Taos Pueblo Indian Water Rights Settlement Amendments Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Taos Pueblo Indian Water Rights Settlement Amendments Act updates the 2010 Taos Pueblo settlement statute. It adds definitions for a mitigation well system and Pueblo Trust Funds, then revises section 505 so the Secretary manages multiple Pueblo trust funds instead of a single fund. It creates a Taos Pueblo Groundwater Development Supplemental Trust Fund that Taos Pueblo may use for groundwater production, treatment, and delivery infrastructure, and a Taos Pueblo Surface Water Sharing Supplemental Trust Fund that may be used for surface water sharing infrastructure and gages tied to the Settlement Agreement. It adds supplemental nonreimbursable assistance for eligible non-Pueblo entities to plan, permit, design, engineer, and construct mutual-benefit water projects, including water treatment, with application deadlines and construction benchmarks. Non-mitigation well system projects must spend at least 10 percent within three years, substantially complete construction within six years, and fully complete within eight years; mitigation well system projects must spend at least 15 percent within three years, substantially complete within four years, and fully complete within six years, with limited extension authority. The bill provides mandatory appropriations of $161 million, adjusted for construction costs, for mutual-benefit projects; $190 million, adjusted, for the groundwater development supplemental trust fund; and $16 million, adjusted, for the surface water sharing supplemental trust fund. It also states that prior settlement conditions and the 2016 Interior finding remain valid and that no settlement agreement or partial final decree amendment is required for Interior to carry out the Act.
Who Benefits and How
Taos Pueblo water programs benefit from supplemental trust funds for groundwater infrastructure and surface water sharing infrastructure. Taos Pueblo groundwater infrastructure benefits from a $190 million mandatory appropriation, adjusted for construction cost changes. Taos Pueblo surface water sharing infrastructure benefits from a $16 million mandatory appropriation, adjusted for construction cost changes. Eligible non-Pueblo entities benefit from $161 million in supplemental nonreimbursable assistance for mutual-benefit water projects. Mutual-benefit water project contractors benefit from funded planning, design, engineering, construction, and water treatment work.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Interior trust fund staff must manage the supplemental Pueblo trust funds, investments, withdrawals, and expenditure conditions. Bureau of Reclamation project staff must award and oversee mutual-benefit project grants, contracts, and financial assistance agreements. Eligible non-Pueblo entities must meet application deadlines and construction expenditure, substantial-completion, and final-completion deadlines. Treasury transfer staff must move mandatory appropriations into the new settlement funds. Federal taxpayers bear the cost of at least $367 million in mandatory appropriations before construction-cost adjustments.
Key Provisions
- Adds definitions for the mitigation well system and Pueblo Trust Funds.
- Establishes supplemental groundwater development and surface water sharing trust funds for Taos Pueblo.
- Authorizes supplemental nonreimbursable assistance for eligible non-Pueblo mutual-benefit water projects.
- Requires project expenditure and completion deadlines for mitigation well system and non-mitigation projects.
- Appropriates $161 million for mutual-benefit projects, $190 million for groundwater development, and $16 million for surface water sharing, each subject to adjustment.
- Protects prior settlement conditions, the 2016 Interior finding, and implementation without amending the settlement agreement or partial final decree.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Amends the Taos Pueblo Indian Water Rights Settlement Act by defining a mitigation well system and Pueblo trust funds, creating supplemental groundwater and surface-water-sharing trust funds, adding supplemental nonreimbursable mutual-benefit project assistance with construction deadlines, appropriating $161 million for mutual-benefit projects, $190 million for groundwater development, and $16 million for surface-water sharing, and preserving prior settlement conditions and decrees.
Key Policy Areas
Tribal Water Rights, Bureau of Reclamation, Water Infrastructure, Appropriations
Primary Purpose
Amends the Taos Pueblo Indian Water Rights Settlement Act by defining a mitigation well system and Pueblo trust funds, creating supplemental groundwater and surface-water-sharing trust funds, adding supplemental nonreimbursable mutual-benefit project assistance with construction deadlines, appropriating $161 million for mutual-benefit projects, $190 million for groundwater development, and $16 million for surface-water sharing, and preserving prior settlement conditions and decrees.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Taos Pueblo water programs
- Taos Pueblo groundwater infrastructure
- Taos Pueblo surface water sharing infrastructure
- Eligible non-Pueblo entities
- Mutual-benefit water project contractors
Identified Costs
- Interior trust fund staff
- Bureau of Reclamation project staff
- Eligible non-Pueblo entities
- Treasury transfer staff
- Federal taxpayers
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMs. Leger Fernandez introduced the following bill; which was referred …
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Bureau of Reclamation project staff, Interior settlement staff, Interior trust fund staff
Bureau of Reclamation project staff, Interior trust fund staff face effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: Interior settlement staff, Treasury trust fund staff
Negative-direction: Treasury transfer staff
Taos Pueblo groundwater infrastructure, Taos Pueblo surface water sharing infrastructure
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology