Volume 17 Issue 6 June

A Conversation With Congressman Baumgartner

By Kris Polly

In our cover story this month, we speak with Congressman Michael Baumgartner, who has represented Washington’s 5th Congressional District since 2025. With strong roots in Eastern Washington, natural resources issues, and international affairs, Congressman Baumgartner brings a wide perspective to water management– and irrigation-related matters. We talk about the goal of completing the Columbia Basin Project, the importance of preserving the lower Snake River dams, forest management legislation, and more.

Then, we speak with Brad Wind, a longtime veteran of Colorado water utility Northern Water who today serves as its general manager. Northern Water operates the majority of the Bureau of Reclamation’s Colorado–Big Thompson project, which brings an average of 215,000 acre-feet of water per year from the western side of the Continental Divide to its service area in north-central Colorado. To continue serving this growing region, Northern Water is working on two vast system improvement projects, the Windy Gap Firming Project and the Northern Integrated Supply Project, both of which involve significant water storage.

Next, we speak to the team from the Pajaro Valley Water Management Agency on California’s Central Coast. Founded to control and alleviate groundwater overdraft and saltwater intrusion, the agency is working to bring its management activities to the next level of sophistication with the comprehensive deployment of McCrometer flow meters and the thorough use of the digital data they generate.

Another digitalization process has gone on at central Washington’s South Columbia Basin Irrigation District, which has adopted Assura Software’s solutions to create modules for purchase orders, management tasks, board meetings, damage claims, and permits. Terrie Larson, the district’s executive assistant, and Hamish Howard, the CEO and managing director of Assura, explain how the software works and how it has improved operations at the district.

Goanna Ag provides crop management technologies that integrate a variety of inputs, including canopy temperature, soil moisture, weather, and satellite imagery, to provide actionable recommendations about when to irrigate—and when not to. Derek Brazda, Goanna Ag’s vice president of U.S. sales and operations, tells us more about the technology and the water savings it can deliver.

Finally, we speak with Paul Conti, an aquatics specialist at Alligare, about Aqualine 6.3, a versatile new addition to the aquatic chemical company’s lineup of products. Aqualine can provide either broad-spectrum control or selective species management and integrates well with mechanical and biological plant control methods.

Sometimes, system improvement means building enormous pipelines and reservoirs capable of moving and storing thousands of acre-feet of water. Other times, it means installing many small meters and monitors that add up to systemwide digitalization. And sometimes it means adopting technological solutions that will save a minute here and a minute there—adding up to many hundreds of hours across an organization. In all these ways, irrigation districts are improving their infrastructure and operations and equipping themselves to face tomorrow’s challenges.

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.