Feds won't flood the Grand Canyon this spring. What that will mean for the Colorado river
Glen Canyon Dam has impounded the Colorado River near the Arizona-Utah line since 1963, and with it the annual load of sand that natural snowmelt floods previously churned up onto beaches and sandbars in the Grand Canyon each year. The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, working through a collaborative adaptive management program to make the most of what sand a smaller tributary still deposits below the dam, has flooded the canyon by opening the dam's bypass tubes 12 times since 1996.
With repeated decisions not to open the floodgates even when the sand is available, some are questioning whether the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program is preserving Grand Canyon's ecology and recreation as required under the Grand Canyon Protection Act of 1992.
'We are failing,' said Ben Reeder, a Utah-based river guide who represents the Grand Canyon River Guides on a technical work group that considers management options for the Reclamation Bureau.
'Deeply disappointed,' said Larry Stevens, a canyon ecologist who represents Wild Arizona and the Grand Canyon Wildlands Council on the work group.
Reeder and Stevens were among advocates and state agency officials who reluctantly agreed to forego a flood last fall in favor of saving the sand for a more naturally timed springtime flood. Events over the winter would interfere with that plan.
Reclamation officials said in April that they would recommend that new Interior Secretary Doug Burgum not authorize the flood because a National Park Service contractor was excavating in a slough downstream of the dam to disrupt its use as a spawning bed by non-native fish, including smallmouth bass. Work on relining the bypass tubes to protect their steel pipes also interfered.
On Thursday, May 22, the agency announced that the decision against flooding was final.
Invasive fish: Cold water shots into the Colorado River slow a bass invasion in the Grand Canyon
Those who had anticipated a rejuvenating flood said they appreciate the need to protect native fish from voracious predators like the bass, but that there's too often some reason or another to reject bypassing the dam's hydropower turbines to send water downstream, a cost to the dam's power customers around the West. In 2021, for instance, the government declined to flood the canyon to prop up Lake Powell's water level.
'It just seems like looking for any excuse not to do one,' Reeder said. The default appears to be against flooding in any given year, he said, perhaps because the team that ultimately recommends for or against does not include environmentalists or recreationalists.
'It really kind of bothers me, honestly, that we talk about the Grand Canyon in these economic terms as if it's there for human consumption,' Reeder said.
Fresh off a May river trip, Reeder said beach erosion is apparent throughout the canyon. Rains from last year's monsoon particularly battered one of his preferred camping beaches, at Stone Creek.
'We have a sand-starved system,' he said.
Environmentalists prefer a spring flood over fall, because it best mimics the river's natural rhythm. Angler advocates also prefer spring, as it comes at a time that can better support a tailwater rainbow trout fishery, which has suffered in recent years as low water in Lake Powell led to a warming river. More than any flood, the trout need more water in the reservoir, pushing the warm surface farther from the dam intakes, said Jim Strogen, who represents Trout Unlimited in the adaptive management discussions.
'A deeper, colder lake is the best thing for that fishery,' he said.
Shortages: Hobbs says Arizona will defend its Colorado River water, wants other states to accept cuts
The floods cost perhaps $1 million or $2 million in lost hydroelectric production, according to Leslie James, who represents mostly rural and tribal power consumers in the program as executive director of the Colorado River Energy Distributors Association. Last year, when there was no major flood but the dam managers regularly pulsed cold water through the bypass tubes to keep the river inhospitable to bass spawning, the agency said the cost in lost power production was $19 million.
The losses deplete a fund that pays for dam maintenance and environmental programs, James noted, and drawing more from that fund this year could cause delays in maintenance.
'We weren't asked our views on (a spring flood), she said, 'but if asked we would say that we always have concerns about bypassing hydropower generation.'
James said a repeat of last summer's cool releases to combat bass seems unnecessary, as bass so far are generally restricted to the 15 miles below the dam and are not showing up dozens of miles downstream at the confluence with the Little Colorado River, a haven for native humpback chubs. Reclamation officials said they will decide in June whether to pulse cold water through the canyon this summer.
The agency reported that last year's cool flows appeared to have worked, preventing any detectable growth in bass numbers by keeping the river mostly below 16 degrees Celsius — the temperature at which bass reproduce successfully — as far downstream as the Little Colorado. It also projected that without bypass flows this summer, temperatures in the river likely would rise above 16 degrees.
A federal biologist working on chub conservation told The Arizona Republic it would not be surprising if bass reach the Little Colorado by fall and reverse gains in the native fish population that allowed the government to downlist the chub from endangered to threatened in 2021.
