 annually to be shared by the
Federal government and the States of California and Nevada. Under TROA
irrigation water rights acquired by Water Authority and others are to
be transferred in accordance with applicable State law to meet water
conservation and water quality objectives. This reduction of irrigation
water rights results in a loss of approximately 100 jobs and the loss
of $1.4 million in personal income. Water rights will also be purchased
from willing sellers to meet future water demand. The cost of such
purchases is approximately $12.3 million annually based on current
market value of water rights. Because TROA implementation actions rely
on market mechanisms, any
[[Page 53184]]
reductions in economic activity or productivity, including employment
or income reductions occasioned by the sale of irrigation water rights
and reduced agricultural activity, will be fully compensated by the
monetary or other compensation derived from the sale of the water
rights.
One of the benefits of TROA would be the avoided costs to the water
users in the area of developing additional water storage facilities to
meet increasing water demands in the region. The construction costs and
O&M for new water storage facilities to meet that demand would be
approximately $5 million annually. In addition to the avoided costs
from implementing TROA, there is the additional benefit of supporting
the Reno-Sparks economy by providing the storage capacity for M&I water
demand in the future. It is estimated that in 2033, through the
operation of TROA, the stored M&I water will support approximately
74,000 jobs and approximately $2.6 billion in associated personal
income annually. There are also the annual nonmonetary benefits of
improving water quality, improving fish and wildlife habitat, and
meeting Indian trust responsibilities. Accordingly, TROA is not an
economically significant rule under E.O. 12866.
(2) This rule will not create a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfere with an action taken or planned by another Federal agency.
Bureaus within the U.S. Department of the Interior are the only Federal
agencies directly affected by the agreement. For instance, all TROA
actions are specifically subordinated to Army Corps of Engineers
(Corps) flood control criteria so that the Corps is free to adjust them
as necessary apart from this regulation. In addition, TROA specifically
provides that any use of the Corps' Martis Creek Reservoir for a TROA
purpose, e.g., for conservation or credit water storage, would require
a written agreement with the Corps. Upon TROA taking effect, Section
206(c) of the Settlement Act, which pertains to water use on the U.S.
Naval Air Station, Fallon, Nevada, shall also become effective. This is
a consequence of the Settlement Act, and not a direct effect of the
provisions of TROA.
(3) This rule does not alter the budgetary effects of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights or obligations of
their recipients. The rule is a negotiated agreement, and it directly
affects only the signatories of that agreement.
(4) OMB has determined that this rule does not raise novel legal or
policy issues. TROA explicitly incorporates or accommodates all
relevant laws and judicial decisions. By law TROA cannot have an
adverse effect on any other person's water rights under the Orr Ditch
or Truckee River General Electric decrees, and any modifications to
those decrees necessary to implement TROA must be approved by the two
courts with jurisdiction over the two decrees before TROA can become
effective. TROA is required to be consistent with the decision in
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe v. Morton, 354 Fed. Supp. 252 (D.D.C. 1973)
and cannot be inconsistent with the Secretary's responsibilities under
the Endangered Species Act.
2. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Department of the Interior certifies that this document will
not have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of small
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
The rule will not affect a substantial number of small entities.
TROA directly affects only its signatories. While TCID may be
considered a small entity, TROA neither directly affects TCID or the
water rights of the individual water right holders on the Newlands
Project. Specifically, the parties likely to be directly affected by
TROA are:
U.S. Department of the Interior;
State of California;
State of Nevada;
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe;
Truckee Meadows Water Authority;
Washoe County Water Conservation District;
City of Reno, Nevada;
City of Sparks, Nevada;
City of Fernley, Nevada;
Washoe County, Nevada;
Sierra Valley Water Company;
Carson-Truckee Water Conservancy District;
North Tahoe Public Utilities District; and
Truckee Donner Public Utilities District.
Sierra Pacific Power Company will join in the execution of TROA for
a limited purpose through a Special Joinder.
Water operations of Water Authority, Conservation District, City of
Reno, City of Sparks, and Washoe County, Nevada, are all intertwined
within one geographic area in western Nevada. The criterion for a small
entity is less than 50,000 population. All of these entities are
located within Washoe County, Nevada. The population of Washoe County
is approximately 346,000 people (2000 Census). The Reno-Sparks division
of Washoe County has a population of approximately 256,000. Only if
Conservation District, a taxing authority water purveyor of M&I and
irrigation water supplies, were considered a separate entity would it
be considered small as it has 33,000 people within its taxing
jurisdiction; Water Authority serves 77,000 customers. The City of
Fernley, in Lyon County, with a population of approximately 8,600 (2000
Census), would be considered small.
Carson-Truckee Water Conservancy District's office is located in
Reno, Nevada, and the District has no service population. It is
authorized under Nevada State statutes to collect fees and taxes to do
conservation work.
North Tahoe Public Utility District, Tahoe Vista, Placer County,
California, has a service population of 5,300 and, therefore, is
considered a small entity. It consists of the Sewer and Water
Department, Recreation and Parks Department, North Tahoe Beach Center,
and the North Tahoe Community Conference Center.
Truckee Donner Public Utilities District, Truckee, California, is a
non-profit utility providing electric and water service in the Truckee
area. The District serves 12,000 electric customers and 12,000 water
service connections. It is considered a small entity.
Sierra Valley Water Company is a small water purveyor in Sierra and
Plumas Counties, California. It provides domestic and irrigation water
to 29 customers. It is, therefore, considered small.
Pyramid Lake Paiute Indian Reservation is located in Washoe County,
with approximately 1,734 tribal members residing on the reservation.
Indian tribes are not covered by the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Power Company's service territory covers approximately 50,000
square miles in northern Nevada including the cities of Reno, Sparks,
and the Lake Tahoe area of northeastern California. It is a wholly-
owned subsidiary of Sierra Pacific Resources. It employs in excess of
1,100 people and services approximately 500,000 electric and gas
customers. It has assets in excess of $2.5 billion and revenue in
excess of $1 billion. It is not, therefore, considered a small entity.
Of the most likely signatories, only five are considered to be
small entities, and all who enter into TROA will be willing
signatories. There is, therefore, not a significant effect on a
substantial number of small entities.
3. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small
Business
[[Page 53185]]
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This rule:
a. Does not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or
more.
b. Will not cause a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions. The availability of additional water
management options is expected in the long term to lower overall
operation costs.
c. Does not have significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of
U.S.-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises. TROA
has only regional effects and will not have national or international
implications.
4. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule does not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments in the aggregate, or on the private sector, of more
than $100 million per year. The rule does not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or tribal governments or the private
sector. The costs of the new water management opportunities made
available by the agreement will only accrue to the signatories, and the
costs will be small relative to the benefits and will apply only if a
signatory avails itself of the options under the agreement. Therefore,
a statement containing the information required by the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.
5. Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under the criteria in Executive Order 12630, the rule does not have
significant takings implications. The provisions of the agreement are
accepted voluntarily by the signatories and the exercise of water
rights under existing decrees is expressly provided for. Therefore,
this rule will not result in a taking of private property, and a
takings implication assessment is not required.
6. Federalism (E.O. 13132)
Under the criteria in Executive Order 13132, this rule does not
have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. The States of California and Nevada are
signatories to TROA and participated fully in negotiations that
culminated in the agreement. TROA would have two principal effects on
the governments of the States of California and Nevada.
First, when TROA enters into effect, an allocation of the waters of
the Lake Tahoe and Truckee River basins, and confirmation of the
allocation of the Carson River and its tributaries represented by the
Alpine Decree, automatically enters into effect in a manner similar to
an interstate compact. Generally, these allocations limit the amount of
water that can be used or diverted from Lake Tahoe basin for use within
the basin under procedures of the two States, and the amount of water
that can be used or diverted from the California portions of the
Truckee River basin and the Carson River and its tributaries under
relevant decrees and procedures of the State of California. The balance
of the water of these two rivers that flows into Nevada can be
allocated pursuant to the water allocation procedures of the State of
Nevada and various court decrees. Generally, these allocations were
negotiated by and agreed to by the two States and, though not required
by law to do so, both States have voluntarily abided by their
provisions pending passage of Public Law 101-618, initially, and
pending implementation of TROA, subsequently. TROA merely aids in the
implementation of the allocation of the waters of the Lake Tahoe and
Truckee River basins provided for in the Settlement Act. By signing
TROA, the two States will, effectively, be binding themselves to this
interstate allocation.
