The Denver Gazette reports on President Donald Trump’s veto of a bipartisan Colorado water bill tied to the Arkansas Valley Conduit project. The article is by Marianne Goodland.
The bill aimed to help finish a long-planned southeastern Colorado pipeline project supporters say is needed to deliver clean drinking water to about 50,000 residents across 39 communities in the lower Arkansas Valley.
The Bullet Point Brief
- President Trump vetoed H.R. 131, calling the project economically unviable and arguing Colorado, not federal taxpayers, should pay for it.
- Rep. Lauren Boebert called for a veto override and said the bill was non-controversial and passed the House and Senate unanimously.
- The Arkansas Valley Conduit is described as a 130-mile pipeline from Pueblo Reservoir to Lamar, intended to serve 39 communities.
- The article says groundwater in the lower Arkansas Valley is contaminated with high levels of selenium, and cites a 2025 Colorado State University study describing health risks at high exposure.
- Project costs have grown, with the article reporting an estimate of $1.39 billion; it also reports federal contributions of more than $500 million to date and a 2020 state appropriation of $100 million (mostly loans).
My Bottom Line
Principle: Clean, reliable drinking water is basic infrastructure, and Washington should not play games with it.
I agree with Rep. Boebert on this one. If a bill is truly bipartisan, unanimous in both chambers, and aimed at getting safe drinking water to rural families, a veto is the wrong tool. If you want to debate cost control, do it in the open and do it with a plan, not a surprise stop sign.
What this means locally: Weld County knows water is life. Whether you are a family on a well, a city system operator, or a farmer watching every acre-foot, you cannot run a community on uncertainty. When big projects get yanked around by national politics, it drives up costs, delays construction, and leaves local ratepayers holding the bag.
What I’d like to see next: Congress should move quickly on a veto override vote, and if that fails, leadership should bring back a clean, narrowly written fix that addresses repayment terms and cost accountability without stalling the project. I also want clear, public numbers on the remaining local share and the repayment structure so rural communities can plan, budget, and build. Water policy should be boring, predictable, and focused on results. That is the goal.
Source: Denver Gazette — link

