Colorado Code § 37-92-305

Standards with respect to rulings of the referee and decisions of the water judge - definitions
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) In the determination of a water right the priority date awarded
shall be that date on which the appropriation was initiated if the appropriation was completed
with reasonable diligence. If the appropriation was not completed with reasonable diligence
following the initiation thereof, then the priority date thereof shall be that date from which the
appropriation was completed with reasonable diligence.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this article, a particular means or point of diversion of a
water right may also serve as a point or means of diversion for another water right.
(3) (a) A change of water right, implementation of a rotational crop management
contract, or plan for augmentation, including water exchange project, shall be approved if such
change, contract, or plan will not injuriously affect the owner of or persons entitled to use water
under a vested water right or a decreed conditional water right. In cases in which a statement of
opposition has been filed, the applicant shall provide to the referee or to the water judge, as the
case may be, a proposed ruling or decree to prevent such injurious effect in advance of any
hearing on the merits of the application, and notice of such proposed ruling or decree shall be
provided to all parties who have entered the proceedings. If it is determined that the proposed
change, contract, or plan as presented in the application and the proposed ruling or decree would
cause such injurious effect, the referee or the water judge, as the case may be, shall afford the
applicant or any person opposed to the application an opportunity to propose terms or conditions
that would prevent such injurious effect.
(b) Decrees for changes of water rights that implement a contract or agreement for a
lease, loan, or donation of water, water rights, or interests in water to the Colorado water
conservation board for instream flow use under section 37-92-102 (3)(b) shall provide that the
board or the lessor, lender, or donor of the water may bring about beneficial use of the historical
consumptive use of the changed water right downstream of the instream flow reach as fully
consumable reusable water, subject to such terms and conditions as the water court deems
necessary to prevent injury to vested water rights or decreed conditional water rights.
(c) In determining the amount of historical consumptive use for a water right in division
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6, the water judge shall not consider any decrease in use resulting from the
following:
(I) The land on which the water from the water right has been historically applied is
enrolled under a federal land conservation program; 
(II) The nonuse or decrease in use of the water from the water right by its owner for a
maximum of five years in any consecutive ten-year period as a result of participation in:
(A) A water conservation program, including a pilot program, approved in advance by a
water conservation district, water district, water authority, or water conservancy district for lands
that are within the entity's jurisdictional boundaries or by a state agency with explicit statutory
jurisdiction over water conservation or water rights;
(B) A water conservation program, including a pilot program, established through
formal written action or ordinance by a water district, water authority, or municipality or its
municipal water supplier for lands that are within the entity's jurisdictional boundaries;
(C) An approved land fallowing program as provided by law in order to conserve water
or to provide water for compact compliance; or
(D) A water banking program as provided by law; or
(III) Subject to subsection (3)(f) of this section, the decrease in use or nonuse of a water
right owned by an electric utility in division 6 since January 1, 2019, that occurs during the
period beginning January 1, 2019, and ending December 31, 2050; except that any water right,
or portion of a water right, that is leased or loaned by the electric utility to a third party is not
entitled to historical consumptive use protection pursuant to this section for the period that the
water right, or portion of the water right, is subject to the lease or loan.
(d) Quantification of the historical consumptive use of a water right must be based on an
analysis of the actual historical use of the water right for its decreed purposes during a
representative study period that includes wet years, dry years, and average years. The
representative study period:
(I) Must not include undecreed use of the subject water right; and
(II) Need not include every year of the entire history of the subject water right.
(e) If an application is for a change of that portion of a water right for which a previous
change of water right has been judicially approved and for which the historical consumptive use
was previously quantified, the water judge shall not reconsider or requantify the historical
consumptive use. However, the water judge may, without requantifying the historical
consumptive use, impose such terms and conditions on the future use of that portion of the water
right that is the subject of the change as needed to limit the future consumptive use of that
portion of the water right to the previously quantified historical consumptive use.
(f) (I) To qualify for historical consumptive use protection pursuant to subsection
(3)(c)(III) of this section or to qualify for the exception to abandonment pursuant to section 37-
92-103 (2)(c), an electric utility that manages all units of a generating station in division 6 shall,
for itself and on behalf of the other owners of the generating station, file with the division 6
water court an application seeking quantification of the historical consumptive use for the
absolute direct flow water rights serving the generating station. The application must be filed
with the division 6 water court within one year after the date that the final unit of the generating
station is taken offline.
(II) The application described in subsection (3)(f)(I) of this section is a claim for a
determination of a water right, and the division 6 water court has jurisdiction to determine the
historical consumptive use for the absolute direct flow water rights serving the generating station
in accordance with this section using the standards and procedures set forth in sections 37-92-
302, 37-92-303, and 37-92-304 and this section, including standards and procedures related to
notice and participation of opposers; except that a change of water right is not required as a
prerequisite for the quantification of the historical consumptive use by the division 6 water court.
