Contacts:
Jocelyn Gibbon, (602) 510-4619-c, jgibbon@edf.org
Steve Pawlowski, (602) 254-9330, steve.pawlowski@sierraclub.org
Nikolai Lash, (928) 266-5606, nlash@grandcanyontrust.org
Ian Wilson, (520) 290-0828, x.1106, iwilson@sonoraninstitute.org
Linda Stitzer, (520) 488-2436, linda.stitzer@westernresources.org
(Phoenix, Ariz.—May 4, 2012) Five conservation groups
this week celebrated the Salt
River as their second “River of the Month” in a year-long
series honoring the Arizona Centennial. The series features fact sheets with
graphics and photos profiling the geography, ecology, use, and threats to a
different river every month to celebrate the Arizona’s precious water resources.
Last month, the groups focused on the Colorado
River as the "lifeblood of the West."
"If the Colorado River can be said to the ‘lifeblood
of the West,’ the Salt River is the lifeblood of Phoenix and the surrounding
communities," according to the profile by Environmental Defense Fund, Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Trust, Sonoran Institute,
and Western
Resource Advocates, the groups behind the river series.
The story of the Salt River is symbolic of the many faces
of Arizona, from the river's journey through a rugged and spectacular canyon
wilderness to its essential role in cultivating the farms, industries, and
development that gave rise to Phoenix, the sixth largest city in the U.S., in
the unlikely landscape of the Sonoran Desert.
From its origin, the Salt River flows west through Native
American lands and a remote wilderness area, then through a series of dams and
reservoirs that provide water and power to the Phoenix metropolitan region. The
first and largest dam, Roosevelt, completed in 1911, created Roosevelt Lake and
secured a reliable water supply for Phoenix. Below Roosevelt Dam, the Salt
flows through three more dams and reservoirs and is then joined by its largest
tributary, the Verde River, from the north. Below this confluence, the Granite
Reef Diversion Dam distributes water to canals that flow to the Phoenix
metropolitan area. Due to these diversions, the Salt now rarely flows below
Granite Reef and along its course through Phoenix.
Various efforts to restore degraded stretches of the Salt
River are underway. For example, within the City of Phoenix, the Rio Salado
Habitat Restoration Project utilizes urban runoff and groundwater to restore a
five-mile stretch of riverbed. Completed in 2005, the restoration area provides
environmental education and economic development opportunities along a
revitalized riverbed. Such projects "point the way to what is possible
when people recognize that Arizona's rivers are an ecological and economic
asset to the people of the state," said EDF's Jocelyn Gibbon.
The next river featured by the groups will be the Little
Colorado River. The University of Arizona’s Water Resources Research Center
(WRRC) has provided assistance in preparation of the profiles. The WRRC’s
recent “Environmental
Water Needs Assessment” is evaluates information about the water
needs of environmental resources in Arizona.