Secondly, there are modest (i.e., expected to be approximately
$600,000 in total) financial requirements for funding the annual
administration of TROA. Subject to the limits on the authority in the
constitutions of the two States to commit future appropriations, it is
reasonable to expect the two States to pay their allocated shares of
the funding. By signing TROA, the two States would be signaling their
intention to secure funding for their shares of the administration of
TROA. Neither of these effects is considered to rise to the level of
significance requiring a Federalism Assessment. The rule, which governs
only the responsibilities of the signatories, does not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government. The rule
provides for the application of State law in its implementation in the
same manner as does the Settlement Act. Therefore, a Federalism
Assessment is not required.
7. Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This rule complies with the requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule:
a. Does not unduly burden the judicial system.
b. Meets the criteria of section 3(a) requiring that all
regulations be reviewed to eliminate errors and ambiguity and be
written to minimize litigation; and
c. Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2) requiring that all
regulations be written in clear language and contain clear legal
standards.
8. Consultation With Indian Tribes (E.O. 13175)
Under the criteria in Executive Order 13175, we have evaluated this
rule and determined that it has no potential effects, within the
requirements of the Executive Order, on Federally recognized Indian
tribes.
Indian trust resources are legal interests in property or natural
resources held in trust by the United States for Indian Tribes or
individuals. The Secretary of the Interior is the trustee for the
United States on behalf of Indian Tribes. Examples of trust resources
are lands, minerals, hunting and fishing rights, and water rights.
Indian trust resources have been assessed in consultation with the
following tribes during the development of TROA: Pyramid Lake Paiute
Tribe--Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation in Nevada; Reno-Sparks Indian
Colony--Reno and Hungry Valley, in Nevada; Fallon Paiute Shoshone
Tribe--Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Reservation and Fallon Colony in Nevada;
and Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California--colonies in Nevada and in
California with cultural interests at and near Lake Tahoe.
For the Pyramid Tribe, flow in the Truckee River below Derby Dam
and discharge to Pyramid Lake will increase slightly under TROA. With
increased flow and the increased capacity to manage Truckee River
water, TROA will: Assist in improving lower river water quality;
enhance slightly the elevation of Pyramid Lake; enhance the riparian
canopy; assist in stabilizing the lower river; enhance recreational
opportunities at Pyramid Lake; enhance spawning opportunities for cui-
ui and LCT; and enhance river habitat for Pyramid Lake fishes. In
addition, the exercise of Truckee River agricultural and M&I water
rights below Derby Dam, including those of the Pyramid Tribe, will
continue to be satisfied. For Reno-Sparks Indian Colony, TROA will have
no effect on the exercise of Truckee River water rights. The Fallon
Paiute Shoshone Tribe will receive a full water supply with the same
frequency as at present. TROA will have no effect on flows of the
Carson River or on resources of the Washoe Tribe.
The Federal Government negotiated TROA on a government-to-
government
[[Page 53186]]
basis with the Pyramid Tribe, as well as with the States of California
and Nevada. As a result, TROA incorporates the principles of
sovereignty for each sovereign signatory.
9. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not contain any requirement for information
collection by a Federal entity or Federal employee, and a submission
under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) is not required.
There are several provisions of TROA which require information to
be submitted by the signatory parties to the TROA Administrator. With
respect to the Paperwork Reduction Act, it is important to note that
the TROA Administrator is not a Federal employee and the Office of the
TROA Administrator is not a Federal entity. The signatory parties have
agreed to provide to the Administrator the information requested and
necessary for proper implementation and administration of TROA. Thus,
even though there are requirements to provide information contained in
the negotiated TROA and, as required by Congress, are provisions of the
rule, the information is not sought or requested by a Federal employee
or a Federal agency. Accordingly, the subject provisions are not
information collection requirements for purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
10. National Environmental Policy Act
This rule does not constitute a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment. The Final EIS/EIR has
concluded that implementation of TROA would not significantly affect
the quality of the human environment and that no unavoidable adverse
impacts are expected as a result of implementing TROA. No mitigation
measures are identified or required. Because of exchanges and storage
agreements that are components of TROA, a more assured long-term
drought water supply for Truckee Meadows would be obtainable, and
improved flow conditions would be possible for Pyramid Lake fishes and
aquatic species in general. California's allocation of water for M&I
purposes in the long run would be assured and could be utilized in the
short run to improve environmental conditions in the Truckee River.
