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Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter said the region needs to do more to protect the water that's already available. "Conservation has to become an ethic in the West," he said. Inevitably, though, there will be hard decisions to make about who gets water and who doesn't, said Doug Miell, an Australian water consultant and former leader of an irrigation council during some of the country's worst drought conditions. "The bad news is there's no silver bullet," said Miell, who advocated for more information gathering and sharing among resource managers. Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer, the incoming WGA chairman, agreed that water needs to be better measured, moved more efficiently and conserved on a larger scale. "Those of us who are managing water in the West know how important this is," he said. ___ Western Governors' Association: http://www.westgov.org/
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