Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Instream Flow: The Ultimate Guide to Protecting Our Rivers' Lifelines ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Instream Flow? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine a river is the circulatory system of a landscape. It's the main artery, carrying life-giving water to forests, fields, and communities. For over a century, the law in the American West treated this artery like a resource to be tapped, allowing farms, cities, and industries to insert straws and draw water out. The rule was simple: "use it or lose it." But what happens when too many straws are inserted? The artery runs dry, and the ecosystem it supports—the fish, the wildlife, the riverside forests—begins to suffer and die. You see this in dry riverbeds and struggling fisheries. **Instream flow** is the legal cure for this problem. It is a type of [[water_right]] designed not to take water *out* of the river, but to legally protect the water that is left *in* it. Think of it as a doctor's prescription for a river's health, legally guaranteeing a minimum flow of water needed to keep the ecosystem alive and functioning. It ensures there's enough water for fish to spawn, for boats to float, for wildlife to drink, and for the river to remain a healthy, vibrant part of our community and environment. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **Instream flow** is a modern legal tool that designates a certain amount of water to remain within a stream or river to protect fish, wildlife, recreation, and overall ecosystem health. [[environmental_law]]. * Strong **instream flow** protections directly benefit you by preserving fish for sport, maintaining the scenic beauty of natural areas for hiking and tourism, and ensuring better water quality for downstream communities. [[public_trust_doctrine]]. * Understanding the rules of **instream flow** is critical if you are a landowner with a river on your property, a farmer considering water conservation, or a community member concerned about a local development's impact on a cherished stream. [[prior_appropriation_doctrine]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Instream Flow ===== ==== The Story of Instream Flow: A Historical Journey ==== The story of instream flow is a story of a fundamental shift in American values. For most of our history, particularly in the arid West, water was seen as a commodity to be conquered and put to "work." The dominant legal framework, the [[prior_appropriation_doctrine]], was born from this mindset. It established a simple but brutal rule: "first in time, first in right." The first person to divert water from a stream and put it to a **beneficial use**—like farming, mining, or supplying a town—gained a permanent, legally protected right to that water. This system fueled the settlement and development of the West, but it came at a great cost. The law only recognized "beneficial use" as taking water *out* of the river. Leaving water in the stream for fish or scenery was seen as wasteful. As a result, many rivers became "over-appropriated," meaning that the total volume of water rights on paper exceeded the amount of water actually in the river. In dry years, senior water rights holders could legally divert the entire flow of a river, leaving miles of dry, barren riverbed in their wake. The tide began to turn in the 1960s and 1970s with the rise of the modern environmental movement. A new consciousness swept the nation, recognizing that healthy rivers were valuable in and of themselves. This shift was enshrined in landmark federal laws like the [[endangered_species_act]] of 1973 and the [[clean_water_act]] of 1972. These acts forced a national conversation: how can we protect endangered fish if their rivers run dry? How can we have "clean water" if there's no water to begin with? In response, states began the slow and often contentious process of changing their laws. They had to grapple with a radical idea: that leaving water in a stream could be a "beneficial use." Starting with states like Oregon and Colorado, legislatures passed statutes that, for the first time, allowed a state agency to hold a water right specifically for instream flow. This was a revolution in water law. It created a legal mechanism to fight for the river itself, giving it a place at the table alongside farmers and cities. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== While the concept is now widely accepted, instream flow protection is not based on one single national law. It's a patchwork of state statutes and federal influences. **State Law is King:** Water management is primarily a state responsibility. Most Western states have amended their water codes to authorize instream flows, but the methods vary wildly. For example, the Colorado Revised Statutes § 37-92-102(3) states that the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) can appropriate water to "preserve the natural environment to a reasonable degree." * **Statutory Language:** //"For the benefit and enjoyment of present and future generations, 'beneficial use' shall also include the appropriation by the state of Colorado... of such minimum flows between specific points on natural streams and lakes as are required to preserve the natural environment to a reasonable degree."