Volume 16 Issue 1 January MT
Working for the Future of Irrigation, Worldwide
By Kris Polly
Helena-based professional services consulting firm Morrison-Maierle has worked on many water resources and irrigation projects in Montana, including the Jocko Area Canal Conversion Project and Bitter Root Irrigation District’s Siphon 1 replacement. In this month’s cover story, we interview Molly Davidson, the firm’s natural resources market group leader, about these and other irrigation infrastructure projects.
The South Island of New Zealand is rich in irrigated agriculture, irrigated pasture, hydropower resources, beautiful views, and charming and resourceful people. Participants in a March 2024 tour organized by Irrigation Leader experienced all this and more, and this month, we bring you their thoughts and experiences.
Next, we learn about challenges and solutions at three U.S. irrigation districts: Tualatin Valley Irrigation District in Oregon and the Kirwin and Webster Irrigation Districts in Kansas. While all are affected by drought and are working hard to maintain and modernize their water delivery systems despite funding challenges, the details of their challenges differ interestingly by location.
There’s significant irrigation north of the border, too: We learn more about irrigated agriculture in Alberta in a conversation with Margo Jarvis Redelback, the executive director of the Alberta Irrigation Districts Association, and also preview the association’s February 2025 conference.
Then, we speak with Dani Quissell, the executive vice president of the North Dakota Water Users Association, who also serves as the executive director of the North Dakota Irrigation Association and the North Dakota Water Education Foundation. These statewide organizations advocate for adequate water funding and sound water policy, support irrigation development, and promote the education of future water resources professionals.
Shane Sheppard is the manager of Consolidated Irrigation District No. 19, located in the rapidly urbanizing outskirts of Spokane in eastern Washington State. He tells us how the district has responded to the changing water use patterns in the region, including through the construction of major water storage facilities.
Across many regions and nations, irrigated agriculture continues to grow strongly, while also working doggedly to confront the challenges posed by drought and the aging of infrastructure. I hope you find our interviews with the tenacious and determined professionals in our industry inspiring.
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.