If the division 6 water court enters a decree quantifying the historical consumptive use,
subsection (3)(e) of this section applies to the absolute direct flow water rights.
(III) The quantification of the historical consumptive use by the division 6 water court
described in this subsection (3)(f) may be used in a proceeding to change the water right if and
only if the water right subject to the change will not be diverted to any location east of the
continental divide or sold for use outside of the state of Colorado.
(3.5) Applications for a simple change in a surface point of diversion. (a) For
purposes of this subsection (3.5):
(I) "Intervening surface diversion point or inflow" means any ditch diversion or other
point of diversion for a decreed surface water right, point of replacement or point of diversion by
exchange that is part of an existing decreed exchange, well or well field that is decreed to
operate as a surface diversion, or point of inflow from a tributary surface stream.
(II) "Simple change in a surface point of diversion" means a change in the point of
diversion from a decreed surface diversion point to a new surface diversion point that is not
combined with and does not include any other type of change of water right and for which there
is no intervening surface diversion point or inflow between the new point of diversion and the
diversion point from which a change is being made. "Simple change in a surface point of
diversion" does not include a change of point of diversion from below or within a stream reach
for which there is an intervening surface diversion point or inflow or decreed instream flow right
to an upstream location within or above that reach.
(b) (I) An application for a simple change in a surface point of diversion is subject to all
provisions of this article, including sections 37-92-302 to 37-92-305, except as specifically
modified by this subsection (3.5).
(II) The procedures in this subsection (3.5) apply only to a simple change in a surface
point of diversion and do not change the procedures or legal standards applicable to any other
change of water right.
(III) An application for a simple change in a surface point of diversion may:
(A) Be made with respect to a change of point of diversion that has already been
physically accomplished or with respect to a requested future change of point of diversion;
(B) Be made with respect to an absolute water right or a conditional water right; and
(C) Include one or more water rights that are to be diverted at the new point of diversion.
The application must not include or be consolidated or joined with an action by the applicant
seeking any other type of change of water right or diligence proceeding or application to make
absolute with respect to the water right or rights included in the application.
(c) The applicant bears the initial burden in an application for a simple change in a
surface point of diversion to prove, through the imposition of terms and conditions if necessary,
that the simple change in a surface point of diversion will not:
(I) Result in diversion of a greater flow rate or amount of water than has been decreed to
the water right and, without requantifying the water right, is physically and legally available at
the diversion point from which a change is being made; or
(II) Injuriously affect the owner of or persons entitled to use water under a vested water
right or a decreed conditional water right.
(d) If the applicant makes a prima facie showing with respect to the matters in paragraph
(c) of this subsection (3.5), the case proceeds as a simple change in a surface point of diversion,
the applicant has the burden of persuasion with respect to the elements of its case, including the
matters in paragraph (c) of this subsection (3.5), and the standards of paragraph (e) of this
subsection (3.5) apply. If the applicant does not make such a prima facie showing, the referee or
water judge shall dismiss the application without prejudice to the applicant's filing an application
for a change of water right that is not a simple change in a surface point of diversion.
(e) The following standards apply to a simple change in a surface point of diversion:
(I) There is a rebuttable presumption that a simple change in a surface point of diversion
will not cause an enlargement of the historical use associated with the water rights being
changed.
(II) The decree must not requantify the water rights for which the point of diversion is
being changed.
(III) The applicant, in prosecuting the simple change in a surface point of diversion, is
not required to:
(A) Prove that the water diverted at the new point of diversion can and will be diverted
and put to use within a reasonable period of time;
(B) Prove compliance with the anti-speculation doctrine; or
(C) Provide or make a showing of future need imposed by the cases of Pagosa Area
Water and Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited, 219 P.3d 774 (Colo. 2009), or City of Thornton
v. Bijou Irrigation Co., 926 P.2d 1 (Colo. 1996); except that nothing in this subsection (3.5)
relieves the applicant or its successors in any pending or future diligence application from any of
the requirements for demonstrating diligence in the development of a conditional water right
changed pursuant to this subsection (3.5).
(3.6) Correction to an established but erroneously described point of diversion -
definitions. (a) As used in this subsection (3.6):
(I) "Diverter" means the owner or user of a decreed water right.
(II) "Established but erroneously described point of diversion" means a point of
diversion of either surface water or groundwater:
(A) That has been at the same physical location since the applicable decree or decrees
confirmed the water right, unless it was relocated pursuant to section 37-86-111 or, in the case of
a well, relocated according to a valid well permit. A diversion that has been in the same physical
location since the enactment of the "Adjudication Act of 1943", which was repealed in 1969, has
a rebuttable presumption of having been located at the same physical location since its inception.
(B) That is not located at the location specified in the applicable decree or decrees
confirming the water right; and
(C) From which the diverter has diverted water with the intent to divert pursuant to the
decree or decrees confirming the water right.
