Schock. 1977.)
373
Tables 16 and IT provide information on the projects in the three
States for the 1975 and 1976 seasons, respectively, as shown in the
maps in figures 5 and 6. Reference numbers where footnoted in the first
column of the tables correspond to North Dakota projects. Other col-
umns identify operators, sponsors, operational periods, seeding agents,
delivery modes, whether or not the project incorporated randomized
seeding, and the objectives. Xote that none of the operational projects
included random seeding.
Figure 7 shows the number of years from 1951 through 1976 that
counties in the three-State area were totally or partially included
in target areas of weather modification projects, according to an inten-
sive study of projects in the area over this timespan by Schock. 19
Statistics on these projects are given in table 18.
19 Ibid., pp. 15-15.
374
co c
o E
2^
c —
Ere™
1 -o o »1
l T3 -o •
c 00 :E-2
. <*>-o - 3
■a o ^
a. >- -o . - oo" =>■ oo
Q.cuc3j2«j.B-c=
'= «J ro oj " QJ ="-5
;I|i-?I:s i
t; co ° O co -° ^ co o^J-"
" iH-s s = 5 s s.es i
,± £ ^g20.i £ S J; O _
m oo .™ i nun oo-Q (_ s oh
£■■5
£ cd .
a> 52
05 "re
o CD
3"
»- CO o
» 1 £ .
c n ™ «m
o o-o^- |
^ TO CO CO *->
c g> fl> u
- C CO.i;-0
5 CD CO «, C
OO.Q
; 2 I
ID
te (4 percer
le (2 percei
rotechnics.
« .
%~
o _r
CO
CO
1 -5
l-S
-rCD
»
1!
Agl
t
— -O
oo
<
1975..
1975.
CO
CO
to Aug.
to Aug
ID
June
May
ikota
>ocia-
c
o
to
o
festern NortI
Suppression
Weather M<
ciation, Inc.
— -O
OO
r-< O
375
376
Figure 7. — Counties in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota which were
partially or totally included in weather modification target areas during the
years 1951 through 1976. The numbers indicate the number of seasons during
that time period that a given county included target areas for weather modifi-
cation projects. (From Schock, 1977.)
Table 18. — Statistics on operational and research weather modification projects
conducted in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota during the period
1951 through 1976.
Number of projects 63
Number of seasons projects conducted 162
Number of research projects 14
Number of seasons research projects conducted 27
Number of research projects financed totally with Federal dollars 9
Number of applied projects for which Federal dollars supported an evalua-
tion 2
Maximum number of counties in applied projects during a single year
(1974) 64
Source : Schock, 1977.
SOUTH DAKOTA
In the late 1940's and early 1950's there was a proliferation of
weather modification projects throughout the Great Plains, and as
much as 50 percent of the State of South Dakota is estimated to have
been under cloud seeding during the peak years. Financed through
voluntary contributions mostly from farmers and ranchers, the tech-
niques most often employed ground-based silver iodide generators.
The first weather modification legislation in South Dakota, enacted in
1953, established the South Dakota Weather Control Commission and
instructed the commission to promote and regulate cloud-seeding
activit ies.-°
20 Donnan, John A.. Jackson L. Pellett, Richard S. Leblang, and Loo F. Hitter, "The Rise
and Fall of the South Dakota Weather Modification Program," the Journal of Weather
Modification, vol. 8, No. 1, April 197G, pp. 1-2.
