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In the semi-arid West, coldwater fish and the rivers they swim are in trouble. Trout require clean, cold water to survive. In the West, every native species of trout has been listed or proposed for listing under the federal Endangered Species Act. These fish suffer from water diversions, dams, and other alterations to natural river and stream flows. A major cause of the wide-spread decline of western fisheries is state water management systems that encourage the diversion of water to agricultural, municipal and industrial uses with little protection for the value of water flowing in streams to benefit fisheries, wildlife and recreation. Trout Unlimited started the Western Water Project in 1998 with a commitment to working at the state level on water management issues. Trout Unlimited has hired professional staff in five states - Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah and Wyoming -- with the scientific, legal and organizational knowledge necessary to engage in this arcane discipline. Our effectiveness is leveraged in state legislatures and in local communities by thousands of TU volunteers in the region. We have also reached out to form alliances with non-traditional allies, including irrigators, landowners, water suppliers and state agencies. Three basic principles underlie TU's Western Water Project:
For more information contact: Western Water Project Melinda Kassen, Director, Western Water Project |