(b) A water right is deemed to be diverted at its decreed location and is not erroneously
described if:
(I) With respect to a surface water diversion:
(A) The physical location of the point of diversion is within five hundred feet of the
decreed location; and
(B) Neither a natural surface stream that is tributary to the diverted stream nor another
surface water right is located between the decreed location and its physical location;
(II) With respect to a groundwater diversion, the physical location of the point of
diversion is within two hundred feet of the decreed location, unless the decree specifies a lesser
distance for acceptable variation in location.
(c) To proceed with a correction in point of diversion under this subsection (3.6) for an
established but erroneously described point of diversion that is due to a clerical mistake in the
decree, but does not fall within the three-year period set forth in section 37-92-304 (10) for the
water clerk to correct the mistake, the diverter of the established but erroneously described point
of diversion may file a petition with the water clerk for correction of the clerical mistake within
three years after the diverter became aware of the mistake. The same procedures set forth in
section 37-92-304 (10) apply to corrections in point of diversion under this paragraph (c).
(d) (I) To proceed with a correction in point of diversion under this subsection (3.6) for
an established but erroneously described point of diversion that is not due to a clerical mistake in
the decree, a diverter has the burden to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a point of
diversion is an established but erroneously described point of diversion.
(II) Except as specifically modified by this subsection (3.6), an application for a
correction in an established but erroneously described point of diversion is subject to all
provisions of this article, including sections 37-92-302 to 37-92-305.
(III) The procedures in this subsection (3.6) apply only to a correction in an established
but erroneously described point of diversion and do not alter the procedures or legal standards
applicable to a change of water right.
(IV) A diverter may apply for a correction in an established but erroneously described
point of diversion only:
(A) For a point of diversion that is already in place; and
(B) If one or more water rights are diverted at the corrected point of diversion.
(V) The application must not include or be consolidated or joined with an action by the
applicant seeking any type of change of water right or diligence proceeding or application to
make absolute with respect to the water right or rights included in the application.
(e) If an applicant proves the matters in paragraph (a) of this subsection (3.6) by a
preponderance of the evidence, then there is a rebuttable presumption that a correction in an
established but erroneously described point of diversion:
(I) Will not cause an enlargement of the historical use associated with a water right
diverted at the point of diversion; and
(II) Does not injuriously affect the owner of or persons entitled to use water under a
vested water right or a decreed conditional water right.
(f) If the applicant does not prove the matters in paragraph (a) of this subsection (3.6) or
if the presumptions stated in this subsection (3.6) are successfully rebutted, the referee or water
judge shall dismiss the application without prejudice to the applicant's filing an application for a
change of water right.
(g) The following standards apply to a correction in an established but erroneously
described point of diversion:
(I) The decree must not requantify the water rights for which the erroneously described
point of diversion is being corrected;
(II) The applicant, in prosecuting the correction in the erroneously described point of
diversion, is not required to:
(A) Prove that the water diverted at the corrected point of diversion can and will be
diverted and put to use within a reasonable period of time;
(B) Prove compliance with the anti-speculation doctrine; or
(C) Provide or make a showing of future need imposed by the cases of Pagosa Area
Water and Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited, 219 P.3d 774 (Colo. 2009), or City of Thornton
v. Bijou Irrigation Co., 926 P.2d 1 (Colo. 1996);
(III) The state engineer shall not curtail a diversion based solely on the fact that the point
of diversion is erroneously described; and
(IV) Nothing in this subsection (3.6) modifies the state engineer's authority to make
determinations regarding the administration of water rights and the distribution of water.
(h) During a change of water right case or an abandonment proceeding, if a point of
diversion qualifies as an established but erroneously described point of diversion pursuant to this
subsection (3.6), full consideration of the historical consumptive use of the water right at its
physical location shall not be denied due solely to the fact that the point of diversion is not at its
decreed location.
(4) (a) Terms and conditions to prevent injury as specified in subsection (3) of this
section may include:
(I) (A) A limitation on the use of the water that is subject to the change, taking into
consideration the historical use and the flexibility required by annual climatic differences.
(B) For purposes of determining lawful historical use, if a decree entered before January
1, 1937, establishes an irrigation water right and does not expressly limit the number of acres
that the appropriator may irrigate under the water right, the lawful maximum amount of irrigated
acreage equals the maximum amount of acreage irrigated in compliance with all express
provisions of the decree during the first fifty years after entry of the original decree, unless a
court of competent jurisdiction has entered a final judgment to the contrary. Irrigated acreage not
exceeding the lawful maximum amount and located within a reasonable proximity to the ditch,
including extensions and lateral delivery infrastructure, as constructed within the first fifty-year
period after entry of the original decree, may be included in the historical average in an historical
consumptive use analysis supporting a change of water right application.