The floods, achieved with blasts of water that jet across the canyon below the dam, can give the erroneous impression that water is lost downstream. In reality, while the floods do temporarily reduce Lake Powell's elevation, they do not harm irrigators or municipal water providers. Lake Mead captures the water on the Grand Canyon's west end and stores it for later use in Nevada, Arizona, California and Mexico.
Want more stories about water? Sign up for AZ Climate, The Republic's weekly environmental newsletter
Reclamation officials initially told participants in the adaptive management collaboration that a flood was unlikely in April, when Program Manager Bill Stewart said every attempt had been made to schedule it. When the groups and agencies had agreed to put off a flood last fall, he said, it had appeared there would be a window in May when both slough modifications and dam maintenance would be done. The plan was to flood the canyon for 60 hours, with a peak flow of 40,400 cubic feet per second, compared to routine flows in May ranging from 8,000 to 13,382 cfs.
During the transition in presidential administrations, work in the slough was delayed, leading to heavy equipment remaining in the river corridor throughout the month. Dam maintenance also lasted into the timeframe when a flood was envisioned, leaving some of the bypass tube capacity unavailable.
'We really did make every effort to make this happen,' Stewart told flood advocates tuning in to April's virtual meeting.
Some participants, including Arizona Game and Fish Department biologist David Rogowski, said the program needs to improve its scheduling.
'We need to be better about planning for the future,' Rogowski said. 'We aren't doing (a spring flood) because of poor planning.'
Stevens agreed, saying Reclamation should incorporate planned floods into its routine maintenance schedule.
A river scientist who previously led the U.S. Geological Survey's Grand Canyon research team said the Reclamation Bureau's continuing trend of skipping opportunities to flood the canyon jeopardizes Grand Canyon National Park's sandbars — a feature he said is as vital to the park's natural environment as the sandstone walls looming above the river.
'It is disturbing that sand bars always come out second,' said Jack Schmidt, a Utah State University researcher and former head of the Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center. 'It's removing an entire landscape element.'
Brandon Loomis covers environmental and climate issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com. Reach him at brandon.loomis@arizonarepublic.com.
Environmental coverage on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Follow The Republic environmental reporting team at environment.azcentral.com and @azcenvironment on Facebook and Instagram.
This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Grand Canyon advocates lament lack of environmental flows this spring
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
an hour ago
- Chicago Tribune
Funding cuts ripple across Northwestern, as faculty urge no deal with Trump
Nearly four months have passed since the Donald Trump administration abruptly froze $790 million in federal funding at Northwestern University, and the school's fragile research infrastructure has been pummeled by cuts. Portions of research and clinical trials have ground to a halt. Labs have been instructed to scrutinize every expense, from equipment to personnel. Some teams are even killing off lab mice because it's cheaper than feeding them and cleaning cages. With university President Michael Schill set to appear again before a congressional committee Tuesday, rumors of a possible deal with the White House have gripped campus. But the situation on-the-ground remains dire, according to faculty and staff. 'Let's say they unfreeze the funds. The damage is done,' said Guillermo Oliver, a professor in the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension. 'Let's be clear, this is not going to be, 'OK, back to business.'' Northwestern never received formal notification of the funding freeze in April, which came amid several federal probes into allegations of antisemitism. The Evanston-based university has been spending about $10 million a week to keep research afloat, faculty told the Tribune in June. That's led officials to pursue a string of belt-tightening measures. Last week, the university eliminated more than 400 positions, half of which were already vacant. A month earlier, officials announced changes to employees' health insurance plans and a hiring freeze. While Northwestern pays out-of-pocket for research, departments have urged scientists to crimp spending. The Feinberg School of Medicine, which receives 70% of the university's research funding, has seen the brunt of those cuts — potentially putting lifesaving work at risk, faculty say. The Oliver Lab at Feinberg studies the biological development of the lymphatic system. Each piecemeal reduction has contributed to an environment of uncertainty among its staff. As the freeze drags on, Oliver isn't sure how long he can maintain bare-bones operations. 'We were asked to cut as many costs as we could, in everything,' Oliver said. 'The stressful question is, 'When will this be over?' We have no idea.' Many Northwestern scientists, including Oliver, utilize genetically engineered mice specifically bred for lab work. But animal costs have had to be reduced, too. 'It was not mandatory,' he said. 