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Senator Verdell Jackson, Flathead County The Hell
Gate Treaty for the Confederated Salish Kootenai Tribes secured the “right to take fish in common with the citizens
of the Territory”, not a water right; other wise, a group of Montana citizens
could get a water right to protect their favorite place to fish. The Tribes’ right is in common with the citizens of
the Territory. Off-reservation claims do not meet the definition of a federal reserved water right which by law is restricted
to the reservation land. No off reservation water rights have been previously transferred in a compact or case law. Equal protection
under the law is guaranteed in our Constitutional Republic by the Montana and U.S. Constitutions. This means that all the
laws apply equally to citizens both on and off the Reservation. Montana manages river flows and administers water rights for
the benefits of its citizens and is accountable to the rule of law developed by the legislature. Montana cannot turn over
its constitutional and statutory responsibilities
to CSKT a sovereign nation, with its own constitution and different laws that have no accountability to the Montana legislature
or its citizens. The Unitary Management Ordinance of the Compact violates the equal protection clauses of the U.S. and Montana
Constitutions. Individual
State based water rights are transferred to the CSKT in the proposed Compact. The tribe wants more water for in-stream
flow on the Reservation based on a “robust river” standard, not on the survival of fish standard. The increased
in-stream flow water will come from limiting each irrigator to 1.4 acre foot of water for each irrigated acre, (now you know
why the individual water rights are important) and from water efficiency measures such as lining canals. Under state law,
(which would no longer apply) transferring the use of water from irrigation to in-stream flow requires evaluation of the environmental
and economic impacts before a change of use permit can be issued. Taking private water rights violates both the U.S.
and Montana Constitutions. The purpose of the
federal reserved water rights compact is to quantify (justify) the amount of water needed to meet the purposes of the Reservation.
The thousands of water right abstracts(made out to the Federal government and the CSKT)in the
proposed Compact do not justify anything because they are not tied to a purpose of the Reservation such as irrigating additional
acres of land. When the amount of water needed is quantified as required, there is enough water in the Flathead Basin
to meet those needs without taking water from people who grow our food. The Flathead Irrigation Project needs more water
not less. Hungry Horse
dam and all other Federal Dams in Montana have water which can be leased for future development and certainly can be used
to fulfill Reservation purposes. I started the process to lease 100,000 acre feet of water out of Hungry Horse Dam for
future development with Senate Bill 376 in 2007. The Compact contains 90,000 acre feet of this water. Research models
show that 85% of the time the release of 90,000 acre feet of water from Hungry Horse dam would not affect other uses. Dividing
the 90,000 acre feet equally between the State of Montana and CSKT would go a long way in developing a fair and equitable
Compact as required by law. The Montana legislature has not had the research
necessary to properly and responsibly review this proposed Compact,1200 pages, and House Bill 629, 130 pages, because the
Compact Commission has not required legal, environmental, regulatory, or economic assessments to reveal the impacts of this
compact on private property values, future growth, and economic development. Without impact studies, no legislator in
good conscience could pass a document of this magnitude with a $55 million state contribution and the suspicious participation
of the Federal Government |
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