(II) The relinquishment of part of the decree for which the change is sought or the
relinquishment of other decrees owned by the applicant that are used by the applicant in
conjunction with the decree for which the change has been requested, if necessary to prevent an
enlargement upon the historical use or diminution of return flow to the detriment of other
appropriators;
(III) A time limitation on the diversion of water for which the change is sought in terms
of months per year;
(IV) If the application is for the implementation of a rotational crop management
contract, separate annual historical consumptive use limits for the parcels to be rotated according
to the historical consumptive use of such lands. To the extent that some or all of the water that is
the subject of the contract is not utilized at a new place of use in a given year, such water may be
utilized on the originally irrigated lands if so provided in the decree and contract and if the
election to irrigate is made prior to the beginning of the irrigation season and applies to the entire
irrigation season. A failure of a party to a rotational crop management contract who is not the
owner of the irrigation water rights that are subject to the contract to put to beneficial use the full
amount of water that was decreed pursuant to the application for approval of the contract shall
not be deemed to reduce the amount of historical consumptive use that the owner of the water
rights has made of the rights.
(V) A term or condition that addresses decreases in water quality caused by a change in
the type of use and permanent removal from irrigation of more than one thousand acre-feet of
consumptive use per year that includes a change in the point of diversion, if the change would
cause an exceedance or contribute to an existing exceedance of water quality standards
established by the water quality control commission pursuant to section 25-8-204, C.R.S., in
effect at the time of the application, or, if ordered by the court, subsequently adopted by the
commission prior to the entry of the decree, for the stream segment at the original point of
diversion. Under any such term or condition, the applicant shall be responsible for only that
portion of the exceedance attributable to the proposed change. Any such term or condition and
any activity to be taken in fulfillment thereof shall not be inconsistent with the "Colorado Water
Quality Control Act", article 8 of title 25, C.R.S., and rules promulgated pursuant to said act, and
implementation of section 303 (d) of the "Federal Water Pollution Control Act" by the water
quality control division. This subparagraph (V) shall not be interpreted to confer standing on any
person to assert injury who would not otherwise have such standing.
(VI) Such other conditions as may be necessary to protect the vested rights of others.
(b) If the water judge approves the implementation of a rotational crop management
contract, the rotational crop management contract shall be recorded with the clerk and recorder
of the county in which the historically irrigated lands are located, and the water judge shall make
affirmative findings that the implementation of the rotational crop management contract:
(I) Is capable of administration by the state and division engineers. In order to satisfy the
requirement of this subparagraph (I), the water judge may require the applicant to provide
signage and mapping of the lands not irrigated on an annual basis.
(II) Will neither expand the historical use of the original water rights nor change the
return flow pattern from the historically irrigated land in a manner that will result in an injurious
effect as specified in subsection (3) of this section; and
(III) Will comply with paragraph (a) of subsection (4.5) of this section with regard to
potential soil erosion, revegetation, and weed management.
(c) With respect to a change-in-use application that seeks approval to change an absolute
decreed irrigation water right used for agricultural purposes to an agricultural water protection
water right, as described in subsection (19) of this section, the decree must:
(I) Quantify the historical diversions and historical consumptive use of the absolute
decreed irrigation water right used for agricultural purposes pursuant to subsection (3) of this
section;
(II) Quantify the return flows associated with the historical use of the water right in time,
place, and amount;
(III) Provide terms and conditions, pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subsection (4), for a
change in the use of the agricultural water protection water right pursuant to a substitute water
supply plan, approved in accordance with sections 37-92-308 (12) and 37-80-123, including the
return flow obligations in time, place, and amount that prevent material injury to other vested
water rights and decreed conditional water rights;
(IV) In accordance with subparagraph (II) of paragraph (b) of subsection (19) of this
section, allow an amount of the quantified historical consumptive portion of water subject to the
changed agricultural water protection water right to be delivered to a point of diversion within
the water division of historical use without designating the beneficial use to which the water will
be applied. Delivery must be to a point of diversion that is approved by the state engineer in
accordance with conditions:
(A) Set forth in section 37-92-308 (12); and
(B) Developed by the state engineer pursuant to section 37-80-123; and
(V) For a period that the water judge deems necessary and desirable to remedy or
preclude injury and pursuant to section 37-92-304 (6), be subject to retained jurisdiction by the
water judge on the question of injury to other vested water rights.
(4.5) (a) The terms and conditions applicable to changes of use of water rights from
agricultural irrigation purposes to other beneficial uses shall include reasonable provisions
designed to accomplish the revegetation and noxious weed management of lands from which
irrigation water is removed. The applicant may, at any time, request a final determination under
the court's retained jurisdiction that no further application of water will be necessary in order to
satisfy the revegetation provisions. Dry land agriculture may not be subject to revegetation order
of the court.
