Legal and Technical Assistance Program

Reach Out

Water law in Colorado is complex and there are circumstances under which an irrigator can lose their water rights or be adversely impacted by a change of use within the watershed. To a small-scale farmer, water is wealth–the means by which you support your family and the means by which you participate in your community. However, the process through which a farmer must go to defend his water rights, either in an abandonment challenge or as an intervener in a change of use proceedings,  can be costly and time consuming, requiring technical and legal expertise beyond what an individual farmer can afford. Our culture is one in which knowledge is shared orally, from generation to generation.  While this strong oral tradition has meant that acequia knowledge and sustainable farming practices have been passed down for nine and ten generations, the oral tradition has also been a hindrance in the legal and administrative world of Colorado water. Acequias do not have written bylaws and often lack the diversion records necessary for proof of historic use in water court. 

Another problem facing acequias is the challenge of governance. Most agricultural ditches in Colorado are incorporated companies with recorded bylaws and leadership structures. One goal of this program is to support acequia governance through empowerment of its members and strengthened internal controls. Thus far, we have worked to draft model bylaws which can be adopted by acequia ditches and we are currently working to develop a governance handbook for Colorado acequias.

Legal Assistance Application for Acequias

The Acequia Assistance Project Offers Legal Representation and Support to acequias and farmers in the San Luis Valley.

The Acequia Assistance Project is entering our 14 th year of serving the San Luis Valley& acequia community and is taking on new clients this fall.

The Acequia Project’s mission is to support farmers in Costilla, Conejos, Huerfeno, and Las Animas Counties by helping you protect your water rights and ensure that the acequia tradition thrives into the future. We have supported dozens ditches in the San Luis valley with cases including:

 Drafting and passing bylaws

 Incorporation

 Water Rights

How We Work

We work with acequias and other irrigation ditches to become legally recognized entities, meet legal requirements to access grant funding, resolve water rights questions and disputes, and apply for water rights.

If we are able to assist you on your case, the Project will pair you with a practicing water attorney, supported by a team of law students from the University of Colorado Boulder, to represent you or your ditch. All services are provided free of charge.

Contact the Project

If you think that you or your ditch could benefit from our services, please send an inquiry

email to acequia@colorado.edu or

call Nathan Boyer-Rechlin, Project Director, at (518) 791-8814.

Please inquire by October 1st for priority consideration.

*DISCLAIMER: Please note that responding to this posting, submitting an application, scheduling an information session, or any other communication with the Project prior to a formal engagement letter does not establish an attorney client relationship. If your case is selected to be worked on by the Acequia Assistance Project, we will connect you with a licensed attorney and a team of student attorneys who will address your legal matters after a formal engagement letter has been signed.

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