Literature promoting the SaddleBrooke Ranch development west of Oracle touts feature after feature 鈥 high Sonoran Desert terrain with beautiful mountain views, 鈥渕ultimillion-dollar country club amenities,鈥 an 18-hole championship golf course and more.
The development, now roughly 1,000 homes strong with 5,600 total planned, also has delivered something not promoted 鈥 a falling water table.
Since 2009, the water level has dropped 7.3 feet a year in one of two SaddleBrooke Ranch wells and 1.7 feet a year in the other, says the 蜜柚直播 Water Co., a private utility serving the development.
This is one of many suburban developments surrounding 蜜柚直播 where underground water tables are falling and are likely to fall much farther over the next century, state records show.
A prime cause is a 1993 state law that allowed continued groundwater pumping for new developments as long as the developer paid a three-county water district to replenish the aquifer elsewhere with Colorado River water from the Central 蜜柚直播 Project canal.
People are also reading…
One of that law鈥檚 purposes was to ensure that development could continue in areas such as SaddleBrooke Ranch, which lie miles from the CAP canal that runs west of the 蜜柚直播 Mountains.
The law was pushed heavily by developers and builders, including Robson Communities, a Pinal County-based developer that is developing SaddleBrooke Ranch as well as the SaddleBrooke and Quail Creek projects in Southern 蜜柚直播.
At the same time, that law鈥檚 passage cleared the way, politically, for the state to approve separate rules intended to guarantee that no new development is built in 蜜柚直播鈥檚 urbanized counties without an assured, 100-year water supply.
The rules are aimed at carrying out 蜜柚直播鈥檚 pioneering 1980 Groundwater Management Act. It requires the 蜜柚直播, Phoenix and Prescott areas to balance pumping with recharge across their entire groundwater basins by 2025.
The entire state-run, 蜜柚直播-area water management area is on the edge of achieving balance between pumping and recharging because the city of 蜜柚直播 has made heavy use of CAP water.
But water tables underneath fast-growing unincorporated suburbs are heading in the opposite direction:
- Groundwater levels are falling anywhere from 2 to 7 feet yearly in wells serving three private water companies that supply nearly 60 subdivisions belonging to the replenishment district in the Green Valley-Sahuarita area, company officials said.
- Groundwater levels under eight 蜜柚直播-area subdivisions, including SaddleBrooke Ranch, are forecast by the 蜜柚直播 Department of Water Resources to drop to at least 625 feet in 100 years.
- Water levels in five are predicted to drop to at least 800 feet deep, records show. SaddleBrooke Ranch and SaddleBrooke lie in southern Pinal County, but are in the same state management area that governs water use in most of the 蜜柚直播 area.
Under state law, water levels can fall 1,000 feet inside water management areas for 蜜柚直播 and Phoenix and 1,100 feet in the Pinal County management area.
Hydrologists for the state water department made the forecasts around 15 to 20 years ago, as the department granted the developments certificates showing an assured 100-year supply.
The replenishment with CAP water is carried out in recharge basins along the Santa Cruz River and on Pima Mine Road, south of the 蜜柚直播 city limits.
This practice of pumping one place and recharging elsewhere is 鈥渁n artifact of the groundwater code,鈥 says 蜜柚直播 Department of Water Resources Director Tom Buschatzke.

SaddleBrooke Ranch is one of many suburban developments surrounding 蜜柚直播 where underground water tables are likely to fall much lower over the next century.
Under that 1980 law, the responsibility for safe yield is considered to be basin-wide, across a broad geographic area, he said. Safe yield means balancing the amount of groundwater pumped with the amount that鈥檚 recharged back into the ground both through natural and artificial means.
The state law is intended to raise water levels in one area and lower them in another, Buschatzke said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a problem we have discussed over the years, in terms of how to create a closer connection between where you pump the water and where you store the water,鈥 Buschatzke said in a recent interview with KAET-TV.
In interviews with the 蜜柚直播, three retired 蜜柚直播-area hydrologists, all with extensive experience analyzing water pumping impacts, expressed major concerns.
If water levels under these subdivisions decline as far as the state predicts, the many problems typically associated with over-pumping could occur there, the hydrologists said.
Those include subsidence, or the settling and compacting of the ground caused by excessive groundwater withdrawals that can trigger earth fissures.
Others are lower water quality, higher pumping costs and, at worst, the possibility that some aquifers might run out of water.
鈥淭he thing you have to remember is most of the water in this basin, we鈥檙e pumping water that鈥檚 7- to 8,000 years old in many cases,鈥 said Thomas Maddock, the retired head of the University of 蜜柚直播鈥檚 hydrology department.
鈥淎s soon as that water鈥檚 gone, we don鈥檛 have another ice age to reestablish it,鈥 he warned.
It鈥檚 not an acceptable tradeoff to allow localized depletion of some aquifers while an entire basin balances pumping and recharge of groundwater, said Mike Carpenter, a retired U.S. Geological Survey hydrologist.
鈥淚f you draw the water level down in one of these areas, then the water is going to flow from other areas to fill in that which in essence becomes a hole,鈥 Carpenter said.
In years to decades, that will eventually cause water-level declines, aquifer compaction, and subsidence in areas that would otherwise achieve safe yield, Carpenter said, concerns that are shared by Stanley Leake, another retired USGS hydrologist.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 seem square to me to draw the water table down here and recharge CAP water over there, wherever there is,鈥 Carpenter said.

