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.167974.1
SENATE MEMORIAL 35
48
TH LEGISLATURE
- STATE OF NEW MEXICO -
FIRST SESSION
, 2007
INTRODUCED BY
Phil A. Griego
A MEMORIAL
RECOGNIZING THE ACEQUIAS AS CULTURAL PATRIMONY OF THE STATE OF
NEW MEXICO AND DECLARING FEBRUARY 15, 2007 AS "ACEQUIA DAY" AT
THE NEW MEXICO LEGISLATURE.
WHEREAS, the cultural landscape of New Mexico has been
shaped by over one thousand acequias that have sustained
families and communities for centuries by serving as the basis
for local food production and water governance; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico's acequias are a synthesis of
cultural, agricultural and legal traditions inherited from
arid-land civilizations of Asia, Africa and the Iberian
peninsula and the indigenous civilizations of the Americas; and
WHEREAS, acequias are rooted in ancient water and
agricultural traditions with origins over ten thousand years
old in present-day India, Pakistan and Afghanistan, and crop
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types such as maize with roots thousands of years old from
Oaxaca, Mexico; and
WHEREAS, acequias took root in the Iberian peninsula
through Moorish influence and were part of the institutional
knowledge brought by Spanish settlers to present-day Mexico and
New Mexico, where they incorporated agricultural knowledge and
technologies in use by indigenous communities; and
WHEREAS, community land grants, or mercedes, and acequias
came into existence through the collective effort of their
respective communities between two and four hundred years ago
and were established according to a legal and cultural
tradition of communal property that pre-dates the United
States; and
WHEREAS, acequias embody the fundamental principle that
water is life and continue to operate under basic principles
that have guided them for millennia, including the concepts of
local self-governance, attachment of water to place and
community, and sharing scarce water through local customs known
as the repartimiento; and
WHEREAS, acequias intertwine with the social fabric of
their respective villages and neighborhoods by fostering
community cohesion through communal water management,
democratic participation and traditions of cooperative labor;
and
WHEREAS, acequias sustain a rich heritage and land-based
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culture that is intertwined with unique native food traditions,
regional dialects and language customs, and an expression of
querencia, or love of place, through art and spiritual
traditions; and
WHEREAS, thousands of families in New Mexico generate all
or part of their livelihood from farms and ranches that are fed
by acequia waters and sustained by the community-based system
of water distribution; and
WHEREAS, acequias have imprinted a cultural landscape that
is one of the most culturally and ecologically diverse in the
present-day southwest with a plethora of foods such as multiple
varieties of maize, grains, squash, legumes and other
vegetables and heritage fruits; and
WHEREAS, acequias enhance the natural process of aquifer
recharge by slowing and spreading mountain runoff through an
intricate network of waterways that support river flows and
riparian habitats; and
WHEREAS, acequias are steeped in a legal and cultural
tradition that views water as a community resource in which its
use is intertwined with certain rights and responsibilities
that are oriented toward the common good; and
WHEREAS, acequias in New Mexico have endured tremendous
social and political changes, particularly after the signing of
the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 and the Territorial
Water Code of 1907; and
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WHEREAS, although the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
guaranteed property rights, most of the historic common lands
of New Mexico's mercedes were expropriated within fifty years
of the United States conquest of the area; and
WHEREAS, the legal framework adopted by the Territorial
Water Code of 1907 profoundly changed the nature of water
rights in New Mexico by making individual water rights
transferable, thereby allowing water to be viewed as a
commodity that is in contrast to the traditional view of water
as a community resource; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico is a place of chronic water scarcity
and is facing unprecedented demands for water to support
continued growth and development; and
WHEREAS, a prevalent assumption is that water rights to
support growth will come as a result of water transfers out of
agriculture to urban and commercial development; and
WHEREAS, acequias and agricultural communities are
economically disadvantaged and are likely to experience a net
loss of water rights from their communities as wealthier
individuals, entities and regions acquire water rights from a
position of greater economic power; and
WHEREAS, as a result of regional water planning efforts,
projections based on current trends include estimates of a net
loss of agriculture of between thirty percent and sixty percent
in certain regions in the next forty years; and
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WHEREAS, acequias and agricultural communities will need
their water rights base for the future needs of their
respective communities, including agricultural revitalization,
residential development and sustainable rural economic
development; and
WHEREAS, acequia communities are increasingly faced with
water quality problems resulting from various types of
contamination, thereby impairing local capacity for local food
production; and
WHEREAS, in response to these challenges, acequias have
organized at the local, regional and state levels to address
the threats to the viability of acequias and small-scale
agriculture to ensure that the cultural heritage, generational
memory and indigenous knowledge embodied in the acequias be
passed on to future generations of New Mexicans; and
WHEREAS, many acequia leaders in New Mexico came together
to form regional associations of acequias and to form the
statewide congreso de las acequias, which is the governing body
of the New Mexico acequia association and is comprised of
regional delegations from over twenty different regions in the
state; and
WHEREAS, the New Mexico acequia association has
established programs to protect acequia water rights,
strengthen acequia governance, educate youth about acequia
agriculture and support acequia farmers and ranchers; and
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WHEREAS, in recent years, the legislature has expressed
support for acequias by enacting various laws that strengthen
acequia governance, including recognition of regulatory
authority over water transfers, establishment of acequia water
banking and strengthening of acequia enforcement powers
regarding easements;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE
OF NEW MEXICO that February 15, 2007 be declared "Acequia Day"
at the legislature, and that acequias be recognized as the
cultural patrimony of the state of New Mexico because of their
historic, social, economic, ecological and cultural
significance; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that all relevant state agencies,
educational institutions and commissions collaborate with the
New Mexico acequia association in seeking a designation at the
national and international levels for designation as cultural
patrimony and cultural heritage areas; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the office of the state
engineer work with the New Mexico acequia association to
provide greater support to acequias in the area of
infrastructure development, water rights record-keeping,
acequia inventory development, adjudication reform and
regulation of water transfers; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the interstate stream
commission collaborate with the New Mexico acequia association
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to give greater consideration to acequias in upcoming revisions
to the state water plan; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the department of environment
collaborate with the New Mexico acequia association to protect
the water quality of rivers and streams that feed acequia
watercourses and to enforce water quality regulations as
appropriate; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the energy, minerals and
natural resources department include acequia representation in
policy development with regard to watershed management and
restoration; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the public education
department support efforts of the New Mexico acequia
association to develop curricula that recognize the historical,
ecological and cultural significance of acequias; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the cultural affairs
department collaborate with the New Mexico acequia association
to create educational exhibits for the general public; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to the governor, the office of the state engineer,
the interstate stream commission, the department of
environment, the energy, minerals and natural resources
department, the public education department and the cultural
affairs department.
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