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Identification of economic, social, and policy factors influencing irrigation district participation in water transactions in the Deschutes Basin

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Identification of economic, social, and policy factors influencing irrigation district participation in water transactions in the Deschutes Basin
Names Whitman, Cally A. (creator)
Jarvis, William Todd (advisor)
Date Issued 2013-05-29 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 2014
Abstract Surface water in the Deschutes Basin of central Oregon has been largely over
allocated since the early 1900s. Therefore, rapid population growth and urban
demand for water in the upper Basin lead to an increased reliance on groundwater in
the last three decades. The Oregon Department of Water Resources (OWRD)
became concerned in the mid-1990s that groundwater pumping was negatively
affecting senior water rights in the lower Deschutes Basin. A USGS study determined
that there is a hydrologic connection between the upper and lower portions of the
Deschutes Basin. As a result, OWRD banned further groundwater pumping without
mitigation in the Basin. In an effort to allow further groundwater development and
improve streamflows a coalition of local water users and State government personnel
developed the Deschutes Groundwater Mitigation Program (DGMP). The DGMP is a
voluntary market-based approach to water management that allows water rights
holders to transfer excess water instream, which creates mitigation credits that other
water users can purchase to offset new groundwater uses.
Senior water rights holders in the Basin are primarily irrigation districts. This
research uses the Institutional Analysis and Development (IAD) framework to
determine the physical, cultural and institutional factors that influence irrigation
district participation in water transactions and the relationships between different
levels of decision-making in the Deschutes Basin. Research participants were asked

to describe the relationships and interactions between operational decisions, policy
formation decisions and constitutional decisions in the Deschutes Basin. Data was
collected through open-ended interviews with Basin irrigation districts and a broad
section of other water managers (State agencies, environmental advocacy groups,
tribes, hydrogeological consultants, landowners and municipalities), and then
qualitatively coded to identify important themes and relationships.
Results from the operational level of analysis indicate that irrigation districts
are primarily motivated by a fiduciary responsibility to their patrons. Water transfers
and leases are seen as tools that can mitigate the negative consequences of
urbanization and avoid enforcement of environmental regulations related to the
reintroduction of anadromous fish into the Deschutes River. Conservation projects
help boost instream flows and allow irrigation districts to improve their water
supplies and reduce costs. At the policy level of analysis, research participants
recognized the value of collaboration in developing shared goals and mutually
beneficial water management policies. However, they expressed concerns about the
functionality of regional water management organizations. Fort Vannoy v. OWRD,
was a 2008 Oregon Supreme Court case that decided who has access to participate in
the Deschutes Groundwater Mitigation Bank (DGMB). This was as a constitutional
level decision that determined irrigation districts are holders of water right
certificates, not landowners, and irrigation districts have the right to determine if
excess agricultural water can be transferred to another use in the Basin. These
results suggest that there are issues of access and equity within the Deschutes Basin
that need to be further examined.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/
Topic Deschutes
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/40155

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