Block release of water scheduled to begin from Santa Rosa Reservoir Sept. 28, 2020

Published Sept. 22, 2020

SANTA ROSA LAKE, N.M. – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Albuquerque District has scheduled a block release of water from Santa Rosa Lake to start Monday, Sept. 28, 2020, at 8:00 am. 

 

The Bureau of Reclamation, acting on the behalf of Carlsbad Irrigation District, requested the 4,000 acre-feet release. Carlsbad Irrigation District owns the irrigation water that makes up all of the water stored in Santa Rosa Lake.

 

The block release from Santa Rosa Lake is scheduled to last until Oct. 2, 2020, to transfer water to Sumner Lake.

 

“The final date and time for the end of the release will depend on when the full release of 4,000 acre-feet is complete, or if Bureau of Reclamation requests an earlier stop to retain more storage in Santa Rosa Lake,” said Garret Ross, Pecos and San Juan River Basin Manager in the USACE-Albuquerque District’s Water Management Section.

 

Based on current conditions, the lake’s elevation at the beginning of the release is estimated to be at 4702.3 feet, or approximately 7,430 acre-feet of storage. At the end of the release, the lake’s elevation is estimated to be at 4692.9 feet, or approximately 3,400 acre-feet of storage. This equates to about a 9-feet drop in lake elevation during the block release. The final drop in elevation depends on the actual inflows into the lake and the final release volume.

 

At the end of the release, there could be as little as 330 acres of lake available for fishing and recreation. New Mexico Department of Game and Fish and New Mexico State Parks have been notified so that they can make determinations on the management of recreation and the lake’s fishery.

 

Santa Rosa Dam is the first major dam along the Pecos River, and its reservoir has a 2,434 square mile contributing drainage area. The other two dams, Sumner Lake and Dam, and Brantley Dam, are owned by the Bureau of Reclamation. The Santa Rosa Reservoir is a main component in the Pecos River Basin comprehensive plan, providing irrigation storage, flood control, and sediment retention.

 

Although the reservoir is a Corps' managed lake, the campgrounds and most recreation areas at Santa Rosa Lake are managed by New Mexico State Parks. 

 

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Release no. 20-111