Compliance with NEPA will be completed before the final rule is issued.
11. Data Quality Act
In developing this rule we did not conduct or use a study,
experiment, or survey requiring peer review under the Data Quality Act
(Pub. L. 106-554).
12. Effects on Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)
This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition
in Executive Order 13211. A Statement of Energy Effects is not
required.
Analysis contained in the Final EIS/EIR shows that under TROA,
hydropower generation and gross revenues are about 3.5 percent less
under wet hydrologic conditions than under current conditions due to
the increased conservation and improved water quality applications of
TROA; about 6.0 percent less in median hydrologic conditions, and about
55.0 percent greater in dry hydrologic conditions. Net reduced
hydroelectric power generation, if any, resulting from implementation
of TROA would be compensated consistent with the provisions of the
Agreement.
13. Clarity of This Regulation
We are required by Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and by the
Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, to write all rules in plain
language. This means that each rule we publish must:
a. Be logically organized;
b. Use the active voice to address readers directly;
c. Use clear language rather than jargon;
d. Be divided into short sections and sentences; and
e. Use lists and tables wherever possible.
If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send us
comments by one of the methods listed in the ``ADDRESSES'' section. To
better help us revise the rule, your comments should be as specific as
possible. For example, you should tell us the numbers of the sections
or paragraphs that are unclearly written, which sections or sentences
are too long, the sections where you feel lists or tables would be
useful, etc.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
List of Subjects in 43 CFR Part 419
Agriculture, Irrigation, Natural resources, Endangered and
threatened species, Reclamation, Reservoirs, Water resources, Water
supply, Incorporation by reference.
Dated: August 28, 2008.
Kameran L. Onley,
Acting Assistant Secretary--Water and Science.
For the reasons given in the preamble, the Bureau of Reclamation
proposes to add to title 43 of the Code of Federal Regulations a new
part 419 to read as follows:
PART 419--OPERATION OF THE TRUCKEE RIVER AND OTHER RESERVOIRS
Sec.
419.1 What is the purpose of this part?
419.2 What are the definitions used in this part?
419.3 What general principles govern implementation of the TROA?
419.4 What are the specific provisions governing operations of the
reservoirs?
Authority: Pub. L. 101-618 (104 Stat. 3289, 3294).
Sec. 419.1 What is the purpose of this part?
(a) This part satisfies the requirement of section 205(a)(5) of the
Truckee-Carson-Pyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement Act (Settlement
Act) that the negotiated agreement for operation of Truckee River
Reservoirs be promulgated as a Federal regulation. The Truckee River
Operating Agreement (TROA), which is incorporated by reference into
this part, is the agreement negotiated pursuant to section 205(a). The
Director of the Federal Register approves this incorporation by
reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. You may
obtain a copy of TROA from the Area Manager, Bureau of Reclamation, 705
N. Plaza St., Carson City, NV 89701. You may inspect a copy at Bureau
of Reclamation, 705 N. Plaza St., Carson City, NV 89701, or at the
Office of the Federal Register, 800 North Capitol Street, NW., Suite
700, Washington, DC.
(b) This part implements the Settlement Act by providing for
operation of the Truckee River Reservoirs and other reservoirs in a
manner that:
(1) Implements California's allocation of Truckee River basin water
and the Nevada and California allocations of Lake Tahoe basin water;
(2) Enhances fish, wildlife, and recreational beneficial uses of
water in the Truckee River basin;
(3) Carries out the terms, conditions, and contingencies of the
Preliminary
[[Page 53187]]
Settlement Agreement, as modified by the Ratification Agreement;
(4) Ensures that water is stored in, released from, and passed
through Truckee River Reservoirs to satisfy the exercise of water
rights in conformance with the Orr Ditch Decree and Truckee River
General Electric Decree, except for rights voluntarily relinquished by
any persons, or transferred under State law;
(5) Provides for the enhancement of spawning flows available in the
Lower Truckee River for Pyramid Lake Fishes in a manner consistent with
the Secretary's responsibilities under the Endangered Species Act, as
amended;
(6) Satisfies all applicable dam safety and flood control
requirements; and
(7) Minimizes the Secretary's costs associated with operation and
maintenance of Stampede Reservoir.