// * **Plain English:** This law officially changed the definition of "beneficial use" in Colorado. It gave a specific state agency, the CWCB, the exclusive power to act like any other water user, go to water court, and get a legal right to keep water in a river for environmental purposes. **Federal "Big Sticks":** While states control the water rights, the federal government has powerful tools that indirectly protect instream flows. * **[[endangered_species_act]] (ESA):** If a river is home to a threatened or endangered fish (like salmon or the humpback chub), the ESA requires federal agencies to ensure their actions don't harm the species or its habitat. This can force the [[bureau_of_reclamation]], which operates many of the West's largest dams, to release water specifically to maintain flows for fish, regardless of state water rights. * **Federal Reserved Water Rights:** In the landmark case `[[cappaert_v._united_states]]`, the Supreme Court affirmed the doctrine of federal [[reserved_water_rights]]. This legal principle holds that when the U.S. government reserves land from the public domain for a specific purpose (like a national park, national forest, or Indian reservation), it also implicitly reserves the amount of unappropriated water needed to achieve that purpose. If a key purpose of a national forest is to maintain healthy forests and fisheries, the `[[u.s._forest_service]]` can claim a water right with a priority date from when the forest was established, and this right can be used to protect instream flows. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== How instream flow is protected depends entirely on where you live. The differences between states are stark, highlighting the complex and localized nature of U.S. water law. ^ Jurisdiction ^ Primary Mechanism for Instream Flow ^ Who Can Hold the Right? ^ What This Means For You ^ | **Federal** | [[reserved_water_rights]]; [[endangered_species_act]] | Federal agencies (e.g., `[[u.s._forest_service]]`, `[[bureau_of_land_management]]`) | If you live near federal lands, powerful, senior water rights may exist to protect streams, potentially overriding newer state-based rights. | | **Colorado** | State legislative appropriation | **Exclusively** the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB) | You can petition the state to protect a river, but individuals and private groups cannot hold their own instream flow rights. The process is centralized. | | **California** | [[public_trust_doctrine]]; State Water Code §1707 petitions | State Water Resources Control Board; NGOs and individuals can petition. | A more flexible and powerful system. The Public Trust Doctrine provides a broad tool to argue that the state must prevent destruction of waterways. | | **Oregon** | State-held rights and robust private market | Oregon Water Resources Dept.; Private trusts and individuals can buy/lease rights. | A progressive model that allows conservation groups like The Freshwater Trust to actively buy senior water rights from willing sellers and convert them to instream use. | | **Texas** | Environmental flow standards set by stakeholder committees | The state sets standards, but doesn't create a standalone "water right." | A more regulatory and less property-rights-based approach. Protections can be weaker as they are standards to be "considered" rather than a hard property right. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== To truly understand instream flow, you need to break it down into its core legal and scientific components. ==== The Anatomy of Instream Flow: Key Components Explained ==== === Element: A Non-Consumptive Water Right === This is the most fundamental concept. A traditional water right is **consumptive**—it's for water that is diverted, used, and mostly not returned to the river (e.g., water absorbed by crops). An instream flow right is **non-consumptive**. Its entire purpose is to leave water in its natural course. The "point of diversion" is not a headgate or a pump, but a legally defined stretch of river, for example, "from the confluence of Clear Creek to the Highway 10 bridge." The "use" is the preservation of the ecosystem within that stretch. === Element: Quantification (How Much Water?) === You can't just say a river needs "some water." A water right, including one for instream flow, must be for a specific quantity of water, measured in cubic feet per second (cfs). So, how do scientists decide if a river needs 10 cfs or 100 cfs? * **Hypothetical Example:** Imagine a local group wants to protect the native Rainbow Trout in the Blue River. Biologists from the state's Department of Fish and Wildlife will conduct studies. They'll measure the river's depth and velocity at different flow levels. They'll determine that at 5 cfs, the river is too shallow for adult fish to survive. At 15 cfs, there are good spawning gravels. At 25 cfs, there is excellent habitat for young fish to hide and grow. Based on this data, the state might apply for a tiered instream flow right: 25 cfs during the spring spawning season, and 15 cfs for the rest of the year. This scientific recommendation becomes the legal amount requested in the water right application. === Element: Priority Date === In the world of Western water law, **priority is everything**. Every water right has a priority date, which is