377
There was no Government support of weather modification until
1955, so that all projects until that year were voluntarily funded. In
1955 the legislature amended the State law, authorizing each county
to levy up to 1 mill on assessed valuation to support weather modifi-
cation. Counties took advantage of this new authority and some joined
together so that cooperative projects could be conducted in blocks of
contiguous counties. In 1959 the State Board of Regents established the
Institute of Atmospheric Sciences at South Dakota School of Mines
and Technology, and the first Federal funds for weather modification
were made available to the institute in 1961. Through 1970 at least
$3,800,000 in Federal funds had been invested in the State to study
summertime cumulus clouds and thunderstorms and to develop
weather modification techniques, mostly from the Bureau of Reclama-
tion, but also from the Defense and Commerce Departments and from
the National Science Foundation. 21
The "Weather Control Commission instructed the Institute of Atmos-
pheric Sciences to develop an operational weather modification plan
for the State in 1969, and in February 1970 individuals representing
various sections of the State's economy were invited to review and
give direction to such a possible operational program. To coordinate
development efforts the South Dakota Water Development Associa-
tion was established from those assembled. In April of that year the
executive committee of the Legislative Research Council included
this program among its studies of the year and in June and September
the Agriculture and Conservation Committee of the Legislative Re-
search Council heard testimony in support of a statewide weather
modification program. In October the committee approved an amend-
ment to the existing weather modification law, directing the Weather
Control Commission to carry out a statewide program of precipitation
management and appropriating $100,000 in State funds to develop
the program. The bill was subsequently approved, March 17, 1971, by
a two-thirds majority of both legislative houses, as required for all
special appropriations bills. 22
The Commission was attached to the State Department of Agricul-
ture for administrative purposes, but was given full authority to direct
the design and development of the program. In April 1971 the com-
mission selected a director, who assumed his position in September and
immediately began planning the statewide program for the summer of
1972. To emphasize and obtain local support, contact was made with
and support sought from agricultural organizations, water groups, and
the South Dakota County Commissioners Association. Counties were
asked to participate in the program, and it was proposed that one
commissioner from each participating county serve on a Weather Modi-
fication Advisory Committee, each with complete control over cloud
seeding activities in his county. The Weather Control Commission
established a cost share ratio of 25 percent for the county versus 75
percent for the State. Of the State's 67 counties, 26 agreed to partici-
pate during the 1972 summer season and entered into contract with
the Commission. As shown in figure 8, 21 of these counties constituted
a nearly solid block in the southeast part of the State, 3 were in a
block in the Black Hills, and 2 other large counties were in the ex-
21 Ibid., pp. 2-3.
22 Ibid., pp. 3-4.
378
treme northwest corner of the State, constituting a combined land area
of 17,181,000 acres. 23
In 1972 the legislature passed another special appropriation meas-
ure, requiring two-thirds support in both houses, which provided
$250,000 to support the 1972 operational program and administrative
functions of the Commission for fiscal year 1973. About $90,000 was
received in cost-share .funds from participating counties. In view of
insufficient funds, full-scale operations were conducted only in the
southeast part of the State, and supplemental support was provided
elsewhere ; 1972 field operations, costing about 3.2 cents per acre, were
performed under contract to the State by private firms. 24
▲
± Aircraft
Figure 8. — Twenty-six counties in South Dakota which contracted with the
State Weather Control Commission in the first year of the statewide weather
modification program during the 1972 operating season. (From Donnan, Pellett,
Leblang, and Ritter, 1976.)
23 Ibid., pp. 4-6.
24 Ibid., pp. 6-8.
379
Figure 9. — Forty-six counties in South Dakota which contracted with the State
Weather Modification Commission and participated in the statewide weather
modification program during the 1974 operating season. (From Donnan, Pellett,
Leblang, and Hitter, 1976.)
The special State appropriation for 1973 approved by the legislature
was $643,818, supplemented by $190,141 in county funds and $7,000
from the Federal Government. The law was also amended that year to
make changes in the administrative structure and in regulations. The
Weather Control Commission became the Weather Modification Com-
mission with modified membership provisions, the Commission and all
of its functions were transferred to the Department of Natural Ke-
sources, and license and permit requirements and violation penalties
were instituted. 25 The 1973 summer operating season began May 1, with
42 participating counties, divided into 6 operational districts. 26
Plans for the 1974 season included the intent for 46 counties to par-
ticipate, constituting 29,547,000 acres. In the fall of 1973 the Governor
considered the program so well established that he included its f unding
in his general appropriations bill, requiring only a simple majority vote
for passage. The $803,700 included was to fund operations for July
and August 1974 and May and June 1975. A special appropriation bill
was also introduced to provide $171,000 for contracted services in May
and June 1974. Both bills passed the legislature, and $243,600 in county
moneys and $30,200 in Federal funds were also available. The latter
funds were received from the Bureau of Reclamation and were to be
used for evaluation of operations. The overall cost of the 1974 seeding
program was 3.6 cents per acre. 27 Counties participating in this peak
year for the statewide program are shown on the map in figure 9.
25 The present South Dakota statutes relating to weather modification are reproduced in
app. D, p. G04.
16 Donnan, et al., "The Rise and Fall of the South Dakota Weather Modification Pro-
gram," 1976, pp. 8-11.
"Ibid., pp. 12-14.