Sec. 419.2 What are the definitions used in this part?
Act means the Truckee-Carson-Pyramid Lake Water Rights Settlement
Act of 1990, title II, Pub. L. 101-618 (104 Stat. 3289, 3294).
Administrator means the individual appointed in accordance with
sections 2.A.2 through 2.A.3 of the Truckee River Operating Agreement,
incorporated by reference into this part.
Preliminary Settlement Agreement means that Agreement between the
Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe and Sierra Pacific Power Company of May 23,
1989, as subsequently modified and ratified by the United States.
TROA means the Truckee River Operating Agreement, which is
incorporated by reference into this part.
Truckee River basin means the area which naturally drains into the
Truckee River and its tributaries and into Pyramid Lake, including
Pyramid Lake, but excluding the Lake Tahoe basin.
Sec. 419.3 What general principles govern implementation of the TROA?
The following are general operational principles which provide a
framework for the Administrator in implementing the TROA. These general
principles are intended to be consistent with the specific provisions
of TROA, but if they conflict with those specific provisions, the
specific TROA provisions control. Operations should meet all of the
following criteria:
(a) Be conducted, consistent with the TROA and applicable legal
requirements, so that the available water supply in the Truckee River
basin satisfies, to the maximum extent possible, multiple beneficial
purposes, including municipal and industrial, irrigation, fish,
wildlife, water quality, and recreation purposes.
(b) Satisfy vested and perfected rights to use the water of the
Truckee River and its tributaries, to the extent that water rights are
scheduled to be exercised, and to the extent that water is lawfully
available. This includes, but is not limited to, the exercise of water
rights under the provisions of the Orr Ditch Decree, except as
expressly provided in the Settlement Act and the TROA.
(c) Maintain minimum releases and, to the extent practicable
consistent with existing water rights and the TROA, maintain enhanced
minimum releases, preferred stream flows, and reservoir recreation
levels as described in Article Nine of the TROA.
(d) Comply with applicable flood control requirements for Prosser
Creek, Stampede, Boca, and Martis Creek Reservoirs.
(e) Comply with all applicable dam safety requirements.
(f) Use the integrated schedules developed by the Administrator
through coordination with the scheduling parties.
(g) Respond to declared Federal, State, or local water-related
emergencies presenting a clear and immediate danger to public health,
life, property, or essential public services involving an upset or
other unexpected occurrence to facilities and resources addressed in
the TROA.
Sec. 419.4 What specific provisions govern operations of the
reservoirs?
The specific provisions governing operations of the Truckee River
Reservoirs and other reservoirs are contained in the TROA. The
following table shows the location of the provisions in the TROA.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Are in the following
Provisions governing . . . sections of the TROA . .
.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recitals, Definitions........................ Recitals 1 through 9,
Definitions (1) through
(106).
Satisfaction of provisions of law, general Sections 1.A through 1.F
operational principles, protection of water
rights, imported water, remaining water of
the Truckee River, and emergencies.
Administration............................... Sections 2.A through 2.C.
Accounting, reporting, forecasting, and Sections 3.A through 3.E.
monitoring.
Incorporation of certain provisions of the Sections 4.A through 4.G.
preliminary settlement agreement.
Operation of Floriston Rate and Project Water Sections 5.A through 5.E.
Truckee River and Lake Tahoe Basin Allocation Sections 6.A through 6.E.
and Accounting.
Credit Water Establishment, Storage, and Sections 7.A through 7.H.
Conversion.
Priorities and Rules for Operations Following Sections 8.A through 8.V.
Impoundment or Accumulation of Water in
Reservoirs.
Beneficial Uses of Water for Instream Flows Sections 9.A through 9.F.
and Recreation in California.
Design of Water Wells in the Truckee River Sections 10.A through
Basin in California. 10.H.
Scheduling................................... Sections 11.A through
11.H.
Effectiveness of the TROA.................... Sections 12.A and 12.B.
Relation of TROA to Settlement Act, Sections 13.A through
Adjustments to Operations and Changes to 13.E.
Agreement.
Miscellaneous areas.......................... Sections 14.A through
14.Q.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. E8-21177 Filed 9-12-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-MN-P