Quantcast Santa Fe River flows slow and steady
Santa Fe & Northern New Mexico - News
Santa Fe & Northern New Mexico - News
Santa Fe & Northern New Mexico - News
News for Santa Fe and New Mexico :

Advertisement

Email | Print | RSS | Bookmark and Share

Santa Fe River flows slow and steady

Related


Luis Sanchez-Saturno/The New Mexican
Photo: College of Santa Fe student Stewart Sinclair wades in the Santa Fe River, enjoying a day off by juggling for a group of students from the OZ School. City managers plan to keep the river’s flow between 1 and 5 cubic feet per day until 65 million gallons have been released.

More on this site

Advertisement

Thanks to rains and full reservoirs, city releases water

The often dry Santa Fe River will continue flowing for at least the next month, thanks to plentiful rains and the city's decision to release water from Santa Fe Canyon reservoirs.

The city's Sangre de Cristo Water Division is letting the river flow as part of a "growing effort to restore the entire Santa Fe River system to a healthy, living channel," according to a city announcement.

Utility managers plan to keep the water flowing in the river until a total of 200 acre-feet or 65 million gallons has been released. In Santa Fe, 200 acre-feet of water provides enough water for approximately 1,300 households for a year.

"We've been very fortunate this year," Water Division Director Gary Martinez said in a statement. "We think we'll be able to use our full surface water right, go into next year with our reservoirs half full, and have a flowing Santa Fe River part of the year."

The city's reservoirs were 85 percent filled Friday.

Mayor David Coss is promoting the idea of devoting 1,000 acre-feet of water a year to the river. Dave Groenfeldt, executive director of the Santa Fe Watershed Association, said the group supports that as a "reasonable amount of flow to begin with" in trying to have a living river. "We're asking the City Council to build on this flow and keep it going," Groenfeldt said.

Historically, he said, releases from the reservoirs east of the city have averaged more than 1,000 acre-feet of water annually over the last several years. But the water is usually released in short, mass amounts, while river advocates say it would be better to have a slower, steadier flow over a longer period of time.

Meanwhile, the first phase of the Santa Fe River Trail project is scheduled to start Wednesday, when contractors will begin installing about 1,800 feet of a 10-foot-wide concrete trail along the river at the east end of Santa Fe River Road off Alameda Street.

The city will have a noon ceremony on Sept. 15 to celebrate the beginning of the trail construction.


More from The Santa Fe New Mexican

Sports

Director’s drive gives El Gancho Fitness visible, valuable boost

When Michael Polasek took on the job as the director of tennis at El Gancho Fitness, Swim and Racquetball Club, his appraisal of tennis at his new place of employment was grim. »Story

Pasatiempo

The circle will be unbroken

Charles MacKay became Santa Fe Opera's third general director on Oct. 1, 2008. Looked at one way, that means he'll have been on the job just 276 days when the 2009 season opens on Friday, July 3. On the other hand, there's an excellent case to be made that MacKay has been preparing for this position, sometimes on the job, for quite a bit longer. Try 40-some years. »Story

Health & Science

Nevada's nuclear secret

CENTRAL NEVADA TEST AREA, Nev. — At the center of a desolate valley in the middle of Nevada, more than a dozen miles from the nearest paved road, one of the few signs of human activity is a rusty steel well casing that juts oddly out of the desert floor. »Story

Links





Popular Searches

Powered by Local.com

Advertisement