(b) (I) If article 65.1 of title 24, C.R.S., is not applicable to a significant water
development activity, the court may utilize the methods specified in this section to mitigate
certain potential effects of such activity. Subject to the provisions of this article, a court may
impose the following mitigation payments upon any person who files an application for removal
of water as part of a significant water development activity:
(A) Transition mitigation payment. A transition mitigation payment shall equal the
amount of the reduction in property tax revenues for property that is subject to taxation by an
entity listed in section 37-92-302 (3.5) that is attributable to a significant water development
activity. Such payment shall be made on an annual basis in accordance with the repayment
schedule established by the court unless the applicant and the taxing entities mutually agree on
an alternate payment schedule. The county shall certify, as appropriate, to the change applicant
each year the amount of mitigation payment due under this subparagraph (I). Any moneys
collected pursuant to this sub-subparagraph (A) shall be distributed by the board of county
commissioners of the county from which water is removed among the entities in the county in
proportion to the percentage of their share of the total of property taxes for nonbonded
indebtedness purposes.
(B) Bonded indebtedness payment. A bonded indebtedness payment shall be made on
an annual basis in the same manner as mitigation payments and shall be based on the bonded
indebtedness on the property that is to be removed from irrigation at the time the decree is
entered. The bonded indebtedness payment shall be equal to the reduction in bond repayment
revenues that is attributable to the removal of water as part of a significant water development
activity. The court may identify such mitigation payment as part of the decree. Whenever an
application for determination with respect to a change of water rights requires a payment
pursuant to this sub-subparagraph (B), the board of county commissioners of the county from
which water is removed shall distribute any moneys collected among the entities in the county
having bonded indebtedness in proportion to the percentage of their share of the total of such
indebtedness.
(II) Unless the court determines that a greater or lesser period of time would be
appropriate based upon the evidence of record, the amount of the transition mitigation and
bonded indebtedness payments shall be equal to the total reduction in revenues for a period of
thirty years commencing upon the date of initial reductions in such revenues as a consequence of
the removal of water associated with the significant water development activity.
(III) To the extent that there is an increase in the property tax or bonded indebtedness
revenues after the date of the commencement of the payment obligations identified under sub-
subparagraphs (A) and (B) of subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (b) as a consequence of a
change in land use and accompanying modification of the assessed valuation of the land, such
payment obligations shall be correspondingly reduced.
(IV) When determining the amount to be paid pursuant to this paragraph (b), if any, the
court shall take into consideration any evidence of a beneficial impact to the county from which
the water is to be diverted and shall adjust the amount of the payment accordingly.
(c) Paragraph (b) of this subsection (4.5) shall not apply to:
(I) Any removal of water involving water rights owned by the applicant prior to August
6, 2003; any removal of water that was accomplished prior to August 6, 2003; any removal of
water for which an application for a change of water rights was pending in the water court on
such date; or any removal of water for which a decree has been entered that continues to be
subject to the water court's retained jurisdiction;
(II) Any removal of water when:
(A) Such change is undertaken by a water conservancy district, water conservation
district, special district, ditch company, other ditch organization, or municipality;
(B) The water was beneficially used within the boundaries or service area of such entity
before the removal; and
(C) The water will continue to be beneficially used within such entity's boundaries or
service area after the removal; or
(III) Any removal of water where the new place of use is within a twenty-mile radius of
the historic place of use, even though such new place is located within a different county. For
purposes of this subparagraph (III), the distance between the historic place of use and the
proposed new place of use shall be measured between the most proximate points in the
respective areas.
(5) In the case of plans for augmentation including exchange, the supplier may take an
equivalent amount of water at his point of diversion or storage if such water is available without
impairing the rights of others. Any substituted water shall be of a quality and quantity so as to
meet the requirements for which the water of the senior appropriator has normally been used,
and such substituted water shall be accepted by the senior appropriator in substitution for water
derived by the exercise of his decreed rights.
(6) (a) In the case of an application for determination of a water right or a conditional
water right, a determination with respect to a change of a water right or approval of a plan for
augmentation, which requires construction of a well, other than a well described in section 37-
90-137 (4), the referee or the water judge, as the case may be, shall consider the findings of the
state engineer, made pursuant to section 37-90-137, which granted or denied the well permit and
the consultation report of the state engineer or division engineer submitted pursuant to section
37-92-302 (2)(a). The referee or water judge may thereupon grant a final or conditional decree if
the construction and use of any well proposed in the application will not injuriously affect the
owner of, or persons entitled to use, water under a vested water right or decreed conditional
water right. If the court grants a final or conditional decree, the state engineer shall issue a well
permit. Except in cases in which the state engineer or division engineer is a party, all findings of
fact contained in the consultation report concerning the presence or absence of injurious effect
shall be presumptive as to such facts, subject to rebuttal by any party.
(b) In the case of wells described in section 37-90-137 (4), the referee or water judge
shall consider the state engineer's determination as to such groundwater as described in section
37-92-302 (2) in lieu of findings made pursuant to section 37-90-137, and shall require evidence
of compliance with the provisions of section 37-92-302 (2) regarding notice to persons with
recorded interests in the overlying land. The state engineer's findings of fact contained within
such determination shall be presumptive as to such facts, subject to rebuttal by any party.
(c) Any application in water division 3 that involves new withdrawals of groundwater
that will affect the rate or direction of movement of water in the confined aquifer system shall be
permitted pursuant to a plan of augmentation that, in addition to all other lawful requirements for
such plans, shall recognize that unappropriated water is not made available and injury is not
prevented as a result of the reduction of water consumption by nonirrigated native vegetation. In
any such augmentation plan decree, the court shall also retain jurisdiction for the purpose of
revising such decree to comply with the rules and regulations promulgated by the state engineer
pursuant to section 37-90-137 (12)(b)(I), as it existed prior to July 1, 2004.
(7) Prior to the cancellation or expiration of a conditional water right granted pursuant to
a conditional decree, the court wherein such decree was granted shall give notice, within not less
than sixty-three days nor more than ninety-one days, by certified or registered mail to all persons
to whom such conditional right was granted, at the last-known address appearing on the records
of such court.
(8) (a) Except as specified in paragraph (b) of this subsection (8), in reviewing a
proposed plan for augmentation and in considering terms and conditions that may be necessary
to avoid injury, the referee or the water judge shall consider the depletions from an applicant's
use or proposed use of water, in quantity and in time, the amount and timing of augmentation
water that would be provided by the applicant, and the existence, if any, of injury to any owner
of or persons entitled to use water under a vested water right or a decreed conditional water
right.
(b) As to decrees for plans for augmentation entered in water division 1 on or after
August 5, 2009, the plan shall not require the replacement of out-of-priority depletions currently
affecting the river caused by pumping that occurred prior to March 15, 1974. In the case of an
amended plan for augmentation applied for pursuant to this paragraph (b), the water judge may
review all of the terms and conditions of the plan.
(c) A plan for augmentation must be sufficient to permit the continuation of diversions
when curtailment would otherwise be required to meet a valid senior call for water, to the extent
that the applicant shall provide replacement water necessary to meet the lawful requirements of a
senior diverter at the time and location and to the extent the senior diverter would be deprived of
the senior diverter's lawful entitlement by the applicant's diversion. A proposed plan for
augmentation that relies upon a supply of augmentation water that, by contract or otherwise, is
limited in duration shall not be denied solely upon the ground that the supply of augmentation
water is limited in duration, if the terms and conditions of the plan prevent injury to vested water
rights. The terms and conditions must require replacement of out-of-priority depletions that
occur after any groundwater diversions cease. Decrees approving plans for augmentation must
require that the state engineer curtail all out-of-priority diversions, the depletions from which are
not so replaced as to prevent injury to vested water rights. A plan for augmentation, including a
Colorado water conservation board plan to augment streamflows pursuant to section 37-92-102,
may provide procedures to allow additional or alternative sources of augmentation or
replacement water, including water leased on a yearly or less frequent basis, to be used in the
plan after the initial decree is entered if the use of the additional or alternative sources is part of a
substitute water supply plan approved pursuant to section 37-92-308 or if such sources are
decreed for such use.
(9) (a) No claim for a water right may be recognized or a decree therefor granted except
to the extent that the waters have been diverted, stored, or otherwise captured, possessed, and
controlled and have been applied to a beneficial use, but nothing in this section shall affect
appropriations by the state of Colorado for minimum streamflows as described in section 37-92-
103 (4).
(b) No claim for a conditional water right may be recognized or a decree therefor
granted except to the extent that it is established that the waters can be and will be diverted,
stored, or otherwise captured, possessed, and controlled and will be beneficially used and that
the project can and will be completed with diligence and within a reasonable time.
(c) No water right or conditional water right for the storage of water in underground
aquifers shall be recognized or decreed except to the extent water in such an aquifer has been
placed there by other than natural means by a person having a conditional or decreed right to
such water.
(10) If an application filed under section 37-92-302 for approval of an existing exchange
of water is approved, the original priority date or priority dates of the exchange shall be
recognized and preserved unless such recognition or preservation would be contrary to the
manner in which such exchange has been administered.
(11) Nontributary groundwater shall not be administered in accordance with priority of
appropriation, and determinations of rights to nontributary groundwater need not include a date
of initiation of the withdrawal project. Such determinations shall not require subsequent
showings or findings of reasonable diligence, and such determinations entered prior to July 1,
1985, which require such showings or findings shall not be enforced to the extent of such
diligence requirements on or after said date. The water judge shall retain jurisdiction as to
determinations of groundwater from wells described in section 37-90-137 (4) as necessary to
provide for the adjustment of the annual amount of withdrawal allowed to conform to actual
local aquifer characteristics from adequate information obtained from well drilling or test holes.
