What is the Rappahannock Tribe challenging?
The Tribe is challenging DEQ’s approval of Caroline County’s permit to withdraw up to nine million gallons of water per day from the Rappahannock River and transfer water to the Mattaponi River, arguing that the permit was issued without required consultation or adequate scientific analysis.
Who is the Rappahannock Tribe and why should their opinion matter more than anyone else’s?
The Rappahannock Tribe are the original people of the Rappahannock River, with a cultural, historical, and legal relationship to the river that is older than the Commonwealth itself. Theirs is a unique voice with particular value protecting the river for all of Virginia’s people, now and for future generations.
Is the Tribe trying to stop Caroline County from securing drinking water for its residents?
No. The Tribe supports responsible, sustainable water planning. Its challenge focuses on impact and process—specifically the lack of meaningful Tribal consultation, incomplete studies, and unanswered questions about whether less harmful alternatives were adequately considered.
Caroline County says it has no other option but to use the river. Why does the Tribe disagree?
The Tribe believes alternatives—such as purchasing finished water, enhanced conservation, phased approaches, or partial reliance on existing systems—were not transparently evaluated or explained. The Tribe is seeking documentation showing why these options were ruled out.
The County says it already spent millions studying this site. Why raise concerns now?
The Tribe raised concerns throughout the permitting process and formally requested modeling and consultation before final site selection. Those requests were denied. Prior
investment does not excuse incomplete review or failure to consult a sovereign nation.
Why does the Tribe question the size of the permitted withdrawal (nine million gallons per day)?
The Tribe is asking for clarity on how projected residential growth justifies increasing usage from roughly one million gallons per day to nine million—especially after “industrial cooling” needs were removed from the permit application.
What about Caroline County’s population growth?
The Tribe acknowledges growth pressures but maintains that growth projections alone do not justify a permit allowing withdrawals far exceeding demonstrated need—particularly without completed cumulative impact studies or clear demand modeling.
Why is Atlantic sturgeon a concern?
The proposed intake lies within a federally designated critical habitat for Atlantic sturgeon. The Tribe contends the permit was issued before completion of key studies needed to ensure compliance with state and federal protections for this endangered species.