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Judge nixes part of water law allowing property taxes

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By The Associated Press

Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - 05:59:53 pm CDT



As Nebraska tries to avoid paying millions of dollars in damages to Kansas and curbing irrigation along the Republican River, a judge on Tuesday struck down part of a state law designed to help Nebraska comply with a three-state water compact.

Lancaster County District Judge Paul Merritt ruled that the Legislature was wrong last year when it gave natural resources districts in the heavily irrigated river basin the authority to set property taxes. The money was to be spent on measures to help the state comply with the water agreement, including buying water from farmers to send to Kansas via the Republican River.

“Trying to tax people when it’s some widow in McCook who owns her own home and has no connection to irrigation ... they shouldn’t be obligated to pay,’’ said Angus Garey, a dry-land farmer and rancher in the McCook area who is among nine plaintiffs who sued the state.

Critics of the law have said the taxes unfairly and illegally target a relatively small group of people to pay for solutions to a statewide issue, among other things.

Attorney General Jon Bruning said in a statement that “the ruling effectively bars almost any legislation regarding interstate compacts.’’ He said his office plans to appeal.

The ruling prohibits the property taxes from being levied, but doesn’t award damages. And only those who paid property taxes under protest will receive refunds, according to Lincoln attorney Rod Confer, who represented the plaintiffs.

Merritt ruled that the property taxes authorized by lawmakers violate a portion of the state constitution that bars the Legislature from passing laws that give certain people or groups special privileges. One of the arguments posed by the property owners was that the law created a “closed class’’ of natural resources districts in the basin that were the only ones entitled to use the taxing authority granted by the Legislature.

Merritt said it’s not “reasonably probable’’ that the state would enter into other, multistate water compacts that would qualify for the type of taxing authority that was granted by the Legislature in 2007. He used remarks by an assistant attorney general and a state senator as evidence, quoting them near the time the law was considered that it was unlikely Nebraska would ever enter into another compact of that nature.

Shortly after the ruling was issued Tuesday, state officials maintained that it would not hinder Nebraska’s efforts to get in compliance with the water compact that includes Kansas and Colorado.

Kansas contends Nebraska used about 80,000 acre-feet, or roughly 26 billion gallons, more than it was allowed in 2005 and 2006. It has demanded more than $72 million for the overuse in addition to a shutdown of wells that irrigate nearly half of the 1.2 million acres in Nebraska’s portion of the river basin.

Nebraska has said that those figures are too high and that it has a solid plan to get in compliance with the compact. The two sides have failed to resolve the dispute on their own, and the issue is likely headed to arbitration. If that fails, Kansas officials have said they would take it back to the U.S. Supreme Court, which issued a decree in 2003 that governs use of Republican River water.

The ruling Tuesday does not erase a per-acre tax on irrigated land approved by the Legislature as part of the same water law that includes the property tax.

State officials said that the per-acre tax will be enough to pay for current compliance measures, such as buying water, and possible steps in the future, including pumping groundwater into the Republican River to send to Kansas.

“I don’t think it’s a big blow as long as the (irrigated land tax) is intact,’’ said Sen. Mark Christensen of Imperial, who helped craft the water law last year. He spoke Tuesday from his tractor as he planted corn on land he irrigates in the Republican basin.

“We can go to $10 per acre,’’ with the so-called occupation tax on irrigated land, “and we can bring in enough dollars to pay off the state and then we can start on additional projects as needed’’ for compact compliance, he said.

The property tax was only included in the 2007 water law to make financial institutions comfortable issuing bonds for compact compliance measures, because they had no experience with irrigated-land taxes, Christensen said. Once they became comfortable, he said, that the so-called occupation tax was a reliable backing for the bonds, the property taxes were to be phased out.

The lawsuit challenging the property taxes kept bonds from being issued to pay farmers for water they agreed to sell last year, leaving about 300 of them unpaid for months. Gov. Dave Heineman last month signed a bill allowing the state to borrow $9 million from its cash reserve to pay Republican River irrigators.

Should the ruling on Tuesday stand, the $9 million will likely be repaid with the occupation tax, which could generate roughly $12 million a year if the tax was levied at the highest allowable rate.

But Confer suggested Tuesday that the occupation tax isn’t safe from a lawsuit similar to the one brought against the property tax.

“It wouldn’t be truthful if I said we weren’t talking about it,’’ he said of another lawsuit.


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Of course wrote on May 20, 2008 2:05 pm:
" Yes, because making the landowners who benefit from the irrigation out of the Republican River is COMPLETELY unfair. Instead, it should be all taxpayers in Nebraska. Just because I don't get a direct benefit from it doesn't mean I shouldn't have to help pay for someone else to! "

airedale wrote on May 20, 2008 2:27 pm:
" Hmm....some posters on previous articles suggested that this argument had legs. I guess they were right.

