Navajo Nation running out of water

“Some 40 percent of the Navajo tribe’s 190,000 residents have no potable supply, and many receive their water out of the back of trucks.”

The Navajo Nation — which spans is the largest and, arguably, the driest American Indian reservation in the United States.

Navajo Nation, water

Delcon, Arizona: In the Navajo Nation, water is so scarce that some 40 percent of the tribe’s 190,000 residents have no potable supply, and many receive their water out of the back of trucks.

Now, with the help of veteran Arizona Senator Jon Kyl, a Republican and one of Capitol Hill’s senior experts on water law, Navajo leaders and their lawyers appear to be steadily inching closer to a long-awaited legal settlement to draw millions of gallons of water for the reservation from the Little Colorado River.

The settlement would be the 27th Indian water-rights agreement to reach completion since the federal government began negotiating water rights with tribes in the 1970s, during the Carter administration.

Like the others, the Little Colorado River agreement has followed years of intense mediation and legal negotiation by this western tribe, other water users, and the U.S. Department of the Interior.

More Information full article:
http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2011/world/water-law-racing-an-arizona-senators-retirement-dry-navajo-nation-draws-closer-to-securing-more-water/

Navajo Nation water quality information available – Video

Navajo Nation Water Quality Project from Northwestern University is a interactive website to make water quality information easily available and analyzable online.

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