380
For the 1975 summer seeding season, 45 counties expressed interest in
participation. The Commission developed an increased emphasis on
public information through over 100 public meetings in the fall and
winter of 1974-75, institution of a daily news release program during
the 1975 operational season, and expansion of the advisory committee to
include representatives from all the counties in each district. The fiscal
year 1976 budget was again included in the general appropriations bill.
Although evaluations had indicated positive results from the previous
seeding, South Dakota was suffering from a potentially severe drought
and the mood of the legislature was less supportive than in earlier
years. An attempt to move the appropriations from the general appro-
priations bill to a special appropriation requiring a two-thirds vote
test was defeated, however, and $776,500 was approved for fiscal year
1976. With county funds, the total budget for that year was $1,076,800,
and another $41,500 from the Bureau of Reclamation was provided to
support evaluations. 28
With the approach of the 1976 summer season, 42 counties provided
letters of intent to participate, and the proposed budget in the Gover-
nor's fiscal year 1977 general appropriations bill included $855,000 for
the statewide weather modification program. It became obvious that the
group opposing the State program had become well organized and in-
fluential. Concentrating their efforts in a few key counties where the
commissioners were overwhelmed by groups of strong opponents, the
opposition was instrumental in changing the decisions to participate
by those counties. In turn, these actions had negative effects on neigh-
boring counties. Consequently the 42 counties indicating intention to
participate in 1976 dwindled to 22 counties which signed contracts with
the Weather Modification Commission. In the legislature, meanwhile,
there was a successful move to remove the weather modification budget
from the Governor's general appropriation bill. A special appropria-
tion bill was promptly introduced, along with two other weather modi-
fication bills. One would have repealed the entire, existing weather
modification law, and the other would have required a hearing by each
county commission prior to issuance of a permit. None of these bills, in-
cluding the special appropriation measure, passed the legislature, so
that no funds were available to conduct the State program in fiscal year
1977. The Weather Modification Commission continued to function
as the State regulatory agency for issuance of licenses and permits. 29
Support of operational weather modification projects in South Da-
kota reverted, therefore, to the pattern of private and county funding
which existed prior to establishment of the statewide program, and
the number of such projects decreased dramatically. With funds avail-
able for part of the 1976 season, the State weather modification pro-
vided some support to local projects in nine southeastern counties and
to three counties in the northwest. The latter joined with the proiect in
southwestern North Dakota for the 1976 season. The South Dakota
Commission also contracted with the State of North Dakota to carry
out an evaluation program for 1976 operations in South Dakota.
Another five-county area in the eastern part of the State operated a
project with no State support during September 1976, originating after
2 * Ibid., pp. 12-14.
29 Ibid., pp. 14-16.
381
the drought extended into that area. 30 Counties included in projects
carried out in South Dakota during 1975 and 1976 are shown in the
maps in figures 5 and 6, and information on these projects is included
in tables 16 and 17, all of which appear in the section on the discussion
of North Dakota activities.
Four weather modification bills were introduced into the 1977 legis-
lature, one of which was a special appropriation bill which would have
provided 50-percent State support to operations in the estimated 30
counties interested in such a cooperative program. The special appro-
priation failed as did the other bills, and during 1977 only Harding
County, in the northwest, sponsored a seeding program, using county
funds and contracting with the adjacent project in North Dakota for
some of the required services. An attempted 1977 cooperative project in
five southeastern counties, supported by private and some county funds,
did not get underway. No weather modification bills were presented in
the 1978 legislature, though minimal funding has been approved by the
legislature in the past two sessions in the general appropriations bill
to maintain the Weather Modification Commission. 31
UTAH
The State of Utah has both one of the largest State weather modifica-
tion programs and one of the more complete organizational structures
for administering State projects and regulations provided by law. The
Divison of Water Resources is charged with developing the waters of
the State to the best beneficial use for citizens of Utah, considered to
be the second driest State in the Nation. 32 The Utah weather modifica-
tion law, titled Cloud Seeding to Increase Precipitation, was passed by
the State legislature March 5, 1973, and became effective May 8, 1973.
