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[DOCID: f:h3468enr.txt]
H.R.3468
One Hundred Sixth Congress
of the
United States of America
AT THE SECOND SESSION
Begun and held at the City of Washington on Monday,
the twenty-fourth day of January, two thousand
An Act
To direct the Secretary of the Interior to convey to certain water
rights to Duchesne City, Utah.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Duchesne City Water Rights
Conveyance Act''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds the following:
(1) In 1861, President Lincoln established the Uintah Valley
Reservation by Executive order. The Congress confirmed the
Executive order in 1864 (13 Stat. 63), and additional lands were
added to form the Uintah Indian Reservation (now known as the
Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation).
(2) Pursuant to subsequent Acts of Congress, lands were
allotted to the Indians of the reservation, and unallotted lands
were restored to the public domain to be disposed of under
homestead and townsite laws.
(3) In July 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt reserved lands
for the townsite for Duchesne, Utah, by Presidential proclamation
and pursuant to the applicable townsite laws.
(4) In July 1905, the United States, through the Acting United
States Indian Agent in Behalf of the Indians of the Uintah Indian
Reservation, Utah, filed two applications, 43-180 and 43-203, under
the laws of the State of Utah to appropriate certain waters.
(5) The stated purposes of the water appropriation applications
were, respectively, ``for irrigation and domestic supply for
townsite purposes in the lands herein described'', and ``for the
purpose of irrigating Indian allotments on the Uintah Indian
Reservation, Utah, * * * and for an irrigating and domestic water
supply for townsite purposes in the lands herein described''.
(6) The United States subsequently filed change applications
which provided that the entire appropriation would be used for
municipal and domestic purposes in the town of Duchesne, Utah.
(7) The State Engineer of Utah approved the change
applications, and the State of Utah issued water right
certificates, identified as Certificate Numbers 1034 and 1056, in
the name of the United States Indian Service in 1921, pursuant to
the applications filed, for domestic and municipal uses in the town
of Duchesne.
(8) Non-Indians settled the town of Duchesne, and the
inhabitants have utilized the waters appropriated by the United
States for townsite purposes.
(9) Pursuant to title V of Public Law 102-575, Congress
ratified the quantification of the reserved waters rights of the
Ute Indian Tribe, subject to reratification of the water compact by
the State of Utah and the Tribe.
(10) The Ute Indian Tribe does not oppose legislation that will
convey the water rights appropriated by the United States in 1905
to the city of Duchesne because the appropriations do not serve the
purposes, rights, or interests of the Tribe or its members, because
the full amount of the reserved water rights of the Tribe will be
quantified in other proceedings, and because the Tribe and its
members will receive substantial benefits through such legislation.
(11) The Secretary of the Interior requires additional
authority in order to convey title to those appropriations made by
the United States in 1905 in order for the city of Duchesne to
continue to enjoy the use of those water rights and to provide
additional benefits to the Ute Indian Tribe and its members as
originally envisioned by the 1905 appropriations.
SEC. 3. CONVEYANCE OF WATER RIGHTS TO DUCHESNE CITY, UTAH.
(a) Conveyance.--The Secretary of the Interior, as soon as
practicable after the date of the enactment of this Act, and in
accordance with all applicable law, shall convey to Duchesne City,
Utah, or a water district created by Duchesne City, all right, title,
and interest of the United States in and to those water rights
appropriated under the laws of the State of Utah by the Department of
the Interior's United States Indian Service and identified as Water
Rights Nos. 43-180 (Certificate No. 1034) and 43-203 (Certificate No.
1056) in the records of the State Engineer of Utah.
(b) Required Terms.--
(1) In general.--As terms of any conveyance under subsection
(a), the Secretary shall require that Duchesne City--
(A) shall allow the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and
Ouray Reservation, its members, and any person leasing or
utilizing land that is held in trust for the Tribe by the
United States and is located within the Duchesne City water
service area (as such area may be adjusted from time to time),
to connect to the Duchesne City municipal water system;
(B) shall not require such tribe, members, or person to pay
any water impact, connection, or similar fee for such
connection; and
(C) shall not require such tribe, members, or person to
deliver or transfer any water or water rights for such
connection.
(2) Limitation.--Paragraph (1) shall not be construed to
prohibit Duchesne City from charging any person that connects to
the Duchesne City municipal water system pursuant to paragraph (1)
reasonable, customary, and nondiscriminatory fees to recover costs
of the operation and maintenance of the water system to treat,
transport, and deliver water to the person.
SEC. 4. WATER RIGHTS.
(a) No Relinquishment or Reduction.--Except as provided in section
3, nothing in this Act may be construed as a relinquishment or
reduction of any water rights reserved, appropriated, or otherwise
secured by the United States in the State of Utah on or before the date
of the enactment of this Act.
(b) No Precedent.--Nothing in this Act may be construed as
establishing a precedent for conveying or otherwise transferring water
rights held by the United States.
SEC. 5. TRIBAL RIGHTS.
Nothing in this Act may be construed to affect or modify any treaty
or other right of the Ute Indian Tribe or any other Indian tribe.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate.
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