water rights
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
water rights in law, the qualified privilege of a landowner to use the water adjacent to or flowing through his property. The privilege, also known as riparian rights, may be modified or even denied because of the competing needs of other private-property holders or of the community at large. There is no private ownership of such water in most cases, and hence it cannot ordinarily be impounded and sold. The owner, however, may use the water for his ordinary private purposes, such as stock watering or irrigation, and then return the unused residue. Most uses of water affect its purity to some degree, and recent environmental legislation has greatly restricted the amount of permissible water-use pollution. Water projects such as dams that threaten the survival of rare species can be blocked under the Endangered Species Act. In certain parts of the United States—especially in the arid and semiarid regions of the Southwest—the prior appropriation rule applies, and the first user of water, whether or not he owns land abutting the water, has the unrestrained right to it without regard to his neighbor's needs. Throughout the United States, the rights of private owners in water can be set aside to construct public works, such as dams and irrigation projects. The ownership of a stream bed may depend upon whether the stream is or is not a navigable water . If it is navigable, some states claim title to the bed, whereas in other states the rule is the same as in the case of nonnavigable streams, namely that an abutting owner's property extends to the middle of the bed and that those with property along both banks of a stretch own the enclosed portion of the bed. If the stream is navigable, the owner must permit public use for passage and transportation; if it is nonnavigable, the owner may exclude all but other riparian owners from using the stream. If the stream shifts course, ownership of the former bed is not affected. Underground and percolating waters have no easily determined course, and the usual American practice is not to restrict a landowner who taps and exploits these waters; however, in some states the rights of those who may be adversely affected must be considered.
Bibliography: See S. Bhatt, Environmental Laws and Water Resources Management (1986).
Author not available, WATER RIGHTS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Law change clouds water rights.
ORian (Portland, OR); 11/2/2006; 843 words
; ... Tualatin Valley's request for an extension of its water rights snagged along with those of dozens of other ... species. The Fish and Wildlife Department reviews water rights extensions before they can be approved by the Water Resources Department. Rick Kepler, Fish and Wildlife's water ...
Read more
|
|
Water for sale?: State wants to buy spring water rights near Hagerman.
Times-News (Twin Falls, Idaho); 2/21/2007; 434 words
; ... right-holders to fill senior holders' decreed rights. Water calls sometimes end in costly lawsuits, and Anderson said everyone involved in water disputes is tired of spending thousands of dollars on attorneys. Water-right holders can subordinate their rights to the board, which essentially ...
Read more
|
|
Aurora, Colo., Expected to Agree to Delay in Water-Rights Trial.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 10/18/2002; 560 words
; ... Chieftain, Colo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Oct. 18--Aurora is expected to agree to postpone ... application to buy and transfer Rocky Ford Ditch water rights, according to an attorney for the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District. After the Southeastern ... which has been ...
Read more
|
|
Coloradans Guess about Mystery Bidder for Canal Land and Water Rights.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 12/13/2001; 653 words
; ... Chieftain, Colo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Dec. 13--Much is already known or suspected about ... investor offering to buy up Fort Lyon Canal land and water shares in the Arkansas Valley. John Lefferdink ... said. If I can leverage $35 million worth of water for $500,000 and go to some ultimate ...
Read more
|
|
Jump right in - the water's just fine
Chicago Sun-Times; 7/7/1986; 2 words
; ((PHOTO CAPTION))
Read more
|
|
NEW RULES FOR RIVERS COLORADO SUPREME COURT GUARANTEES WATER RIGHTS FOR RECREATIONISTS.
Rocky Mountain News; 5/20/2003; 2 words
; Caption text only.