Such decree shall then control the determination of the quantity of annual withdrawal allowed in
the well permit as provided in section 37-90-137 (4). Rights to the use of groundwater from
wells described in section 37-90-137 (4) pursuant to all such determinations shall be deemed to
be vested property rights; except that nothing in this section shall preclude the general assembly
from authorizing or imposing limitations on the exercise of such rights for preventing waste,
promoting beneficial use, and requiring reasonable conservation of such groundwater.
(12) (a) In determining the quantity of water required in an augmentation plan to replace
evaporation from groundwater exposed to the atmosphere in connection with the extraction of
sand and gravel by open mining as defined in section 34-32-103 (9), C.R.S., there shall be no
requirement to replace the amount of historic natural depletion to the waters of the state, if any,
caused by the preexisting natural vegetative cover on the surface of the area which will be, or
which has been, permanently replaced by an open water surface. The applicant shall bear the
burden of proving the historic natural depletion.
(b) No person who obtains or operates a plan for augmentation or plan of substitute
supply prior to July 1, 1989, shall be required to make replacement for the depletions from
evaporation exempted in this subsection (12) or otherwise replace water for increased calls
which may result therefrom.
(c) In determining the quantity of water required in an augmentation plan to replace
stream depletions in connection with any mining operation as defined in section 34-32-103 (8),
C.R.S., for which a reclamation permit has been obtained as set forth in section 34-32-109,
C.R.S., there is no requirement to replace the amount of historic natural depletion to the waters
of the state, if any, caused by the preexisting natural vegetative cover and evaporation on the
surface of the area that will be, or that has been, eliminated or made impermeable as part of the
permitted mining operation. The applicant bears the burden of proving the historic natural
depletion.
(13) (a) The water court shall consider the findings of fact made by the Colorado water
conservation board pursuant to section 37-92-102 (6)(b) regarding a recreational in-channel
diversion, which findings shall be presumptive as to such facts, subject to rebuttal by any party.
In addition, the water court shall consider evidence and make affirmative findings that the
recreational in-channel diversion will:
(I) Not materially impair the ability of Colorado to fully develop and place to
consumptive beneficial use its compact entitlements;
(II) Promote maximum utilization of waters of the state;
(III) Include only that reach of stream that is appropriate for the intended use;
(IV) Be accessible to the public for the recreational in-channel use proposed; and
(V) Not cause material injury to instream flow water rights appropriated pursuant to
section 37-92-102 (3) and (4).
(b) In determining whether the intended recreation experience is reasonable and the
claimed amount is the appropriate flow for any period, the water court shall consider all of the
factors that bear on the reasonableness of the claim, including the flow needed to accomplish the
claimed recreational use, benefits to the community, the intent of the appropriator, stream size
and characteristics, and total streamflow available at the control structures during the period or
any subperiods for which the application is made.
(c) If a water court determines that a proposed recreational in-channel diversion would
materially impair the ability of Colorado to fully develop and place to consumptive beneficial
use its compact entitlements, the court shall deny the application.
(d) In addition to determining the minimum amount of streamflow to serve the
applicant's intended and specified reasonable recreation experience, the water court shall make a
finding in the decree as to the flow rate below which there is no longer any beneficial use of the
water at the control structures for the decreed purposes.
(e) If the other elements of the appropriation are satisfied, the decree shall specify the
total volume of water represented by the flow rates decreed for the recreational in-channel
diversion. For purposes of this subsection (13), the "total volume of water represented by the
flow rates decreed for the recreational in-channel diversion" means the sum of the flow rates
claimed in cubic feet per second for each day on which a claim is made multiplied by 1.98.
(f) If the court determines that the total volume of water represented by the flow rates
decreed for the recreational in-channel diversion exceeds fifty percent of the sum of the total
average historical volume of water for the stream segment where the recreational in-channel
diversion is located for each day on which a claim is made, the decree shall:
(I) Specify that the state engineer shall not administer a call for the recreational in-
channel diversion unless the call would result in at least eighty-five percent of the decreed flow
rate for the applicable time period;
(II) Limit the recreational in-channel diversion to no more than three time periods; and
(III) Specify that each time period is limited to one flow rate.
(14) No decree shall be entered adjudicating a change of conditional water rights to a
recreational in-channel diversion.
(15) Water rights for recreational in-channel diversions, when held by a municipality or
others, shall not constitute a use of water for domestic purposes as described in section 6 of
article XVI of the state constitution.
(16) In the case of an application for recreational in-channel diversions filed by a county,
municipality, city and county, water district, water and sanitation district, water conservation
district, or water conservancy district filed on or after January 1, 2001, the applicant shall retain
its original priority date for such a right, but shall submit a copy of the application to the
Colorado water conservation board for review and recommendation as provided in section 37-
92-102 (6). The board's recommendation shall become a part of the record to be considered by
the water court as provided in subsection (13) of this section.
(17) (a) Applicants for approval of a rotational crop management contract shall pay the
state engineer the following fees:
(I) An application fee of one thousand seven hundred thirty-four dollars;
(II) A fee of six hundred seventeen dollars that is due annually beginning one year after
submittal of the application until the application has been decreed by the water judge pursuant to
section 37-92-308 (4); and
(III) An annual fee of three hundred dollars per year after the application has been
decreed.
(b) The state engineer shall transmit the fees to the state treasurer, who shall deposit
them in the water resources cash fund created in section 37-80-111.7 (1).
(18) In the case of an augmentation plan that includes the construction of a recharge
structure, the division engineer shall provide, as part of the summary of consultation report
described in section 37-92-302 (4), an analysis of potential changes in the groundwater levels
downgradient of the proposed recharge structure resulting from the operation of the recharge
structure, and the court and referee shall consider the division engineer's analysis.
(19) Agricultural water protection - definitions. (a) (I) After the state engineer's
proposed rules promulgated under section 37-80-123 are reviewed and finalized pursuant to
section 37-80-123 (1)(c) and after the Colorado water conservation board has finalized the
criteria and guidelines developed pursuant to section 37-60-133, the owner of an absolute
decreed irrigation water right used for agricultural purposes may apply in water court to change
the use of the water right to an agricultural water protection water right. As used in this section,
an "agricultural water protection water right" means a water right decreed to allow the lease,
loan, or trade of up to fifty percent of the water subject to the water right.
(II) After a person has obtained a decreed agricultural water protection water right, the
person may apply for substitute water supply plan approval pursuant to section 37-92-308 (12).
(b) If the owner of a decreed agricultural water protection water right obtains a substitute
water supply plan pursuant to section 37-92-308 (12), the agricultural water protection water
right is subject to the following conditions:
(I) The owner of a decreed agricultural water protection water right must comply with
the terms of the decree governing the point of diversion where the leased, loaned, or traded water
is being delivered;
(II) The owner may lease, loan, or trade up to fifty percent of the quantified historical
consumptive use portion of the agricultural water protection water right;
(III) Any amount of water not being leased, loaned, or traded must continue to be used
for agricultural purposes:
(A) On the property historically decreed to be served by the original absolute decreed
irrigation water right; or
(B) For as long as the other portion of water is being leased, loaned, or exchanged, on
another property served by the same ditch system;
(IV) The owner of the agricultural water protection water right is required to participate
in one or more of the following programs:
(A) As established by the federal government, the state, a subdivision of the state, or a
nonprofit organization, conservation programs that conserve the land historically served by the
irrigation water right, which programs include Colorado's conservation easement program
established in article 30.5 of title 38, C.R.S., the United States fish and wildlife service easement
program, the Natural Resources Conservation Services easement program, the Colorado division
of parks and wildlife easement program, and a county open space easement program; or
(B) An agricultural water protection program designed to assure compliance with the
terms of subparagraph (III) of this paragraph (b). The program must be sponsored and operated
by an eligible entity through a formal action or ordinance and in compliance with minimum
criteria and guidelines established by the Colorado water conservation board pursuant to section
37-60-133. An eligible entity may enroll agricultural water protection water rights only from a
water right historically decreed within the entity's geographic boundary.
(V) If the owner's participation in a conservation program pursuant to subparagraph (IV)
of this paragraph (b) ceases, the owner's eligibility to transfer water subject to the agricultural
water protection water right by lease, loan, or trade or to obtain a substitute water supply plan
pursuant to section 37-92-308 (12) is suspended, and the water must be used only for agricultural
irrigation purposes on the property historically decreed to be served by the original absolute
decreed irrigation water right until the owner participates in one of the conservation programs
again; and
(VI) The owner shall not lease, loan, or trade water subject to the agricultural water
protection water right outside of the water division where the historical consumptive use was
located.
(c) As used in this subsection (19), an "eligible entity" means an entity that:
(I) Has geographic boundaries that are located entirely within the water division of the
water right's historical place of use and are defined in an original or amended document
governing the entity; and
(II) Is a water conservation district, water conservancy district, irrigation district, ditch
or reservoir company, nonprofit water provider, or municipality.
(20) Limited applicability of St. Jude's Co. case - legislative declaration. The
provisions in the Colorado supreme court's decision in St. Jude's Co. v. Roaring Fork Club, LLC,
351 P.3d 442 (Colo. 2015), interpreting section 37-92-103 (4), do not apply to absolute and
conditional water rights for which a decree was entered as of July 15, 2015. Rights which would
be subject to the Colorado supreme court's interpretation of section 37-92-103 (4) in the St.
Jude's Co. case but for this subsection (20) are valid and shall be given full force and effect.
Such rights may be maintained through findings of reasonable diligence and made absolute, and
augmentation plans related to such rights may be approved, in accordance with Colorado law.
Changes of such rights must be limited to changes in points of diversion made in accordance
with the provisions of this section.

‹ Prev All Colorado sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.