The Quail Creek community was granted assured water supply approvals by the state for more than 4,000 homes in the 1990s and early 2000s.
A fourth retired hydrologist, Don Pool, agreed that subsidence could become a concern in some heavily pumped areas, but said that maybe 鈥渢hey can trade water across the valley somehow鈥 to alleviate problems like that in isolated areas.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 see it as a huge issue if the region is in safe yield鈥 overall, said Pool, also formerly of the geological survey.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to look at trouble鈥
The city of 蜜柚直播 has averted major subsidence by halting most of its pumping in favor of importing CAP water.
But in suburban areas where heavy pumping continues, 鈥淚 think some disasters are possible,鈥 said Leake, adding the risks should be examined case by case.
In terms of sheer water availability, as levels approach 1,000 feet deep, 鈥測ou鈥檙e going to look at trouble,鈥 said Maddock.
Water quality issues would probably be the first problem because the deeper water is typically at higher temperatures, which can leach naturally occurring contaminants from surrounding rock.
Also, at deeper levels, 鈥渆nergy costs are pretty damn severe,鈥 he said.
Below 500 feet, the water is also more likely to have higher fluoride levels, which can cause browning of teeth, said Carpenter.
As a well and its pumps approach 1,000 feet, you can get to the point where they can鈥檛 reach water because the well casing isn鈥檛 deep enough, he said.
You can reconfigure the well, but 鈥渢hen what do you do? Go down another 1,000 feet? There鈥檚 not a guarantee that you鈥檒l get some water. You could run out of water,鈥 Maddock said.

鈥淚llinois did a better job with capturing rainfall for recharging aquifers than we do here,鈥 says Chuck Stack, an environmental scientist.
Risk of earth fissures
Typically, areas of a groundwater basin most prone to subsidence have larger amounts of clay, the hydrologists said. Clay layers have finer-grained sediments than sands and gravels. That makes it harder to remove water from clay layers, but makes it easier for them to compact and settle when water is removed.
The 蜜柚直播 basin鈥檚 heaviest clay concentrations 鈥 typically 60% to 80% 鈥 stretch along a belt-shaped band running from central 蜜柚直播 south to the booming Sahuarita and Green Valley areas, a 1987 U.S.G.S. map shows. Clay concentrations of 40% to 60% are common immediately surrounding that belt. Heading north toward Catalina and SaddleBrooke, concentrations drop to the 20% 40% range.
鈥淚鈥檇 say somewhere from 40% to 60% might be places that should be examined a little closer to see what the susceptibility to subsidence might be,鈥 said Leake.
The 1987 report warned that subsidence in this area could someday get as bad as in the Eloy-Picacho area of Pinal County. There, heavy agricultural pumping has caused the ground to sink up to 20 feet and triggered earth fissures up to 2 miles long.
Rate of decline
Sam Sherrill, who lives in the SaddleBrooke subdivision south of SaddleBrooke Ranch in Pinal County, is concerned about the future of the water supply lying underneath.
Now 78, he moved to SaddleBrooke five years ago from Ohio after retiring as an associate professor at the University of Cincinnati鈥檚 School of Planning.
He started digging into his area鈥檚 water issues about a year ago, after he would ask people where 鈥渙ur water is coming from, and everywhere I asked, nobody knew.鈥
After hitting blind alleys, he recently found 蜜柚直播 Department of Water Resources records for one private water-company well serving SaddleBrooke that shows it鈥檚 been falling about 1.5 feet a year since 1995.
To him, that鈥檚 no sign of impending crisis, since that well sits at 344 feet.
At that rate, water levels will only drop to 500 feet over 100 years.
But the rate of decline could increase, because Robson is now selling homes for a neighboring, 500-home development called the Preserve at SaddleBrooke.
In addition, a map recently circulated by officials associated with the SaddleBrooke Ranch project shows another, 3,534-acre 鈥渇uture potential expansion area鈥 of lands surrounding the current development.
Sherrill said he鈥檚 concerned that the pumping and replenishment of water supplies by various agencies and companies is 鈥渁 game of musical chairs. There are more and more people buying fewer chairs.鈥
He likens the practice of people buying subdivision lots for which pumped water will be replenished elsewhere to 鈥渁 water insurance scheme, like buying insurance without knowing what the risk is.鈥

Natural desert was cleared for the Saddlebrooke Ranch golf course in 2005.
鈥淪omething鈥檚 not right鈥
Down in Quail Creek, which lies east of Green Valley along Old Nogales Highway, residents Chuck Stack and John Murphy also are concerned about falling water tables under their subdivision.
Quail Creek was granted assured water supply approvals by the state for more than 4,000 homes in the 1990s and early 2000s.
They know their subdivision will keep growing, since they see new building pad locations rising along Quail Crossing Road, the main drag through the red tile roofs, golf course and country club in their community.
And since the state law doesn鈥檛 require private water providers like theirs to report to the state how fast their water levels are falling each year, they鈥檙e concerned 鈥渟omething鈥檚 not right here,鈥 Murphy said.
But Stack, who moved to Quail Creek from Aurora, Illinois, in early 2019, said he鈥檚 not concerned that the region will run out of water because as a certified environmental scientist, he believes lots of improvements can be made in water conservation.
鈥淚llinois did a better job with capturing rainfall for recharging aquifers than we do here. 蜜柚直播 is probably 20 years behind Illinois,鈥 he said.
鈥溍坭种辈 is going to have to get its act together and do some aggressive work on rainwater harvesting and conservation,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t takes money, but in the long term potable water is one of the most valuable resources in the Sonoran Desert. We should treat it that way.鈥