Survey work starts on major Navajo Nation water project
Survey work began on the $870 million Navajo Gallup Water Supply Project in New Mexico.

The pipeline is a component of the Navajo Nation water rights settlement that President Barack Obama signed into law last year. The project will serve the Navajo Nation, the Jicarilla Apache Nation and the city of Gallup, New Mexico.

The Interior Department says the pipeline will bring water to 250,000 people on and off the reservation by the year 2040. Congress set a deadline for completion by December 31, 2024.

Get the Story:
Project brings water infrastructure to Navajo Nation, costs $870M (The Farmington Daily Times 3/23)

Relevant Documents:
President Obama Remarks | STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT | BACKGROUND ON THE OMNIBUS PUBLIC LANDS MANAGEMENT ACT BILL SIGNING | Secretary Ken Salazar Remarks

Omnibus Lands Bill:
H.R.146 | S.22

Related Stories:
Salazar signs Navajo water pipeline decision (10/1)
Announcement set for Navajo pipeline project (9/30)
Editorial: Much work left on Navajo water rights (06/10)
Navajo Nation celebrates water rights settlement (05/27)
Editorial: Water project benefits Navajo people (4/9)
Obama signs omnibus public lands bill into law (3/31)
Obama to sign omnibus public lands bill into law (3/30)
Tribal provisions included in omnibus lands bill (3/26)
Navajo Nation water rights settlement in Congress (02/17)