State Engineer closes Hot Springs Underground Water Basin

The language is a little wonky in State Engineer Mike Hamman’s July 5 order closing the “Hot Springs Underground Water Basin,” but there appear to be two reasons for the closure that will disallow future well drilling in that basin indefinitely.

First, the order refers to the Office of the State Engineer’s Hydrologic Bureau’s recent analysis that the Palomas Creek and the Rio Grande are being depleted by pumping in the hot springs water basin. Since both the Palomas Creek and Rio Grande are “fully appropriated,” no new appropriations in the hot springs water basin will be allowed.

Second, the order indicates the hot springs water basin is probably over-appropriated, since the recharge is less than the “appropriated” or potential discharge.

The City of T or C was informed of State Engineer Hamman’s order on July 11 via an email from OSE employee Jerri Pohl, who sent the order and map of the hot springs basin to City Clerk Angela Torres, Utility Billing Director Sonya Renfro, Water and Wastewater Director Arnulfo Castaneda and Assistant City Manager Traci Alvarez. Alvarez issues well permits to well applicants. The Citizen made an Inspection of Public Records Act request and Torres forwarded Pohl’s email, the State Engineer’s order and the map of the basin.

For generations the OSE issued “domestic” well permits to hot springs water basin applicants nearly automatically. Applicants, upon proving they hired an OSE approved well driller, were granted a 3 acre-feet-per-year appropriation. About 10 years ago the OSE reduced domestic well permit appropriations to 1 acre foot of water per year.

Hamman has not been state engineer long. Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham appointed him state engineer February 2022. During his short tenure he has been embroiled in the U.S. Supreme Court case involving how water from the Rio Grande is divvied up among Texas, New Mexico and Colorado, with Texas claiming ground water pumping is depleting the Rio Grande and thus shorting their fair share of water delivery. On July 3 the water master assigned to the case forwarded a proposal to the Supreme Court, according to a Source New Mexico news article. Hamman said New Mexico needs to reduce groundwater pumping in a letter he wrote in response to the water master’s proposal. Perhaps the closing of the Hot Springs Underground Water Basin, which is adjacent to the Rio Grande, is in response to this court case. (https://sourcenm.com/2023/01/11/possible-deal-to-end-rio-grande-scotus-case-becomes-public/

About the same time Texas filed its case against New Mexico in 2013 that has now reached the U.S. Supreme Court, the City of T or C, under the leadership of then-Mayor John Mulcahy, expressed concern about over-appropriating the hot springs aquifer. The city commission decided to close the hot springs basin until a study was performed by Professor Mark Person of the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. At the conclusion of the study Person recommended that the hot springs basin be reopened to well drilling and the city commission complied.

Mulcahy tried to protect the hot springs further by making a study of state and federal laws concerning hot springs well drilling, their run off and discharge. He pushed through local ordinances that required each new well applicant to seek and receive a Clean Water Act discharge permit, but Alvarez has not enforced those local ordinances.  Closing the basin will at least stop further hot springs discharge into the ground and the city’s sewer system, the salts in the hot springs water causing problems with the sewer works.

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Kathleen Sloan
Kathleen Sloan

Kathleen Sloan has been a local-government reporter for 17 years, covering counties and cities in three states—New Mexico, Iowa and Florida. She has also covered the arts for various publications in Virginia, New Mexico and Iowa. Sloan worked for the Truth or Consequences Herald newspaper from 2006 to 2013; it closed December 2019. She returned to T or C in 2019 and founded the online newspaper, the Sierra County Sun, with Diana Tittle taking the helm as editor during the last year and a half of operation. The Sun closed December 2021, concurrent with Sloan retiring. SierraCountySun.org is still an open website, with hundreds of past articles still available. Sloan is now a board member of the not-for-profit organization, the Sierra County Public-Interest Journalism Project, which supported the Sun and is currently sponsoring the Sierra County Citizen, another free and open website. Sloan is volunteering as a citizen journalist, covering the T or C beat. She can be reached at kathleen.sloan@gmail.com or 575-297-4146.

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2 Comments

  1. That is insane! I am not against some change but why is our community/county/basin the only one targeted? There are people and demands all up and down the Rio Grande but ours is the only one to bear the burden on all new wells “depleting” the Rio. Lots of communities are over allocated. Jarales where I grew up looks nothing like it did 50 years ago. Maybe the state should spread the responsibility around. I will be curious to see if other communities/counties/basins are treated the same. I don’t claim to be a hydrological engineer or know all the details of this decision but this seems extreme. I think there needs to be changes to the over drilling taking place in the downtown district (Riverbend is a huge user and expanding) so maybe limit businesses (???) I don’t know (???) but for a new home owner 15 miles from town to not be able to get a well seems (to me) excessive. I am not here for a spanking but just to express my personal surprise.

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