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Reporting on science, technology and innovation in Arizona and the Southwest through a collaboration from Arizona NPR member stations. This project is funded in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.Additional stories from the Arizona Science Desk are posted at our collaborating station, KJZZ: http://kjzz.org/science

Arizona Town Hall Begins Next Week, With A Focus On Water

Water issues fill the agenda for the Arizona Town Hall meeting in Mesa Nov. 15-18.

The meeting is a statewide effort to draft a report addressing water resources in the state, including recommendations for future use.

Arizona Town Hall participants will collectively address questions such as “How well has Arizona managed the use of water?” and “What actions would have the most beneficial impact on Arizona’s water needs?”

A representative for the City of Yuma, utilities director Jay Simonton, said he looks forward to learning how other Southwestern communities provide water with environmental stewardship in mind.

“We’re under mandates or the need to provide water conservation, but at the same time the selling of water is what brings us the revenue to operate the system,” Simonton said. “So it’s a catch-22 for us.”

Yuma participants provide the perspective of an economy with a heavy reliance on both agriculture and water from the Colorado River.

“[Without agriculture] this whole town would dry up and disappear,” said Bruce Gwynn, director of the Yuma Fresh Vegetable Association. “I’m sorry that’s just the way it’d be when you take away your prime source of making a living.”

Gwynn sees the town hall as an opportunity to describe farmers’ efforts to increase water efficiency, as well as to hear pressing concerns from other parts of the state.

Just across the Colorado River, Jeff Kightlinger manages the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which covers six counties and includes San Diego and Los Angeles. He’s attending the town hall as an invited speaker and says his goal is to see more discussions about water among Western states.

“We’re using more than is coming in, we can’t keep doing that. It’s simply not sustainable,” Kightlinger said. “We’re going to have to sit down with each other as the basin states on the Colorado River and come up with a long-term plan.”

The final Arizona Town Hall report will be published online after the meeting.