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Ski Resorts Will Have To Prove They Have Adequate Water Supplies

Arizona Snowbowl
(Photo Sean Hobson - CC BY 2.0)
Skiers at Arizona Snowbowl in Flagstaff.

Ski resorts on national forest land now will have to show they have sufficient water supplies, due to a U.S. Forest Service regulation. The rule arose out of concerns about limited water resources in the West.  

Jim Bedwell, recreation director for the Rocky Mountain Region of the U.S. Forest Service, said it’s designed to protect winter recreation.

“We know that communities have built their economies around it, that lifestyles are built around it,” Bedwell said. “We felt it was in the best public interest to sustain those water rights with the ski area operation.”  

An older version of the rule required ski resorts to transfer their water rights to the federal government. The Forest Service abandoned that plan after a lawsuit in 2012. Instead, resorts will have to document long-term, secure water supplies when they apply for or renew their permits.

“What the Forest Service now wants to do with this language in the new rules is just to make sure ski areas maintain the quantity of water that they have for their snowmaking and for their operations, before they use or divert any of those water rights to any other uses," said J.R. Murray, general manager of Arizona Snowbowl in Flagstaff

In the U.S., 122 ski areas operate on national forest lands. In Arizona, that includes Arizona Snowbowl, Elk Ridge and Mt. Lemmon.  

The rule goes into effect on Jan. 29.

Melissa Sevigny is a reporter at KNAU in Flagstaff.