the date the right was first established. When there isn't enough water to go around (like in a drought), the user with the oldest right (the "senior") gets all of their water before the user with a newer right (the "junior") gets a single drop. * **Real-World Impact:** Let's say the Blue River has an instream flow right for 15 cfs with a priority date of **1985**. Upstream, there is a ranch with an irrigation right for 20 cfs with a priority date of **1890**. The river is running low at only 25 cfs. The rancher is **senior**, so they can legally take their full 20 cfs. This leaves only 5 cfs in the river, meaning the **junior** 1985 instream flow right is not met, and the fish habitat suffers. This is why many conservation groups now focus on acquiring very senior water rights from old farms and ranches and converting them to instream flow, as a senior instream right can withstand a drought. === Element: Beneficial Use === This is the legal key that unlocked the door for instream flows. Historically, "beneficial use" meant diverting water for economic purposes like agriculture, industry, and domestic supply. The revolutionary legal change was the legislative expansion of this definition to include non-economic, public values. State legislatures passed laws explicitly stating that protecting fish and wildlife, water quality, and recreation were now legally recognized "beneficial uses." Without this change, any application for an instream flow right would have been dismissed by a water court as wasteful and invalid. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in Instream Flow ==== Navigating an instream flow issue means understanding the various actors involved. * **State Water Engineer / Water Resources Board:** These are the state-level administrators and referees. They are the gatekeepers who review evidence, hold hearings, and ultimately approve or deny applications for new water rights or changes to existing ones. Their decisions are guided by state law and science. * **State Environmental and Wildlife Agencies:** (e.g., Colorado Parks and Wildlife, California Department of Fish and Wildlife). These are often the primary drivers of instream flow protection. Their biologists conduct the scientific studies to determine flow needs, and their lawyers or a sister agency will be the ones to formally apply for and hold the water right on behalf of the public. * **Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs):** Groups like The Nature Conservancy, Trout Unlimited, and American Rivers are sophisticated and crucial players. They act as advocates, raise money, and in states where it's allowed, they operate on the free market. They negotiate with farmers and ranchers to buy or lease senior water rights and then dedicate them to instream flow, often protecting river reaches much more effectively than a junior state-held right could. * **Traditional Water Users:** This includes farmers, ranchers, cities, and industrial users. They are often wary of instream flow programs, fearing they will reduce the amount of water available for their own needs, especially in over-appropriated systems. Their participation and cooperation, however, are often key to successful, voluntary restoration projects. * **Federal Agencies:** The `[[bureau_of_reclamation]]` (operates major dams), `[[u.s._fish_and_wildlife_service]]` (enforces the ESA), and `[[u.s._forest_service]]` (manages national forest lands) are powerful players whose decisions about dam releases and federal land management can have a greater impact on streamflow than any state-level instream right. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== If you're concerned about a local river, you aren't helpless. You can be an effective advocate by understanding the process and knowing what steps to take. ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Face an Instream Flow Issue ==== === Step 1: Immediate Assessment and Observation === - **Identify the Problem:** Is your favorite fishing stream consistently low? Are you noticing algae blooms or a lack of wildlife? Is a new housing development or industrial facility being proposed that will require a large water diversion? Document what you see. Take photos and notes with dates. - **Know Your River:** What is the name of the stream and the larger watershed it belongs to? Precise location is critical. === Step 2: Research Your State's Laws and Water Rights === - **Visit the Website:** Your first stop is the website for your state's water management agency (e.g., "Colorado Division of Water Resources," "Oregon Water Resources Department," "California State Water Resources Control Board"). - **Find the Rules:** Search for terms like "instream flow," "minimum streamflow," or "environmental flows." Find out: Does your state recognize instream flow rights? Who is allowed to hold them (state only, or private groups too)? - **Look Up Existing Rights:** Most state agencies have online databases where you can look up water rights on a specific stream. See who the major water rights holders are and if any instream flow rights already exist. === Step 3: Connect with Key Players and Allies === - **Contact the Experts:** Reach out to the regional office of your state's fish and wildlife agency. Talk to the local fisheries biologist. They are often the most knowledgeable