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A child playing in the Poudre River
Leo Pierson, 9, spends his first day of summer break cooling off in the Poudre River in Fort Collins, May 30, 2025. (Kira Vos, Special to the Colorado Sun)

More than a year after a landmark $100 million environmental settlement designed to improve the Poudre River was OK’d, little progress has been made to put the agreement into action.

The settlement, signed in February 2025, came after Save The Poudre sued to stop the $2.7 billion Northern Integrated Supply Project. The deal was designed to allow NISP to move forward while paying to improve the Poudre and protect it from any harm the project might cause.

Fresh Water News

This Fresh Water News story is a collaboration between The Colorado Sun and Water Education Colorado. It also appears at wateredco.org.

NISP is designed to serve roughly a dozen fast-growing cities along the Northern Front Range and will include two reservoirs and a pipeline.

The Community Foundation of Northern Colorado is leading the effort to implement work funded by the settlement, which includes projects that will make the river healthier for fish and aquatic habitat, improve water flows and water quality, and increase recreational opportunities.

The foundation is overseeing a six-member committee that began meeting in August. The committee will decide how to implement the ambitious environmental projects outlined in the settlement. Some will require moving irrigation diversion points while others will target restoring fish and riparian habitat, all of which will require analysis and study before they can be completed.

“We are taking time to be intentional,” said Jodie Riesenberger, the foundation’s vice president for community impact. 

But work has also been slow because key payments from NISP participants to the foundation are tied to benchmarks in building the massive reservoir and pipeline system. The committee received its first $5 million payment last year when the settlement was signed and is supposed to get its next $5 million payment when construction begins, something that could have happened later this year but has been delayed. The full $100 million is to be paid out over a 20-year period, Riesenberger said.

Since the settlement was approved, though, the project’s largest customer, the Fort Collins-Loveland Water District, has dropped out of NISP. A handful of other cities, including Evans, have also dropped out, citing concerns about soaring design and construction costs, as well as the cost of the environmental settlement.

In response, Northern Water, which is overseeing project construction, temporarily halted design work as it reexamined NISP’s size.

Now, construction isn’t likely to begin until 2027 or later, Northern Water spokesperson Jeff Stahla said.

“We did slow things down,” Stahla said, “but there is still a chance we can start in mid-2027.”

Save The Poudre River President Gary Wockner said the delays aren’t surprising.

The committee has “been moving slow because there is a lot to learn,” he said. “If you want to fix problems on the river, you have to understand the river and know what the problems are.” 

Since the river committee began meeting in August, Riesenberger said work has focused on analyzing what the issues are and trying to figure out how and whether to spend the money they have on hand now.

Riesenberger said the delays “don’t impact what we’re doing yet, but it could if it drags on longer. The dream is that these dollars could do transformational things for the river.” 

Type of Story: News

Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

Jerd Smith writes about water and drought in Colorado and the American West. She approaches water stories from different angles, covering law and policy, regulation, agriculture, climate and the environment, as well as in main street stories...