{
	"type": "rich",
	"version": "1.0",
	"provider_name": "Action Network",
	"provider_url": "https://actionnetwork.org",
	
	"html": "<link href='https://actionnetwork.org/css/style-embed-v3.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' /><script src='https://actionnetwork.org/widgets/v6/petition/protect-the-gila-river?format=js&source=widget'></script><div id='can-petition-area-protect-the-gila-river' style='width: 100%'><!-- this div is the target for our HTML insertion --></div>",
	"author_name": "Gila Conservation Coalition",
	"author_url": "https://actionnetwork.org/groups/gila-conservation-coalition",
	"title": "Protect the Gila River",
	"thumbnail_url": "https://can2-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/share_options/facebook_images/000/238/842/original/Protect_the_Gila_River.png",
	"description": "Flowing out of America’s first Wilderness Area, the wild Gila and San Francisco rivers are under threat from harmful water diversion and storage projects. As the last free-flowing river in New Mexico, the Gila and its tributary the San Francisco is home to seven threatened or endangered species and are the centerpiece of the region&#x27;s outdoor recreation and tourism economy. Federal legislation was recently introduced to designate 450 miles of the Gila and San Francisco rivers and their tributaries as wild and scenic. The Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) and the New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission (ISC) released a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Gila River diversion project (NM Unit) proposed by the NM Central Arizona Project (CAP) Entity. As joint leads for the NEPA process the BOR and the ISC are taking public comment on four diversion/storage action alternatives and the no action alternative. Tell the Bureau of Reclamation to select the No Action Alternative. It&#x27;s well past time to stop wasting NM Unit Funds on the failed Gila diversion planning process and instead direct funding to priority community water projects to meet the needs of everyone in southwest New Mexico. The proposed New Mexico Unit alternatives do not pass even minimum standards of viability: - Financially infeasible - Project water under all alternatives is too expensive for farmers to buy. Even assuming public subsidy for project construction costs, the cost of water per acre-foot likely exceeds farmers&#x27; willingness to pay. -Not economically viable - Costs to the economy as a whole for all diversion alternatives are greater than the benefits. None of the action alternatives “maximize public benefits&quot; as required by the Water Resources Development Act, and therefore the no action alternative should be selected. -Unfair - The NM Unit Fund should be used to implement priority water projects in southwest New Mexico benefiting 60,000 people, rather than to subsidize water for a handful of irrigators. - Harmful to threatened and endangered species and riparian habitat along the Gila and San Francisco rivers -  NM Unit diversion alternatives will decrease stream flow and cause disturbance that will adversely affect native vegetation and degrade riparian habitat, impacting threatened and endangered birds, native fish and snakes. - Impact historic and cultural properties and human remains - All alternatives will impact many historic and cultural sites, such as small pueblos, pithouse villages, and rock art sites, as well as disturb human remains significant to Tribes. Advocate for the No Action Alternative Immediate and future water needs in southwest New Mexico can be met cost-effectively by implementing non-diversion alternatives. We can spend the NM Unit Fund (more than $70 million) on priority community water projects that will create a secure water supply for 60,000 people far into the future without building a costly Gila diversion that requires massive ongoing public subsidy to benefit a very few and damages significant cultural resources and ecologically critical riparian habitat. Thank you for taking action to protect the wild Gila River!",
	"url": "https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/protect-the-gila-river"
}

