AREA 71 - ESCALANTE VALLEY

Updated: March 31, 2011

  MANAGEMENT

Water rights in this area were compiled into a Proposed Determination of Water Rights in 1947. This publication was superceded by the subsequent completion of five books in the Escalante Valley Division of the Beaver River/Escalante Valley Adjudication filed with the Fifth Judicial District Court as follows: Enterprise area in 1963, Beryl area in 1964, Milford area in 1964, Millard County area in 1964, and a supplemental book in 1965. A pre-trial order was issued in 1970. Two state-administered distribution system cover this area; the Beryl-Enterprise Distribution System is administered by the Beryl-Enterprise Commissioner, while the Milford Distribution System is administered by the Milford Area Commissioner. Click here to see statistics for this area.

  SOURCES

Surface Water: Surface waters of the area are considered to be fully appropriated. New surface diversions and uses must be accomplished by change applications based on valid existing water rights. Fixed-time projects involving surface waters must be accomplished by temporary change applications on valid existing water rights, which require annual renewal. Change applications involving a transfer between surface and ground-water sources are generally not allowed.

Ground Water: Most of the area is closed to new appropriations with the exception of the northernmost portion. New ground-water diversions and uses must be accomplished by change applications based on valid existing water rights. Fixed-time projects involving ground water must be accomplished by temporary change applications on valid existing water rights, which require annual renewal. For ground-water administration, the area has been divided into five districts, each with some unique policies. Click here to see a map of these policy areas (PDF format)

    1.) Heavily Pumped (primarily in T36S, R16W). This district is a roughly triangular "basin" located within the larger Beryl-New Castle area. It is generally that area between Highway 56 on the northeast, the "Bench Road" on the southeast, and the "Mine Road" on the west. Change applications proposing to move water within this district or from this district to the lesser pumped surrounding area are typically approved.
    2.) Beryl-New Castle (T33S to T37S, R15W to R17W). No new appropriations are approved for this district. Change applications proposing to move ground-water rights from this district into the "Heavily Pumped" district, where water levels have declined 60 feet since 1960, will be denied. Changes proposing to move ground-water rights to the Nada- Lund district to the north are reviewed individually and could be approved. The New Castle vicinity has some geothermal resources being used for greenhouse heating. Additional geothermal applications are reviewed carefully as further information is developed regarding the capacity of the geothermal resource.
    3.) Nada-Lund (T31S to T35S, R11W to R15W). No new appropriations are approved due to declining water levels. Applications proposing to move underground water rights from the adjacent Milford or Beryl-New Castle districts into this district are reviewed on their individual merits and may be approved.
    4.) Milford (T27S to T31S, R10W to R13W). No new appropriations are approved due to declining water levels. There is an active geothermal development in the vicinity of Roosevelt Hot Springs. Long-term data on the size and longevity of the geothermal resource is not yet available. Transfers of water rights southward from the Black Rock district or northward from the Nada-Lund district into the Milford district, are generally not permitted.
    5.) Black Rock (T23S to T27S, R8W to R11W). In this district, which includes the Cove Fort area, small appropriations for isolated domestic and stockwatering wells have been approved with acre- foot limitations. Such small filings are typically limited to the requirements of one family, 1/4 acre of irrigation and 10 head of livestock (1.73acre-feet) or the equivalent in other beneficial uses. Applications are generally approved upon a showing of immediate need for water and the presumptions that the applicant has all the necessary resources and authorities to diligently develop the proposed beneficial uses of the water and file proof. Typically, a period of five years is allowed for full development with extensions of time granted only under unique circumstances clearly beyond the control of the applicant. Temporary, fixed-time, or non- consumptive appropriations are reviewed on their individual merits and may be approved. Larger filings for permanent appropriation are being held unapproved pending the acquisition of better information on the available resource. Specific projects could be approved depending on their location and nature, particularly in the case of deep bedrock wells for geothermal purposes. There is active geothermal development in the vicinity of Cove Fort and Sulphurdale, but long-term resource data is not yet available.

