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| | ISPE News (Site not responding. Last check: ) |
 | | Schlager, an associate professor of public policy and administration at the University of Arizona, has received a three-year grant from the National Science Foundation to explore why some compacts are bogged down in turmoil, with states regularly taking more than their allocated share of water, while others flow smoothly. |
 | | Schlager and her colleague Tanya Heikkila, an assistant professor in the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, are studying 14 river compacts: the Arkansas, Bear, Belle Fourche, Big Blue, Costilla Creek, Klamath, La Plata, Pecos, Republican, Rio Grande, Snake, South Platte, Upper Niobrara, and Yellowstone. |
 | | Schlager is on sabbatical until the fall, culling annual reports by the various compacts and piles of other documents for data for the interstate river project. |
| www.ispe.arizona.edu /news/articles/schlager.html (696 words) |
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