Nevada fight over leaky irrigation canal and groundwater more complicated than appears on surface

FILE — Water flows through a control gate on an irrigation canal in Fernley, Nev., near Reno on March 18, 2021. A U.S. appeals court has breathed new life into a rural Nevada's town's unusual bid to halt government repairs to an aging, federal irrigation canal that burst and flooded nearly 600 homes 15 years ago. The town of Fernley, area farmers and ranchers in the high desert 30 miles (48 kilometers) east of Reno say the renovation that finally began this year might help guard against another failure of the 118-year-old earthen canal. (AP Photo/Scott Sonner, File)

RENO, Nev. (AP) — Water conflicts are nothing new to the arid West, where myriad users long have vied for their share of the precious resource from California's Central Valley to the Colorado and Missouri rivers.

But few have waded into the legal question playing out in rural Nevada: To what extent can local residents, farmers and ranchers claim the water that is soaking into the ground through the dirt floor of an antiquated, unlined irrigation canal?

The ɫtv Press. All rights reserved.

More Environment Stories

Sign Up to Newsletters

Get the latest from ɫtvNews in your inbox. Select the emails you're interested in below.