Achieving "safe yield", the long-term balance between groundwater withdrawal and replenishment by 2025 has been a central talking point in Quad City water management since 1980 when the Arizona Groundwater Management Act first established that goal for the Prescott Active Management Area (PrAMA). But with no regulatory penalties for not meeting safe yield, action to do so has been minimal thus, aquifer overdraft has increased. Dr. Peter Kroopnick, retired hydrologist and head of the Science Committee for the Citizens Water Advocacy Group (CWAG), discussed the water outlook for the Quad Cities in the decades to come and explained the science behind the groundwater flow models used to measure overdraft. A question and answer period followed the presentation.

It has long been recognized by groundwater professionals that pumping within the PrAMA has exceeded recharge, and that meeting safe yield, which is defined as a goal and is not a requirement, is unlikely to occur by 2025 or anytime soon. Dr. Kroopnick explained how the Arizona Department of Water Resources (ADWR) collects data to estimate the annual overdraft and how it constructs its groundwater flow models to evaluate groundwater changes over several decades. He also detailed the specific components of that collected data.

While ADWR uses measured pumping and recharge rates to create its models, Dr. Kroopnick will discuss why some parts of the data used must be estimated. These include mountain-front recharge, flood recharge, underflow at groundwater basin boundaries, evapotranspiration, and canal and stream seepage.

Dr. Peter Kroopnick retired to Prescott in 2009 and promptly joined CWAG. He is currently serving as a member of the CWAG Board as well as head of the Science Committee. Before his retirement, he was a practicing hydrogeologist for a major engineering company and an instructor in Hydrogeology at Arizona State University. He specializes in groundwater modeling and environmental chemistry. For pleasure he works as a volunteer Park Ranger for the City of Prescott.

Well owners can investigate the Arizona Water Blueprint through an interactive map of AZ water resources through a link to the Prescott Active Management Area.

DAILY DROPLET

  • "Ranchers need clean water for their stock, farmers need it for their crops, every employer needs it to stay in business, and every living thing needs it for life... The law needs to be clear to protect water quality and the rights of landowners."
    Mark Udall
  • "Water is the driver of Nature."
    Leonardo da Vinci
  • "When the well is dry, we know the worth of water."
    Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard’s Almanac, 1746
  • "...and since flow of information is to spirit what water is to life, we'd best think about how to keep the pipes free and unclogged."
    Raphie Frank
  • "In an age when man has forgotten his origins and is blind even to his most essential needs for survival, water along with other resources has become the victim of his indifference."
    Rachel Carson
  • "We forget that the water cycle and the life cycle are one."
    Jacques Yves Cousteau
  • "Water is life's matter and matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water."
    Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, 1937 Nobel Prize for Medicine
  • "Water is everywhere and in all living things; we cannot be separated from water. No water, no life. Period..."
    Robert Fulghum
  • "It's the water. Everything is driven by the water."
    Mike Thompson
  • "Whiskey is for drinking; water is for fighting over."
    Mark Twain