'Nobody told us, 'You need to reduce your mouse colony by 50%.' Rather it was, 'Try to reduce as much as you can without major impact to your research.'' Infrastructure for labs and clinical trials takes time to develop, and sudden shifts in resources and personnel can jeopardize years of work. That can't be immediately reversed, researchers say. Scott Budinger, chief of pulmonary and critical care in the department of medicine, has spent more than two decades researching drugs to treat pneumonia. While his team is still able to collect vital patient samples, they've been left untouched in a freezer. 'The work on those new drug targets has virtually stopped … All of that work could be gone in several months,' Budinger said. 'If we start to lose the people and lose the expertise, you can't just step in and rebuild that work.' It's unclear how much longer Northwestern can continue to fund research without reimbursement. A university spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment. Northwestern is among the wealthiest universities in the country, with a $14.3 billion endowment. But the school's business model was built on grants: During its 2023-24 fiscal year, it received $1.05 billion in research funding. Amid the pause, the endowment and donors can only offer so much support. Endowments weren't designed to be rainy-day funds or sitting cash. A large portion of the capital is invested in hedge funds and private equity. Much of the pool is also restricted, meaning the funds are reserved by donors for specific purposes — such as scholarships or academic programs. In a typical year, most universities only draw from their year-to-year earnings at a rate of less than 5% of the total endowment. That uncertainty — coupled with perceived threats to academic freedom — has led some scientists to explore opportunities elsewhere, even outside of the U.S. Faculty members have voiced concerns that a potential exodus of researchers could undermine Northwestern's competitiveness on the global stage. It's an option weighed by Benjamin Thomson, an assistant professor of ophthalmology who said he would consider returning to his home country of Canada. 'I've done some looking at positions,' Thomson said. 'I have no immediate intention of leaving, but it's not something I would necessarily be averse to if the situation were different.' In recent weeks, several Ivy League schools have settled with the Trump administration to restore paused funding. Columbia University, for example, will pay more than $220 million to the federal government and implement several initiatives aimed at addressing antisemitism on campus. The Wall Street Journal reported that Northwestern officials were also in talks with White House. A university spokesperson declined to comment, but rumors of a deal have already rippled through campus. Northwestern's Concerned Faculty Group, which represents hundreds of members, said in a statement last week that a settlement would make the school 'complicit in an assault on institutions of higher education.' The Trump administration has leveraged federal funding to force universities to comply with its agenda, the statement said. 'This is extortion,' said Laura Beth Nielsen, a professor of sociology and member of the group. 'We need to resolve the situation, but not at the expense of academic freedom.' Meanwhile, Schill is set to appear again before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce in a transcribed interview closed to the press Tuesday. When he last appeared before the Republican-led body in May 2024, he was grilled for hours about the campus environment for Jewish students. A committee spokesperson did not directly comment on when or if the transcription might be made public. 'We all agree that if there is an antisemitism problem on campus, that the university is under an obligation to take action to stop it,' said Paul Gowder, a professor of law. 'But we also all agree that this is a pretext.' The situation has left some faculty conflicted. Many are alarmed by the prospect of yielding to federal pressure, but also recognize that an indefinite funding freeze poses serious risks. Melissa Simon, vice chair for research in the department of general obstetrics and gynecology, was one of the highest-funded Northwestern professors through the National Institutes of Health. In May, her research hub, the Center for Health Equity Transformation, was shuttered with just minutes' notice. Simon suspects Northwestern closed the lab to comply with the Trump administration's crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives. A few weeks later, she was allowed to resume the center's research under a new name, Elevate Lab. But the whiplash has been draining. 'I'm fighting every day. It has been demoralizing and exhausting,' Simon said. 'But how much will so-called negotiation with Trump help?' Last week, Simon was forced to lay off her program assistant, Chisom Chima, her only staffer not funded by grant money. Both women were devastated. 'It's very heartbreaking, not just to lose a job, but to lose a job working with this team,' Chima said. 'Everyone has been on edge.' Next month, undergraduate students will begin to trickle back to campus. It won't be a typical academic year. When Schill announced the layoffs last week, he called the period of the freeze 'among the most difficult in our institution's 174-year history.' But the message among faculty is clear: The university is at a tipping point for research. 'I think if the freeze were reversed today, we could get things back,' Budinger said. 'I don't think it's too late yet, but time is running out.'
