Testimony of Congressman Greg Walden before
the House Natural Resources Committee Oversight
“Crisis of Confidence: The Political
Influence of the Bush Administration on Agency Science and Decision-Making”
Third, the Committee’s hearing today, to the extent it opens old wounds and reignites past conflicts, runs the risk of aborting a mediated settlement process that includes 26 parties in the Basin who in the past would have been at each others throats and for the last many months have been at each other’s tables trying to find a Basin-wide solution.
I also worked closely with your two predecessors to hold oversight hearings on the problems to help identify what went wrong and how we could fix it. We called on the Department of Interior to seek a review by the National Academy of Sciences during a field hearing at the fairgrounds in Klamath Falls.
We looked at the problems, including a lack of fish screens on the A Canal and fish passage at Chiloquin Dam. And this Administration responded aggressively by pushing the agencies to get results on both. Today, a multi-million dollar, complex fish screen prevents sucker larva from ending up in the irrigation system rather than staying in their natural habitat. And within a year or two, Chiloquin Dam, which was the main cause of the original listing will be gone, reopening 95% of the habitat up the Sprague River. In addition, the Basin has seen 370 partnership ecosystem restoration projects, a 100-thousand acre water bank, and more than $500 million dollars in Klamath Watershed habitat restoration, water quality improvement and water conservation efforts since 2002. Good things are happening in the Basin like never before. It’s unfortunate that the Committee’s value time is not spent encouraging more forward progress in the Basin. As for the fish kill: I implore you to listen to the words of Professor William Lewis who will testify later today, and who chaired the Committee on Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath River Basin, a committee of the National Research Council, the premier, independent, scientific body in the world: “The Klamath Project is located over 150 miles upstream from the mouth, and water flowing through the Klamath Project accounts for only 10% of the total flow at the mouth; large tributaries entering the river below the Klamath Project contribute most of the flow at the mouth. Furthermore, the Klamath Project releases water that is warm because it comes from storage lakes rather than reaching the stream through groundwater or surface runoff. The committee concluded that a relatively small amount of warm water propagated over a distance of 150 miles would not have made a critical difference to the salmon that were staging for migration at the mouth of the river.” “The committee also examined previous conditions and found that low flows similar to those of 2002 had occurred in several years within the period of record without any accompanying salmon mortality. The committee therefore concluded that mortality was the result of an unusual combination of conditions, probably including unusually low flow plus the absence of a cool pulse of flow that even a brief precipitation event might have provided.”
Prior sessions of Congress have helped those in need, farmers and fishermen, when they’ve suffered losses. And prior sessions of Congress have investigated what went wrong and why. I implore this Committee to not go down the partisan path of political provocation, but instead to rise above it and provide support to those good citizens who are laboring to find common ground in a Basin-wide settlement. Let’s do what’s best of the fish, the farmers, the Tribes and the fishermen. Let’s encourage them to find common ground, not rub salt in old wounds when they are so close to an historic agreement of enormous significance.
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