In part, the law states :
The State of Utah through the Division of Water Resources shall be the only
entity, private or public, that shall have authority to authorize, sponsor, and/or
develop cloud seeding research, evaluation, or implementation projects to alter
precipitation, cloud form, or meteorological parameter within the State of Utah,
except cloud seeding for suppression of fog is excluded. The Division of Water
Resources shall authorize, sponsor, and/or develop local or statewide cloud seed-
ing projects that conform to overall State water planning objectives which are
determined to be feasible by the Division of Water Resources. ... A cloud seeding
project as used in this act shall be a planned project to evaluate meteorological
conditions, perform cloud seedings, and evaluate results. 33
As designated by this law, the Division of Water Resources is the
State agency responsible for regulation and sponsorship of weather
modification projects. A Board of Water Resources has approved a
set of rules and regulations which stipulate requirements for licensing
of operations and obtaining permits on specific projects. 34 These rules
are included in appendix M.
30 Butler, Vern D., "Report of weather modification activities in South Dakota" (part of
report of area No. 5 — North Central States). North American Interstate Weat' er Modifica-
tion Council, business meeting, Dec. 2-3, 1976. In NAIWMC publication No. 77-1. Septem-
ber 1977. p. 78.
31 Butler, Vern D., private communication.
32 Summers. Paul C. Utah cloud seeding program, briefing before the U.S. Department of
Commerce Weather Modification Advisory Board, Sept. 24, 1977.
33 Utah Code Annotated No. 73-15-3. Cloud seeding to increase precipitation — control of
division of water resources — powers and authority of division — "cloud seeding" and
"cloud-seeding project" defined. (The Utnh weather modification law is included in its en-
tirety along with similar laws of other States in app. D, p. 612.)
34 State of Utah, Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water Resources, "Rules,
Regulations, and Procedures Relating to the Utah Cloud Seeding Act of 1973" (Laws of
Utah, ch. 193), March 1976, 13 pp.
34-857 O - 79 - 27
382
The State's cloud seeding program is administered by a small stall'
in the -Division of Water Resources, augmented by two advisory
groups of experts. The Program Advisory Committee (PAC) includes
representatives from State, Federal, and local agencies, such as the
Forest Service, the National Park Service, State Lands, and local user
groups who have either a direct or indirect interest in the program.
The Technical Advisory Group (TAG) is composed of meteorologists
from the National Weather Service, the Bureau of Reclamation, tho
University of Utah, and Utah State University as well as statisticians
from the Soil Conservation Service and the University of Utah. 35
The operational cloud-seeding program in Utah is organized on a
State-county basis, where costs are shared between the State and the
counties or other political subdivisions. The cost sharing ratio is ap-
proximately 60 percent State to 40 percent local. From 1973 through
1975, before State funds were available, a group of counties in the
southern part of the State, an area of somewhat constant drought,
contracted for seeding winter clouds to increase mountain snowpack.
In 1975 the legislature appropriated State funds, however, which per-
mitted expansion of seeding operations to 1-1 southern counties, cover-
ing about 60 percent of the land area of the State. That same year
three northern counties joined three southern counties in Idaho, ini-
tiating a project for rain enhancement and hail suppression that has
been conducted during the summers of 1976 and 1977. The severe
drought conditions of the past year led to increased interest from local
officials and increased funding from the State legislature, so that
projects were conducted in all but three of the State's 29 counties
during 197T. 36
The Utah program also supports weather modification research.
State funds have been earmarked for research activities as well as for
evaluation and environmental monitoring. In particular, weather mod-
ification research at the Utah Water Research Laboratory, formerly
supported by the Bureau of Reclamation, is now funded by the State,
since Federal "Sky water" funds have not been available in recent years.
The State has officially agreed to support the proposed plan of the
Bureau of Reclamation to augment water supplies in the Colorado
River through cloud seeding in the major watersheds in the river
basin. The Division of Water Resources recently concluded an agree-
ment with the Bureau to begin preliminary project design in the Uinta
Mountains of eastern Utah in preparation for this project. 37
WASHINGTON
Under the weather modification law of the State of Washington 38
the Department of Ecology is charged with responsibility for super-
vision and control of all weather modification activities conducted
within the State. The department also represents the State in all inter-
state contacts relating to weather modification. In accordance with
regulations promulgated by the State to implement the administra-
tion of the law, the Department of Ecology carries out the State's
program of regulation which requires the issuing of licenses and per-
mits, the payment of fees, and the reporting of activities. These regu-
lations, reproduced in appendix M, apply to all weather modification
•« Summers, "Utah Cloud Seeding Program," 1977.
38 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
28 RCW 43.37.010 through 910. See app. D for the text of the Washington law, p. 613.
383
activities in all parts of the State except as specifically exempted. 39
Activities which are exempted from licensing, permit, and liability
Share with your friends: |