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Grassley places holds on 3 Trump Treasury nominees
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is placing a hold on three of President Trump's nominees to the Treasury Department over forthcoming administration rules expected to hamper tax credits for wind and solar energy. Grassley, who recently engaged in a heated back-and-forth with Trump over the handling of judicial picks, announced his move to place the holds in the congressional record Friday. 'Today, I placed a hold on three Department of the Treasury nominees,' he said in the record, specifically naming Trump's picks for the department's general counsel, assistant secretary and undersecretary. The Iowa Republican added that while the 'big, beautiful, bill' recently passed by Congress allowed for wind and solar companies to continue to get tax credits if they begin construction of their projects in the next year, the Treasury Department 'is expected to issue rules and regulations implementing the agreed upon phase-out of the wind and solar credits by August 18, 2025.' 'Until I can be certain that such rules and regulations adhere to the law and congressional intent, I intend to continue to object to the consideration of these Treasury nominees,' Grassley said. Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) is also placing a hold on the same nominees — Brian Morrissey Jr., Francis Brooke and Jonathan McKernan — for the same reason, a source familiar told The Hill. It's not entirely clear whether these holds will actually have a significant impact on the nominations. Typically, they can slow the process of confirming a nominee, requiring the chamber to spend hours debating and taking additional votes for each nominee without ultimately blocking them. With a handful of nominees, holds are more of an annoyance, but in some cases — like in 2023, when Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) put holds on hundreds of military promotions — they have successfully delayed nominations for a significant period. It's unusual, though not unheard of, for lawmakers of the president's party to place holds on nominees. Grassley's decision was first reported Monday by C-SPAN'S Craig Caplan. Curtis's move was first reported by Politico. The hold comes amid a larger spat between Grassley and Trump after president told the senator last week to ax the Judiciary Committee's 'blue slip' tradition of allowing home-state senators to veto nominees to district courts and U.S. attorneys' offices. Trump reposted comments that accused Grassley of being 'sneaky' and a 'RINO,' an acronym for Republican in name only. 'I was offended by what the president said, and I'm disappointed it would result in personal insults,' Grassley said in response. Trump, meanwhile, has expressed frustration at the pace of the Senate's confirmation of his nominees, saying lawmakers should stay in Washington to confirm more people ahead of their yearly August recess. How rapidly to phase out energy tax credits was a major sticking point among Republican lawmakers as they put Trump's megabill together. The bill provisions that Curtis helped to secure allowing wind and solar projects to get the full value of a lucrative tax credit if they start construction within 12 months of its passage. After the bill was passed Trump signed an executive order that directed the Treasury to take a strict approach to limit which projects are eligible. The administration has been particularly hostile to wind and solar and broadly supportive of other energy sources, including oil, gas, coal and nuclear. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Politico
4 hours ago
- Politico
The global AI contest hits the UN
With help from Aaron Mak The rivalry between the United States and China over who will dominate artificial intelligence has moved to an obscure battlefield: A Geneva-based United Nations agency most people have never heard of. The Trump administration announced in June — a full year early — that it will push for a second term for American diplomat Doreen Bogdan-Martin as secretary general of the International Telecommunication Union, the organization that sets voluntary international standards for technology ranging from radio frequencies and broadband to 6G mobile phones. This is the earliest the State Department has ever made this kind of push at the ITU, an indication of the growing urgency of the U.S.-China technological rivalry. The Trump AI Action Plan, released earlier this month, specifically names the ITU as key to America's global tech dominance. But some observers worry that Trump's tough-minded foreign policy approach may already be hurting the U.S. in its quest to keep Bogdan-Martin in office. The ITU has been a great-power battleground before. In 2022, with Huawei turning telecom into a global contest, America and China waged a proxy battle for control over the agency. The Chinese backed Russian candidate Rashid Ismailov, a former Russian telecom minister who lost decisively to Bogdan. Government and tech insiders say the stakes are even higher now because the ITU is setting standards for AI —more than 150 to date — for how governments and countries integrate the technology across existing operations. That's included standards for testing and evaluation of AI systems in areas like conversational AI tools and computer network diagnostics. So whoever controls the ITU will shape the global standards for AI development and integration. Founded more than 150 years ago to standardize telegraph systems, the ITU today includes the U.N.'s 193 members along with representatives of corporations including AT&T, China Unicom, Nokia and Sony. Over the years, the agency has become central to the growth of telecom technology, negotiating international agreements on everything from radio spectrum allocations to the orbital paths of satellites in outer space. ITU added AI to its suite of technologies with the launch of its AI For Good program in 2017. U.N. members vote every four years to select the agency's secretary general, and that vote has grown more loaded each election. Bogdan-Martin's predecessor, China's Houlin Zhao, developed a reputation among Americans of using his position to bend the ITU toward Beijing. 