Wild & Scenic Rivers

The eligible river segments may be viewed in the map below. Please zoom in and click on any segment to see which Outstandingly Remarkable Value (ORV) was determined to be present. Further details can be found in the Wild and Scenic River Eligibility Evaluation Report Appendix 10 of the final forest plan.

As part of plan revision, the Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre, and Gunnison (GMUG) National Forests have conducted an eligibility study with resource managers and specialists through the interdisciplinary team process, reviewing each segment to:

1. Determine the free-flowing condition (FSH 1909.12-2015-1, Section 82.71).

2. Evaluate outstandingly remarkable values, which are defined unique, rare, or exemplary features that are significant within the associated regions of comparison. Only one such value is needed for eligibility, the categories of which include: Scenery, Recreation, Geology, Fish, Wildlife, Prehistory, History, Other Values (Vegetation, Scientific, Paleontology).

3. Provide preliminary classification of eligible segments as wild, scenic, or recreational, based on the existing level of development in the river and surrounding corridor. River segments may have differing classifications when levels of human use and activity create different degrees of development, given that each segment is of sufficient length to warrant unique management.

The combined length of all the eligible river segments is approximately 113 miles, and the total number of eligible river corridor acres is approximately 36,500 acres. Acres of non-Forest Service land are included in this total, but restrictions DO NOT APPLY to private lands.

(Citation: US Forest Service Wild and Scenic River Process)

Evaluation of GMUG Wild & Scenic Rivers

GMUG Wild & Scenic Rivers

Overview of the Wild & Scenic Act and Process

The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968[1] requires that:

…the Secretary of Agriculture …shall study and submit to the President reports on the suitability or nonsuitability for addition to the national wild and scenic rivers system of rivers which are designated herein or hereafter by the Congress as potential additions to such system. The President shall report to the Congress his recommendations and proposals with respect to the designation of each such river or section thereof under this Act… [SEC. 4. (a)] 

While instream flow protections are a strong step in the right direction for our local streams and rivers, the protection that they afford primarily addresses the stream itself and does not extend to the health and management of lands within the stream corridor. By finding that a river or stream is suitable for Wild & Scenic protection status there is an opportunity for additional protections for the river corridor that extend beyond the streamflow itself.

Once a stream segment is determined to be “suitable” for Wild & Scenic, the federal land-management agencies must create management plans and strategies to: ensure a) a suitable stream segment’s free-flowing condition and b) outstandingly remarkable values. As part of this strategy, no federal agency may approve, permit, fund, or otherwise assist with projects that would have a direct and adverse effect on the ORVs for which the stream might be designated by Congress as Wild & Scenic. The requirement that federal agencies consider and evaluate these ORVs when conducting NEPA is not a direct legal protection but does provide an additional level of analysis and scrutiny when the agencies are considering a potentially impactful project. In Colorado, the BLM has interpreted suitability as requiring that the agency protect a stream’s free flowing nature, the specific ORV’s that have been identified for that segment, and water quality.

Suitable stream segments are placed under protective management to maintain the described ORVs, protect water quality necessary to support ORVs, to maintain the river’s free flowing conditions, and to maintain the classification for which the stream segment is eligible for Wild & Scenic status (eligibility includes characteristics of wild, scenic, or recreational assets).

 

It is important to recognize that federal agencies do not establish a federal reserve water right when a stream is determined as eligible or suitable for wild and scenic. With eligible and suitable status, the agencies only must take specific measures to protect the stream and stream corridor. However, once a river makes it to the final phase of the process and is actually designated as Wild & Scenic a federal water right is established to maintain the characteristics that the segment was established for.

[1] Wild and Scenic Rivers Act (WSR Act; Public Law 90-542; 16 USC, Section 1271 et seq.).

What does the Wild & Scenic protection process involve?

There are three distinct phases required to complete the Wild & Scenic protection process: 1) eligibility, 2) suitability, and 3) full Congressional designation. The Wild & Scenic Act includes a planning provision[1] that requires federal agencies to assess rivers in their management areas for eligibility and suitability determinations as part of each major revision of land management plans (including Forest Management Plans). 

The Forest Planning process involves assessing eligible streams on the GMUG. During the eligibility analysis the land management agency determines whether creeks are free-flowing and have outstandingly remarkable values (ORVs) (additional qualities can be added to this description during the suitability process).

The suitability analysis is a more thorough approach to establishing whether a stream meets the requirements for inclusion in the National Wild & Scenic Rivers System (designation). The suitability analysis also determines what management actions are necessary to protect the stream’s outstandingly remarkable values (ORVs).


BLM

The BLM is required to study and assess suitability of eligible stream segments when undergoing a resource management plan revision. The BLM’s Suitability Criteria (BLM Manual 8351 and Interagency Wild & Scenic Rivers Coordinating Council Guidance) provides eleven suitability criteria, include:

1) Characteristics that do or do not make the area worth of w&s designation;

2) Status of landownership, minerals, use in the area, amount of private land;

3) Reasonably foreseeable potential uses, and values, of the land and related waters which would be enhanced foreclosed, curtailed, or diminished by w&s designation;

4) Federal, public, state, tribal, local or other interests in designation or non- designation;


Forest Service

The USFS manual requires that the agency study eligibility during forest management plan revisions.[2] Eligible stream segments in the USFS are determined as those that are free-flowing and possess at least one outstanding remarkable value (ORV).

A suitability analysis and determination is initiated by proposed projects or when there is strong local interest/support for Wild & Scenic designation, when Congress expresses interest is a specific river, or when a proposed project would affect the resources that made the stream eligible. The Forest Service and other land-management agencies apply suitability study criteria generally similar to those listed for the BLM (above), as developed by the interagency coordinating council.

If the federal agencies determine that a segment is not suitable and issues a formal finding of “non-suitability” it removes the eligibility status and relieves the agency of obligations to preserve the ORVs.

4) Federal, public, state, tribal, local or other interests in designation or non- designation;

5) Estimated cost of acquiring and administering the area if designated;

6) Ability of the agency to manage and/or protect the river area or segment as w&s;

7) Historical or existing rights which could be adversely affected;

8) Adequacy of local zoning and other land use controls in protecting the river’s outstandingly remarkable values;

9) Consistency of designation with other agency plans, programs, or policies and in meeting regional objectives;

10) Contribution to a river system watershed or basin integrity;

11) Other concerns, if any.

[1] The Secretary … shall make specific studies and investigations to determine which additional wild, scenic, and recreational river areas within the United States shall be evaluated in planning reports by all Federal agencies as potential alternative uses of the water and related land resources involved. [SEC. 5. (d)]

[2] Section 5(d)(1) of the WSR Act directs agencies to study rivers during the land management planning process. The Forest Service’s 2012 planning rule (36 CFR 219.7(c)(2)(vi)) requires a comprehensive inventory of rivers and their evaluation for eligibility during forest plan revision. Forest Service policy states that all named rivers on a standard US Geological Survey (USGS) 7.5-minute quadrangle must be included (Forest Service Handbook 1909.12, Chapter 80).

Additional Resources

DRAFT Wild and Scenic Eligibility Report for the GMUG and supporting documents:

Documents that might provide additional insight/information to be used for eligibility: