Featured

Kris Mayes Pushes Back as Saudi-Owned Farm Fights to Delay Water Lawsuit

A Saudi-owned agricultural company pumping the majority of groundwater from a rural Arizona basin is asking a court to put a public nuisance lawsuit on hold, and Attorney General Kris Mayes (D-AZ) isn't having it.

Fondomonte Arizona LLC, which accounts for more than 80% of all pumping in the 912-square-mile Ranegras Plain Basin, went before a Maricopa County judge Wednesday to argue that an ongoing state regulatory process should take precedence over the litigation AG Mayes filed against the company in 2024.

The company's attorneys said the Arizona Department of Water Resources is already moving to designate the basin as an active management area, a status that would restrict new pumping and reduce overall usage by half over 50 years.

Why let a lawsuit duplicate what regulators are already working toward, they argued.

Mayes' Argument

Mayes' office fired back with the simple answer that waiting does nothing.

State attorneys argued that the regulatory process wouldn't specifically target Fondomonte's pumping levels, and without a court ruling declaring the company's water use excessive, the farm could actually lock in its current pumping rates by claiming grandfathered irrigation rights.

That outcome, prosecutors said, would make the two-year regulatory wait essentially pointless.

Although the stakes extend well beyond a courtroom dispute. Residents near the Ranegras Plain Basin in La Paz and Yuma counties have reported dried-up wells, land subsidence, and ground fissures, conditions tied to years of largely unregulated groundwater extraction in rural parts of the state.

Mayes has been vocal about holding large agricultural operations accountable for those harms.

Her office recently reached a settlement with Riverview Dairy in Cochise County's Willcox Basin, where residents faced nearly identical problems.

Under that deal, the Riverview Dairy agreed to sharply reduce its water consumption and help fund the redrilling of damaged residential wells.

Following news of that settlement, Mayes made her position that “Arizonans can’t afford a Saudi mega farm sucking our groundwater dry. I’m going to do everything in my power to keep holding them accountable.”

Judge Scott Minder has not yet issued a ruling on whether to pause the Fondomonte case. 

Ericka Piñon

Ericka Piñon is a reporter for Cactus Politics specializing in Arizona Legislative Correspondent. With 1 year on the ground in Phoenix, Arizona, they have been cited by Cactus Politics, Big Energy News, The Floridian Press, and Texas Politics. Her focus is on Public Relations and Communications. Email: Ericka@dnm.news

Recent Posts

JoAnna Mendoza Maintains Support from Swalwell-Affiliated PAC

Democratic Congressional candidate JoAnna Mendoza, who is running against Representative Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ), continues to…

2 days ago

Abe Hamadeh Introduces Bill to Preserve Last Surviving F-14 Tomcat Fighter Jets

Representative Abe Hamadeh (R-AZ) has introduced legislation to preserve and display the last three F-14…

2 days ago

Maricopa Judge Rules Board of Supervisors Overstepped Authority Over Elections

In a legal showdown over who actually controls elections in Arizona's most populous county, a…

2 days ago

Erika Kirk Event Relocated After Parents Raise Safety, Disruption Concerns

A speaking event featuring Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk has been pulled from a…

2 days ago

Trump, Musk Endorse Halo Composer Marty O'Donnell

Martin O’Donnell, the lead composer behind the original Halo video game trilogy, has scored an…

2 days ago

David Schweikert Introduces Bill Combating Home Health Fraud

Representative David Schweikert (R-AZ) has introduced legislation to combat home healthcare fraud by tightening eligibility…

2 days ago