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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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Hung Out to Dry? Groups Shut Out of Water Decision

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Friday, July 11, 2008   

Las Vega, NV — Conservation groups, ranchers and Native American tribes are calling "unfair" a ruling that will not allow their testimony over the planned diversion of billions of gallons of water from Snake Valley to Las Vegas. Nevada's State Water Engineer says the groups don't qualify to testify.

But, says Susan Lynn, coordinator for the Great Basin Water Network, one of eleven groups denied official status, those groups are very concerned about being left out.

"They're all concerned about the withdrawal of water from Snake Valley as it directly affects them, the park, their agriculture, their lifestyle, and their potential to earn a living."

The State Water Engineer also denied standing to the Confederated Tribes of the Goshutes Reservation, saying their interests could be represented by the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs. The tribes' vice chairman, Ed Naranjo, disagrees.

"The state's water engineer doesn't understand what's going on. He assumes the Bureau of Indian Affairs is representing us, and they're not."

Naranjo says he doesn't see how his tribe is not an "interested party." He says his tribe is tied to the reservation land by a trust and they have spiritual, agricultural and economic needs for the water.

"The Southern Nevada Water Authority has purchased land from ranchers around the reservation, and we can't sell ours, so if there's no water, we've got nowhere to live."

State Water Engineer Tracy Taylor sided with the Southern Nevada Water Authority's decision, saying the groups didn't file an official protest 20 years ago when the $3.5-billion Las Vegas Pipeline was first proposed.

Several groups say they are considering an appeal.






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