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| | Arkansas-White-Red Basins
Inter-Agency Committee
161st AWRBIAC
Meeting and Water Symposium - April 17-20, 2012, Austin, Texas
AWRBIAC is the Arkansas-White-Red Basins
Inter-Agency Committee. It was established in September 1955 by the Inter-Agency Committee on Water Resources (later replaced by the Water
Resources Council which is now inactive).
AWRBIAC
Geographic Importance
The geographical area
encompasses the entire state of Oklahoma and portions of Arkansas,
Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, New Mexico, and Texas, within the
three basins--excluding those portions of the lower White and Bayou Meto
basins affected by the Mississippi River backwater.
Water uses include navigation,
hydropower, irrigation, recreation, fish and wildlife, and municipal and
industrial water supply. These three basins drain about 280,000 square
miles involving all or parts of eight states, 331 counties, and 28
congressional districts. The region's population is about six million,
and includes the following metropolitan areas:
- Fort Smith and Little Rock, Arkansas
- Pueblo, Colorado
- Dodge City and Wichita, Kansas
- Shreveport and Alexandria, Louisiana
- Tucumcari, New Mexico
- Springfield and Joplin, Missouri
- Oklahoma City and Tulsa, Oklahoma
- Amarillo and Wichita Falls, Texas
AWRBIAC Mission
- AWRBIAC Provides a forum
for states and federal agencies involved with the Red, White, and
Arkansas Basins to:
- Coordinate policies, programs,
and activities in areas of water and related land resources
investigation, planning, construction, operation, and maintenance.
- Coordinate water and related
land resource interests among federal, state, and local governments and
private agencies.
- Surface emerging water and
related land resources concerns and/or issues.
- Help resolve water and related
land resource conflicts.
Additional Information
Archived
Last Modified:
02/21/2012 < Back to Technical Resources
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