I doubt that any in the Department of Natural Resources Staff are tax lawyers but one would think that someone from Jon Bruning's office could have pointed out this potential problem.

At any rate, with Bruning either out of the country or engaging in a pointless fight with the NEOC and the Governor trying to keep his big AG pub contributors happy Nebraska is bound to lose and lose bad to Kansas on this issue.

Open your wallets Nebraska Taxpayers - its almost time to foot the bill on this one. "

Rob wrote on May 20, 2008 4:33 pm:
" It seems ridiculous to me that their is no mechanism to levy taxes to resolve issues that affect geographically limited and organized quasipolitical entities like NRDs. County lines were not drawn up based on any kind of measure that had real-world relevance, so it seems that the there needs to be a refinement of the current and quite outdated system of levying taxes. Isn't there some precedence for this in school districting that crosses county boundaries that can parallel this case? If not, a generalized mechanism for levying taxes for nontraditional extra-county boundaries needs to be defined in the State Constitution. This would put more power in the hands of State Legislators, but is seems like it would be more fair to all Nebraska taxpayers. "

Joe wrote on May 20, 2008 6:34 pm:
" Or has anybody noticed that the Republican River actually starts in Colorado, runs through Kansas, before even getting to Nebraska. Or the fact that most of the Counties the River runs through were in a state of drought in 2005-2006. Or that the River was actually "running" dry during this time frame, and not from the fact that the area was over irrigated, but more from the fact that there was little to no precipitation in the areas to fill the tributaries and lakes. When it did rain it was soaked up into the ground so fast there was no runoff, to go downstream to the great state of Kansas. Or do we need to ask what Kansas wants anyway, from what I have heard they did not want it for irrigation, but their recreation lake was a tad bit dry. So maybe some of our great legislators should look at some of the obvious points before handing over what few extra dollars this State has. "

bono vox wrote on May 20, 2008 7:37 pm:
" Let's remember who is at fault for this mess and that is the NRDs themselves. There were created to responsibly manage local water resources. THEY FAILED MISERABLY and created this mess. Now they want the entire state to pay the price. I would argue those that created the mess should pay the tab. "

Ronald wrote on May 20, 2008 8:18 pm:
" Exactly right, bono vox. The Republican River NRDs' chickens are coming home to roost. You suck the underground water down so low in an area where Joe rightly points out is prone to long periods of little rainfall and then you wonder why there is no water left in the rivers. And from what I understand, it takes a long, long time for ground water that feeds rivers to be replenished. Maybe farmers in the Republican River ought to consider that they've used up their allotted resources and find other crops to grow of uses for the land. "

kan wrote on May 21, 2008 7:06 am:
" So states are fighting states for water?Yikes!The Governator(California)is PAYING his people to not water their lawns.Water is fast becoming the next real crisis.No body wants to atytack the problem right now because there is no money involved but just wait and see,the civil war will be over water.Not the Bible,not immagration,not rich vs poor,it will be over life's most basic need. "

Lived in Rep Valley wrote on May 21, 2008 8:13 am:
" Uh, Ronald, obviously you've not been out in the Republican River Valley area. They have planted different crops and in some cases not planted anything at all because they can make more money not planting anything v. planting a crop that they can't water and thus get no yields off of.

From what I am hearing, Kansas has plenty of water. The fight is over the concept of the compact. "

lawncare wrote on May 21, 2008 9:22 am:
" its time we all rethink the desire to have lush green lawns. let nature take its course. save yourself on the water bill and the time and gas to mow your lawn every week. chances are you'll save enough money afford a vacation. most all grasses will go dormant and come back when it rains. stop and think just how much is it really worth. "

Lived in republican valley wrote on May 21, 2008 9:37 am:
" they built a irrigation canal for the farmers from rep city to guide rock. The farms paid to use this water. Then let farms pump from the river. Paid some farms not to plant. Some planted milo to not have to irrigate, some planted fields for hay. Some then irrigated the hay fields. Later some large farms put in pivot which smaller farms did not like and warned about the underground water table. Republican gets the water from colorado snow melt which was low for several years. farms were cut off or had extra charges for water and some chose not to pay to pump. The state signed this compact years ago and now wants to fight kansas over it instead of owning up. No, its not up to the taxpayers to pay more for the few who have benefited from the use of the water. Have relatives yet in the valley who farm, some irrigated some dryland. When I left nebraska they asked why are you leaving this state? Answer: I can't afford to live or retire in nebraska. Glad I made that choice as after several years it seems the state is never going to change. "