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Southeast Water Symposium Information
Southeast Water Resources:
Management and Supply Issues


August 24-26, 1998

The Tennessee Aquarium & Chattanooga Marriott
at the Convention Center

Chattanooga, Tennessee

Sponsored by the Appalachian Regional Commission
and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville


What's the problem?
How can we work toward a solution?
Who will attend?
What will participants do?
What will result?
Where do I get more information?

What's the problem?

      The Southeast's rich cultural, economic, and environmental heritage depends on clean, abundant water. In recent years conflicts over water use and supply have generated debate over how to ensure that various needs are met while protecting the environment, fostering economic development, ensuring regional fairness, and empowering affected groups. Problems include

  • Interbasin transfers.
  • Inequitable pricing schemes.
  • Threats to instream quality caused by withdrawals or other activities whose impacts cross state lines.
    &nbspExamples include
  • Land use and population pressures stemming from the rapid growth of metropolitan Atlanta.
  • Quantity and quality issues in the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint basin.
  • Balancing multi-purpose needs in the Central & Southern Florida water supply "restudy."
  • Diverting water from Lake Gaston on the Virginia-North Carolina border to Virginia Beach.


How can we work toward a solution?

    &nbspThe objectives of this symposium are to:

  • Identify conflicts over current and future water use.
  • Consider what resource-related information is needed to address these conflicts and meet other threats.
  • Assess how present and future conflicts may be better managed through new institutions and decision-making mechanisms that are regionally-based and comprehensive in scope.


Who will attend?

    &nbspDuring two and a half days, a select group of federal, state, and local officials, water user groups, environmental and community organizations, and academic and other researchers will consider these problems through expert presentations and large- and small-group discussions.


What will participants do?

Day One:
    &nbspA plenary session will establish the dimensions of Southeast water problems by identifying current and projected water use trends and critical issues, as well as major policy initiatives.

Day Two:
    &nbspParticipants will examine case studies that reveal impediments to comprehensive, coordinated management of transboundary water problems. They also will discuss keys to overcoming these impediments as revealed by successful experiences with negotiation and problem- solving techniques. During the remainder of Day Two, participants will devise elements for a successful regional strategy.

Day Three:
    &nbspParticipants will consider how such a strategy may be brought about.


What will result?
     
  • A report, furnished to the Appalachian Regional Commission, will contain a series of policy recommendations.
  • A summit will be held within months of the report's publication. The summit will feature decision makers from national, state, and local agencies, and important groups. It will produce a set of priorities among current water uses that may be addressed via a regional framework. It will also identify ongoing challenges likely to remain unresolved under existing decision-making mechanisms.


Where do I get more information?

David L. Feldman, Ph.D.
Coordinator, Southeast Water Supply Symposium
c/o Energy, Environment and Resources Center
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
311 Conference Center Building
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-4134
phone: 865-974-4251; fax: 865-974-1838
e-mail: feldman@utk.edu


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