Read more
|
|
U.S. OPEN A test of will to win Some players chasing history at Oakland Hills; U.S. OPEN HOLE-BY HOLE DESCRIPTION Hole-by-hole description of the South Course at Oakland Hills Country Club, site of the 96th U.S. Open, Thursday-next Sunday: No. 1, 433 yards, par 4: Elevated tee to a tight landing area framed by bunkers left and right. Green, with tongue to the back-right, is protected by a swale. Rough guarding entrance to the green has been cut back for the championship. No. 2, 523 yards, par 5: Birdie is possible on this dogleg left if the drive avoids fairway bunkers and sets up a long second shot to the green. Otherwise, players will lay up in front of the four bunkers protecting the front of the green and face a delicate pitch to a two-tiered green. Upper tier slopes away from the approach. No. 3, 194 yards, par 3: Usually demands a long iron into the prevailing wind. Two deep bunkers guard the left side. If pin is cut on the small plateau at back of green, par will be a good score. No. 4, 430 yards, par 4: Landing area just 24 yards wide. Tee shots hit right of the cluster of bunkers on the inside of the dogleg can catch the slope of the fairway and end up in either of two bunkers to right of landing area. A safe drive leaves an approach that plays shorter than the yardage, as green lies below the fairway. No. 5, 455 yards, par 4: Another tight driving hole with trees guarding left side of fairway and two bunkers guarding the right. Green is among the toughest on course. Entrance is protected by deep bunkers left and right while the green itself slopes down from back to front and has severe contours and crowns. Creek that crosses fairway shouldn't come into play. No. 6, 356 yards, par 4: Shortest par 4 on course. Many players will hit 3-wood from tee, taking bunkers to left of fairway out of play. Deepest green on course. Putting surface split into two tiers with higher portion demanding tough carry. No. 7, 405 yards, par 4: Dogleg right. Players may lay up from tee to avoid a trio of bunkers on left and lateral water hazard on right. Green slopes gently from back to front. Deep bunkers protect left side of green. No. 8, 440 yards, par 4: Toughest driving hole on front nine has pairs of bunkers pinching fairway on each side of landing area. Lip of first bunker on left is too high to allow anything but short-iron layup. Pitch out is only recovery possible from clump of trees farther to left. Uphill approach demands fairway wood or long iron to moderately contoured green guarded by bunkers left and right. No. 9, 220 yards, par 3: Requires long iron or fairway wood to large undulating green that runs on a diagonal from left to right. With its contours, small crown in middle-right and terrace running along the left of putting surface from front to back, some 3-putt bogeys likely. No. 10, 450 yards, par 4: Long iron or fairway wood from elevated tee will avoid three bunkers that line the landing area, plus the steep slope beyond the bunkers. Ball-catching gradient could easily roll into thick rough. Uphill second shot to green with a ridge running through the center. Deep bunker guards the right while the bunker left of green is relatively shallow. No. 11, 399 yards, par 4: Fairway left of bunkers guarding the crook of the slight dogleg right is ideal landing area for short-iron approach. Long, narrow green is flanked on each side by two deep bunkers. Club selection is crucial on approach because back tier of green is four feet higher than the front tier. No. 12, 560 yards, par 5: Tee on South Course's longest hole stands 40 feet above a wide landing area, with a cluster of bunkers left of fairway. Most players will leave their second shots short of a bunker some 70 yards left of the green and try to get up and down on a green that has a ridge running steeply from front-right to back-left. No. 13, 170 yards, par 3: Deep bowl in the front of the green places a premium on club selection to any pin position on the back half of green. Very difficult to keep shot from bunker behind green on the back terrace. No. 14, 4
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 6/9/1996; RON SIRAK; 720 words
; The British Open is the oldest. The Masters, the only one played on the same course every year, produces the most drama. And the PGA springs from the beginnings of American professional golf. But the U.S. Open demands a particular kind of champion. The most grueling of the four major championships,
Read more
|
|
Water-Right. (Appointment ...).(named Frank Stevens sales representative for the Southeastern region )(Brief Article)
Supply House Times; 5/1/2002; Lenius, Pat; 27 words
; Water-Right named Frank Stevens sales representative for the Southeastern region which includes Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, and parts of Arkansas and Louisiana.
Read more
|
|
Water Right.(Web Sites To Watch ...)(www.water-right.com)(Brief Article)
Supply House Times; 11/1/2004; Anderson, Ashley; 49 words
; Water Right, a manufacturer of water treatment products, launched a new site: www.water-right.com. It has drop-down menus addressing common water problems in residential, commercial and industrial applications. A dealers only section supplies industry ...
Read more
|
|
Rep. Maxine Waters (D., Calif.) regrets that her mother lacked the right to an abortion.(The Week)
National Review; 5/17/2004; 20 words
; * Rep. Maxine Waters (D., Calif.) regrets that her mother lacked the right to an abortion. We're thinking, we're thinking . . .
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Rights, Public Water
Water:Science and Issues
... The public trust doctrine; Reserved water rights; and Public interest protection. Navigation ... occurred in California when the private water rights of Los Angeles were restricted to provide ... that interferes with existing private water rights. The public trust doctrine protects ...
Read more
|
|
territorial waters
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... status of the sea. Though the doctrine that the sea must be free to all was upheld, a nation's jurisdiction over its coastal ... territorial limit of 12 nautical mi (22 km) from shore. Territorial rights include the airspace above those waters and the seabed below ...
Read more
|
|
Instream Water Issues
Water:Science and Issues
... ecological, and economic impacts. Instream Water Rights and Protection As science and the public ... This act effectively reserves federal water rights that limit future development. However ... approaches to managing and protecting fresh-water systems are sought. Consequently, legal ...
Read more
|
|
Legislation, State and Local Water
Water:Science and Issues
... especially paramount in allocating water rights. Water-rich eastern states adopted the common-l ... doctrine to allow the state to obtain water rights to protect instream flows and other ... public land regardless of stategranted water rights. Regional and Local Water ...
Read more
|
|
Arts, Water in the
Water:Science and Issues
... appealing, or threatening in themselves; alternately, water (e.g., the sea) may be a metaphor for birth and rebirth ... following discussion briefly highlights some components of water primarily within the Western arts, from ancient times ... Other notable English-language literary works with a water focus ...
Read more
|