'What you saw over and over again was him trying to align the ITU with endorsing Chinese technology and downplaying U.S. complaints about the potential for security breaches by using ZTE or Huawei technology, or endorsing Chinese Belt and Road Initiative telecommunications projects in developing countries,' said Brett Schaefer, an expert on the U.N. at the American Enterprise Institute, and a former member of U.N. General Assembly's Committee on Contributions. The U.S. blacklisted Huawei and ZTE in 2020 as 'companies posing a national security threat'. China's Washington embassy and New York U.N. mission did not answer DFD's questions. Nor did the State Department or Bogdan-Martin. Beijing hasn't announced if it will contest Bogdan-Martin's renomination. In some respects, the U.S. is at the apex of its technological prowess. Nvidia and Microsoft both reached valuations above $4 trillion, making them the wealthiest companies in world history. Trump's AI Action Plan, released in July, is in part a call to keep the U.S. dominant by exporting American technology around the world. Notably, for a White House that rejects much of the world order, it calls for the U.S. to leverage its positions in international bodies, including the ITU. 'Everyone in the world should be using our technology, and we should make it easy for the world to use it,' White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Director Michael Kratsios said last week in Washington. Observers say Bogdan-Martin's early re-entry into the race shows American officials are wary of China's growing influence. Bogdan-Martin easily defeated her rival in 2022, but Mark Lambert, a State Department veteran of the Biden and first Trump administrations, anticipated Bogdan-Martin's rivals would start their campaign ahead of time as well. 'If the Chinese and Russians are crafty, they'll find a like-minded candidate from Africa or Latin America to put forward to line up lesser developed country votes,' said Lambert. Mark Beall, who directed AI strategy in the Pentagon in the first Trump administration, said the U.S. would likely contest China's influence by appealing to the same voters from the lesser developed world, with the early announcement giving 'time to counter potential infrastructure-for-votes deals that some competitors might offer.' Recent signals in the wonky world of global telecom diplomacy may give the U.S. some cause for concern. Daniel Baer, who served as ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe under former President Barack Obama, said Trump's tariffs and slashing of foreign aid might be alienating potential ITU votes. 'In much of the world, there's probably less interest in doing favors for the United States than there might have been a year ago,' he said. In June, the ITU voted on the location of the agency's World Radio Conference, planned for 2027. Although Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick pitched Washington to host the confab, members voted instead to hold the event in Shanghai. 'That's not the outcome that the United States wanted,' said Fiona Alexander, a senior telecoms official in the Commerce Department from 2008 to 2019, during both the Obama and Trump administrations. 'We need to get serious. We need to get organized. There's a long-term play in all of these institutions because it's all about coalition building'. Privacy hawks hound the TSA over facial recognition Privacy-minded Senate Republicans are accusing the Transportation Security Administration of interfering with a bill to make airport screenings less intrusive, POLITICO's Benjamin Guggenheim reported Sunday. Senate Commerce Chair Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said he'd delay consideration of the bill last Tuesday, which would have required the TSA to notify passengers of their ability to opt-out of facial recognition scans and put checks on the storage of biometric data collected in the process. The bill was subject to intense opposition from the travel industry, but Republicans also grumbled about the TSA's involvement. When asked if the TSA raised concerns about the bill, co-sponsor Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) said, 'The short answer is yes; the long answer is hell yes.' He added, 'They're working like an ugly stripper to kill this bill, which tells me we're doing the right thing.' A senior Senate GOP aide also told POLITICO that the 'smears against [the] bill have TSA's fingerprints all over it.' The TSA did not respond to POLITICO's inquiries on the matter. Delta says its AI is not using our data to set prices Delta Air Lines is denying that it uses personal data to set 'individualized' airfares, POLITICO's Alfred Ng reports. The airline made the claims in a letter that the company sent on Friday to Sens. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.), in response to their questions about its pricing practices. Peter Carter, Delta's chief external affairs officer, wrote in the letter, 'Our AI-powered pricing functionality is designed to enhance our existing fare pricing processes using aggregated data.' This response doesn't seem to have allayed the senators' concerns. 'If Delta is in fact using aggregated instead of individualized data, that is welcome news,' Gallego said in a statement. 'But it still begs the question: why did their president brag to their investors about their desire to 'get you the right offer in your hand at the right time'?' Warner wrote in an X post on Friday that 'many questions remain.' post of the day THE FUTURE IN 5 LINKS Stay in touch with the whole team: Aaron Mak (amak@ Mohar Chatterjee (mchatterjee@ Steve Heuser (sheuser@ Nate Robson (nrobson@ and Daniella Cheslow (dcheslow@