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A Must Hear Movement

Hatch Podcast Series – Water in the West

Published March 13, 2026 | Posted in HATCH Podcast Series, Podcast

Water doesn’t begin at the tap. It begins in the dark—underground, in aquifers older than memory. As snow in mountain air. As vapor. As storm. Something that refuses to stay still. By the time it reaches us, it has already lived many lives.

There’s a saying in the West: whiskey is for drinking, water is for fighting.

A line that carries history inside it—compacts, canals, courtrooms. Water hasn’t always been political. For most of human history, it simply existed. But today, especially across the western United States, it often is.

This episode begins in the Arizona desert, at Arcosanti.

In 1970, architect Paolo Soleri and The Cosanti Foundation began building this place in central Arizona. The idea was arcology—architecture shaped by ecology. A community trying to imagine living with the land instead of against it.

Curved concrete rises from the desert. Light pours through open space. A place built on questions.

It was also the site of the HATCH Summit—artists, scientists, entrepreneurs, policymakers, storytellers. People trying to collaborate their way toward something more resilient. Which makes it the right place to talk about water. Because water means different things at once.

For some, it’s sacred. For others, it’s infrastructure—reservoirs, pipelines, allocations and rights. In the western United States, those rights often follow a simple rule: first come, first served. Use it—or lose it.

That logic shaped rivers like the Colorado—now feeding cities, farms, and reservoirs like Lake Powell. But reservoirs drop. Snowpack shrinks. And “management” starts to sound more like triage.

And this story doesn’t stop in Arizona.

In the Andes, salt flats hold the lithium powering electric vehicles. In Bogotá, officials count the days in their reservoirs as the possibility of “Day Zero” enters the conversation.

Different places. Same question. What does it mean to live with water?

In this conversation, Tate chamberlin sits down with Michellsey Benally, David Purkey, and Joel Barnes to explore that question—what a water right really is, who decides, and what it might mean to remember that water was never just a resource in the first place.

Because water keeps moving. And the question is how we move with it.

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