View Full Version : Oklahoma beats Texas this time in the US Supreme Court



ou48A
06-13-2013, 10:28 AM
Supreme Court sides with Oklahoma in water fight.

WASHINGTON -- With water, water virtually everywhere, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday that thirsty Texas counties can't run a pipeline into Oklahoma for more drops to drink.

The decision, which upholds two lower court rulings, is a victory for states' rights over multistate water compacts that are common throughout the West. Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote the opinion for a unanimous court.

On one side of the dispute was Texas, accused of trying to divert water from Oklahoma under terms of a four-state compact that entitled each state to up to 25% of the water from a segment of the Red River. On the other was Oklahoma, asserting that Texas can get the water from within its borders or elsewhere.

The battle was being watched closely by other states with interstate compacts similar to the one the two states share with Arkansas and Louisiana. There are more than two dozen compacts nationwide, mostly in the West, and at least nine with similar provisions.

The battle is critical for nearly 2 million residents of the Dallas-Fort Worth area who get water from the Tarrant Regional Water District. The fast-growing area needs far more water than it has; it warns that if it goes dry, other areas reliant on such compacts could as well.

Under the 35-year-old compact, each of the four states is entitled to no more than 25% of the water. The dispute was over where they could go to get it. Because the main stem of the river is salty, tributaries such as the one in Oklahoma that enticed Texas are considered preferable.

The Lone Star State had lost in both lower federal courts, which ruled that Oklahoma can bar such water invasions. Texas contended that the four-state compact, approved by Congress, should trump state laws, and the U.S. Department of Justice agreed.

During oral argument in April, Lisa Blatt, the attorney representing Oklahoma, said Texas' claim was unprecedented. If granted, she said it would produce "open season for Oklahoma water" and lead to a situation in which "every state could have crisscrossing pipelines into every state."

Supreme Court sides with Oklahoma in water fight (http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/06/13/supreme-court-water-texas-oklahoma-compacts/2382849/)

MustangGT
06-13-2013, 10:33 AM
Good deal. I can imagine a lot of folks in the Las Vegas/Southern California area are shaking in their boots about now. Good!

CuatrodeMayo
06-13-2013, 10:38 AM
Great news!

OKCisOK4me
06-13-2013, 10:51 AM
Yeees!!

adaniel
06-13-2013, 11:10 AM
Great to hear. The fact that this was a unanimous decision tells you their case had zero merit.

ou48A
06-13-2013, 11:23 AM
The water is an undeveloped resource that should give our state economic opportunities…
But we may need to be willing to build pipelines, dam’s and such to see businesses take advantage?

HangryHippo
06-13-2013, 11:41 AM
Excellent news! Texas should have been smarter in how they managed their water and the associated rights.

bradh
06-13-2013, 11:44 AM
We'll need that water for our own growing communities, but I like where you're going.

kelroy55
06-13-2013, 01:00 PM
Excellent news! Texas should have been smarter in how they managed their water and the associated rights.

They might have to quit watering their yards 3 hours a day.

Dubya61
06-13-2013, 01:32 PM
IIRC, Tarrant Regional Water District is HUGE, and wanting to get their fingers into water in many forms. My in-laws lived down there (Wise County, in the middle of the Upper Trinity River Basin) and pumped their own water and they (TRWD) was trying to impose a meter on their (in-laws) water pump and charge them for their own water. I can certainly see how short-sighted it is to call it your own water, but the meter idea certainly seemed invasive.

bradh
06-13-2013, 02:03 PM
Not sure if any of you have heard of the IPL Project venture with Dallas Water Utilities and TRWD, but it's one gonna be one helluva pipeline, 108" steel.

Integrated Pipeline (http://www.iplproject.com/)

Steel prices are gonna be crazy, because this will probably be being built around the same time as our new Atoka pipeline.

Bunty
06-13-2013, 08:57 PM
The victory means Oklahoma can now get back to planning long term management for its water.

Spartan
06-13-2013, 11:57 PM
Don't we usually beat Texas at SCOTUS (re: this time)

Snowman
06-14-2013, 10:40 AM
Don't we usually beat Texas at SCOTUS (re: this time)

This was not any normal beating though, it was a shutout.