Volume 13 Issue 9 October
Getting to Know the New Regional Director
By Kris Polly
Since her appointment as the regional director for the Bureau of Reclamation’s Columbia-Pacific Northwest Region in May, Jennifer Carrington has made a point of visiting and getting to know irrigation districts and irrigators throughout the region—an effort that I know from personal conversations has been greatly appreciated. We are glad to feature Ms. Carrington’s thoughts on maintaining stakeholder dialogue, strengthening water management, and securing infrastructure funding in this month’s cover interview.
We also focus in this issue on health and wellness, an important topic for all irrigation district managers. Joel Irving is a former professional hockey player who today is a salesman and project manager at International Water Screens. When he retired from professional hockey, Mr. Irving decided to take a break from athletics, but soon found his health declining. He tells us how he turned things around with a new daily running regimen.
Washington State’s Quincy–Columbia Basin Irrigation District started a wellness program in direct response to rising insurance premiums. Its program includes employee challenges, informational newsletters, and incentives to take advantage of preventative care. Turlock Irrigation District in California, meanwhile, has a health and safety program based around a platform called Seity, which incorporates daily app-based check-ins, exercise challenges, and more. Central Arizona– based Roosevelt Water Conservation District’s health and wellness program aims to promote the physical, mental, and emotional well-being of its employees and to build community through activities such as stretching classes, massages, activity challenges, and even pumpkin-decorating contests.
When Utah’s Provo River Water Users Association piped and buried one of its canals, it worked with local partners
to build a 17-mile multiuse public trail over it, a win-win- win for the agency, local communities, and the Provo River. General Manager Keith Denos tells us more.
We also speak with Aaron Baldwin of Canal Sugar, which is undertaking the monumental task of replacing 80 percent of Egypt’s sugar imports by planting tens of thousands of acres of sugar beets on challenging soils in the middle of the Egyptian desert.
The small staff of the Greater Wenatchee Irrigation District recently began using an Assura Software solution to help track and prioritize tasks and maintenance projects and to manage its assets as it serves customers across 10,000 acres in north-central Washington State. Manager Craig Gyselinck tells us more about the district’s experience with Assura.
Finally, we feature an interview with Eluid Martinez, the former commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation and state engineer of New Mexico, about the insights he has gleaned from his many years of experience.
Any irrigation district that currently lacks a health and wellness program should consider creating one, and the districts we feature this month supply excellent ideas about where to start. I hope their accomplishments are interesting and inspiring to you as well.
Kris Polly is the editor-in-chief of Irrigation Leader magazine and the president of Water Strategies LLC, a government relations firm he began in February 2009 for the purpose of representing and guiding water, power, and agricultural entities in their dealings with Congress, the Bureau of Reclamation, and other federal government agencies. He may be contacted at kris.polly@waterstrategies.com.