Inhofe to attend City water signing ceremony

June 16, 2020

U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) and other state and local dignitaries will attend a ceremony this week that will help mark the City’s next step in securing long-term potable water supply for Bartlesville and the surrounding area.

The City of Bartlesville Water Supply Signing Ceremony is set for 8:30 a.m. June 19. The event will be held at the Tower Center at Unity Square, located at Sixth Street and Dewey Avenue.

The ceremony marks an agreement between the City of Bartlesville and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers that allows the City to purchase water rights at Copan Lake at a reasonable cost, which is now possible thanks to a provision Inhofe authored in  America’s Water Infrastructure Act of 2018.

“Senator Inhofe’s work on this issue, along with the efforts of many others over the past two decades, has resulted in the City’s ability to purchase water storage rights at Copan Lake,” said City Manager Mike Bailey. “The ability to do this, combined with the City’s planned wastewater reuse project, will provide a drought resilient water supply for our area through at least 2060. It’s an important step for the City of Bartlesville and its water customers.”

The City of Bartlesville Water Resources Committee was formed in 2003 to seek new avenues for water supply sources after severe drought conditions hit the area in 2001-02. In 2006 the City contracted with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to conduct a study to determine the most economical water supply. The Corps completed the report and recommendations in December 2007, and at that time the City began petitioning the Corps of Engineers for a reduction in the cost of water supply at the lake. Prior to the implementation of Inhofe’s provision, water rights at Copan Lake were set at a cost of nearly $2,000 per acre-foot. Today, the City is able to purchase water storage at the lake for approximately $70 per acre-foot.

“As soon as this contract is executed with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the City of Bartlesville will have immediate access to this water through our existing infrastructure, and for the first time since we began pursuing this avenue in 2007, we will have another water source to combat a drought emergency,” Bailey said.

The public is invited to attend the event. For more information, see City Beat: Water rights become feasible at Copan Lake.

Related stories:

City of Bartlesville: Water, then and now

City gets OK for water reuse system grant

Capital needs report

Photo by Imani on Unsplash