and passionate experts on your river's health. - **Find Your Local NGO:** Search for a local or state chapter of Trout Unlimited, American Rivers, or a local watershed council. These groups have on-the-ground experience and may already be working on the issue. They can be invaluable partners. === Step 4: Engage in the Public Process === - **Public Comment:** When a new water right is applied for, or a major water project is proposed, there is almost always a public comment period. This is your formal opportunity to submit written concerns. A well-reasoned letter citing specific negative impacts on fish, wildlife, or recreation is far more effective than a purely emotional one. - **Attend Hearings:** Water board or county commission meetings can be intimidating, but your presence matters. It shows decision-makers that the community is watching. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== While you may not file these yourself, understanding them is key to tracking the process. * **Water Right Application:** This is the foundational document for any new water use, including instream flow. It will specify the amount of water, the "point of diversion" (the stream reach), the priority date sought, and the "beneficial use" (e.g., preservation of fish habitat). * **Petition for Change of Use:** This is a critical form for market-based approaches. When a conservation group buys an old irrigation right, they must file this petition with the state to change the right's legal use from "agricultural" to "instream" or "environmental." This often requires proving that the change will not harm any other water rights holders on the river. * **Streamflow Nomination Form:** Some states have a formal process where citizens or groups can nominate a specific stream reach for consideration for a new instream flow right. The form typically requires you to explain the unique environmental, recreational, or scenic values of the stream. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== Legal battles over water have profoundly shaped the American West. These cases created the legal space for instream flow to become a reality. ==== Case Study: National Audubon Society v. Superior Court (1983) ==== * **The Backstory:** For decades, the City of Los Angeles diverted nearly the entire flow of the streams feeding Mono Lake in California to quench the thirst of its growing population. The lake, a vital habitat for millions of migratory birds, began to shrink dramatically, its salinity skyrocketed, and its ecosystem was on the verge of collapse. * **The Legal Question:** Could long-established, "vested" water rights be re-examined if they were causing the destruction of a critical public resource? * **The Holding:** The California Supreme Court delivered a groundbreaking decision, famously merging water law with the [[public_trust_doctrine]]. It held that the state has an ongoing duty as a "trustee" to protect public resources like lakes and rivers for the benefit of the people. This duty was not extinguished when the state issued water rights decades earlier. L.A. could not simply destroy Mono Lake. * **Impact on You Today:** This case established that water rights are not absolute. It gives citizens and the state a powerful tool to argue that excessive water diversions harming the environment must be reconsidered to protect the public's interest in healthy waterways. ==== Case Study: Cappaert v. United States (1976) ==== * **The Backstory:** Devils Hole is a deep limestone cavern in Nevada, part of a detached unit of Death Valley National Monument. It is the only natural habitat for the critically endangered Devils Hole pupfish. Nearby, the Cappaert family began pumping large amounts of groundwater for their ranch, causing the water level in Devils Hole to drop and threatening the pupfish's survival. * **The Legal Question:** Did the federal government's creation of the national monument in 1952 also give it a right to the water needed to protect the pupfish, even if a rancher started pumping later? * **The Holding:** The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously said yes. It ruled that when the federal government withdraws land from the public domain for a purpose (like protecting a unique species), it implicitly reserves enough unappropriated water to accomplish that purpose. This [[reserved_water_right]] has a priority date of the reservation itself (1952). * **Impact on You Today:** This ruling means that on federal lands—national parks, forests, wildlife refuges, and monuments—the government often holds powerful, senior water rights that can be used to ensure streams keep flowing and unique habitats are protected from later development. ==== Case Study: Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. Rocky Mountain Power Co. (1965) ==== * **The Backstory:** This was an early, pre-environmental movement case in Colorado. A power company wanted to build a dam and sought a water right for its hydroelectric plant. The Colorado River District argued the plan didn't include enough water releases to protect fish. * **The Legal Question:** Was maintaining a fishery a "beneficial use" that could command a water right under the Colorado Constitution? * **The Holding:** The Colorado Supreme Court said no. At the time, the court interpreted "appropriation" as requiring a physical diversion of water out of the stream. Simply leaving water in the river for fish didn't qualify as a legally protectable beneficial use. * **Impact on You Today:** This case is important because it shows the legal wall that existed *before* modern instream flow laws. It demonstrates why it was absolutely necessary for state legislatures to step in and pass new statutes that explicitly amended the definition of "beneficial use" to include environmental protection. It highlights that instream flow is a right created by legislative action, not judicial tradition. ===== Part 5: The Future of Instream Flow ===== The battles to protect our rivers are far from over. New challenges and innovative solutions are constantly emerging. ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== * **Climate Change and "Megadrought":** This is the biggest challenge. As climate change reduces snowpack and increases evaporation, there is simply less water to go around. This puts immense pressure on the priority system. How can a junior instream flow right protect a river when even senior farms and cities are facing cutbacks? This is forcing a difficult conversation about re-evaluating and sharing water in ways that were once unthinkable. * **Groundwater-Surface Water Connection:** For decades, the law treated groundwater and surface water as two separate things. We now know that pumping too much groundwater can directly deplete the flow of nearby rivers. States are slowly developing new laws to manage "connected" waters, but it's a legally and politically fraught process, pitting farmers who rely on wells against those who rely on the river. * **Restoring Over-Appropriated Rivers:** How do you get water back into rivers where 100% of the flow is already legally claimed? This is where market solutions shine. NGOs and state agencies are increasingly using funds to lease or buy senior water rights from willing sellers. These voluntary, market-based transactions are often the only politically viable way to restore flows without sparking massive legal fights. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **Real-Time Data and Management:** New technologies are revolutionizing water management. Satellites can measure snowpack with incredible accuracy, and sensors in streams can provide real-time flow data. This allows water managers to make more precise decisions, ensuring instream flow targets are met without unnecessarily curtailing other users. * **The Rise of Environmental Markets:** We are seeing the growth of sophisticated water markets where water is treated as an asset that can be leased or sold for environmental purposes. This creates powerful financial incentives for conservation. A farmer might find it's more profitable to lease their water to a conservation trust for a season than to grow a low-value crop. * **Shifting Public Values:** Perhaps the most powerful force for change is the continuing shift in societal values. The idea that rivers should be healthy, living ecosystems is no longer a fringe opinion; it's a mainstream expectation. This public demand will continue to drive legal and policy innovations to protect instream flows for generations to come. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[appropriation_doctrine]]**: The legal principle, primarily in the Western U.S., that water rights are acquired by diverting water and putting it to beneficial use. * **[[beneficial_use]]**: A use of water—such as for agriculture, industry, or municipal supply—that is recognized by law as the basis for a water right. * **[[call_on_the_river]]**: An action taken by a senior water right holder to demand that upstream junior users stop diverting water so that the senior's right can be satisfied. * **[[consumptive_use]]**: A use of water that removes it from the water system, such as through evaporation or absorption by plants. * **[[dewatering]]**: The act of diverting the entire flow of a river or stream, leaving the channel dry. * **[[hydrology]]**: The scientific study of the movement, distribution, and management of water. * **[[junior_water_right]]**: A water right that was established more recently than another right on the same stream. * **[[non-consumptive_use]]**: A use of water that does not remove it from its source, such as for boating, fishing, or hydroelectric power. * **[[public_trust_doctrine]]**: A legal principle that certain natural resources are preserved in perpetuity for public use and enjoyment. * **[[riparian_rights]]**: A system of water law, primarily in the Eastern U.S., where landowners whose property adjoins a body of water have the right to make reasonable use of it. * **[[senior_water_right]]**: A water right that is older than other rights on the same stream, giving it priority during times of shortage. * **[[state_engineer]]**: The top water rights administrator in many Western states. * **[[water_adjudication]]**: A judicial process to determine the extent and priority of all water rights in a particular river system. * **[[water_right]]**: A legal right to divert water from a source and put it to a beneficial use. ===== See Also ===== * [[water_rights]] * [[prior_appropriation_doctrine]] * [[riparian_rights]] * [[environmental_law]] * [[clean_water_act]] * [[endangered_species_act]] * [[public_trust_doctrine]]