  GENERAL

Applications are advertised in the Millard County Chronicle, the Beaver Press, or the Spectrum/Daily News, depending on their location. Filing that may involve the diversion of water in Utah for use in Nevada (export) would be subject to the special criteria the statutes require for such projects. The general irrigation diversion duty for this area, which the State Engineer uses for evaluation purposes, is 4.0 acre-feet per acre per year. The consumptive use requirement is determined from the publication Consumptive Use of Irrigated Crops in Utah, Research Report 145, Utah State University, 1994, unless the applicant submits other data for consideration. This area is administered by the Southwest Regional Office in Cedar City.

Other Requirements

The Water Right applicant is strongly cautioned that other permits may be required before any physical development of a project can begin and it is the responsibility of the applicant to determine the applicability of and acquisition of such permits. In order to avoid delays and ensure that Water Right approvals conform to applicable local ordinances, applicants should contact local governmental entities in advance to determine what ordinances are in place that affect the proposed project and to make sure that Water Right filings conform to those ordinances. The approval of a Water Right application does not imply any approval of a project by any other governmental entity. Approval of the project proposed in the Water Right application should be obtained from local governmental entities as necessary to implement a project.

  REFERENCES

Technical Publication No. 6; Ground Water in the Escalante Valley, Beaver, Iron, and Millard Counties, Utah; Utah State Engineer's 27th Biennial Report; 1950. (Out of print)

Technical Publication No. 13; Ground-Water Resources of Selected Basins in Southwestern Utah; Utah State Engineer; 1966.

Technical Publication No. 43; Water Resources of the Milford Area, Utah, with emphasis on Ground Water; Utah Department of Natural Resources; 1974.

Technical Publication No. 73; Hydrology of the Beryl- Enterprise Area, Escalante Desert, Utah, with emphasis on Ground Water; Utah Department of Natural Resources; 1982.

Technical Publication No. 109, Water Budget and Simulation of One- dimensional unsaturated flow for a flood- and sprinkler-irrigated field near Milford, Utah; Utah Department of Natural Resources; 1995.

Basic Data Report No. 6; Groundwater Data, Beaver, Escalante, Cedar City, and Parowan Valleys, Parts of Washington, Iron, Beaver, and Millard Counties, Utah; Utah State Engineer; 1963. (Out of print)

Basic Data Report No. 35; Groundwater Data for the Beryl-Enterprise Area, Escalante Desert, Utah; Utah Department of Natural Resources; 1981.

Basic Data Report No. 43; Selected Test-Well Data from the MX Missile Siting Study, Tooele, Juab, Millard, Beaver, and Iron Counties, Utah; 1985.

U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1409-G; Ground-Water Hydrology and Simulated Effects of Development in the Milford Area, an Arid Basin in Southwestern Utah;

U. S. Geological Survey; 1998. Water-Resources Investigative Report 95-4173, Simulated Effects of Proposed Ground-Water Pumping in 17 Basins in East-Central and Southern Nevada;

U.S. Geological Survey; 1995 (viewing these USGS documents requires the DjVu browser plugin available from LizardTech)

  MODELING

Beryl-Enterprise Ground-Water Flow Model; 1982.

Milford Area Ground-Water Flow Model; 1998.

Regional Ground-Water Flow, Carbonate-Rock Province, Nevada, Utah, and Adjacent States;

USGS Open-File Reports 93-170 and 93-420; 1993.

  PREVIOUS PAGE UPDATES

None available.

Policy area in green,
click on the map for more detail

  DESCRIPTION

Extending northward from the 7,680 foot Bull Valley Mountains and the 10,238 foot Pine Valley Mountains in northern Washington County (T38S) through western Iron and Beaver Counties into south-central Millard County (T19S), this drainage basin includes the watersheds of Shoal Creek, Pinto Creek, and Little Pinto Creeks in the south, and the watershed of Cove Creek and the Beaver River below Minersville (Rocky Ford) Reservoir to the Sevier Desert in the north. The southwestern end of the valley borders Nevada. It is bounded on the west by the 9,660 foot Needle Range and the 7,231 foot Cricket Mountains, and on the east by the 7,226 foot Black Mountains, the 9,578 foot Mineral Mountains, and the Black Rock Desert. The northern end opens into the Sevier Desert. The lowest point is where the Beaver River leaves the area at 4,560 feet, giving the basin a total relief of about 5,700 feet.

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