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| Coalition pushes for storage
Fishermen, farmers want to give Congress a unified
message
by STEVE KADEL Herald and News 10/22/06
MERRILL — A coalition of farmers, ranchers and fishermen agreed
Saturday they would all benefit from improved water storage
capabilities in the upper Klamath Basin. |
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Rep. Greg Walden, who attended the meeting prior to the Potato
Festival parade, agreed. He noted the study of Long Lake as a possible
holding site, saying, “We need to accelerate those efforts.”
State Sen. Doug Whitsett added that climate change is affecting
water storage capabilities.
“Eastern Oregon uses snowpack as a reservoir,” he said. “That snow
is melting earlier and earlier. We definitely need better water
storage.”
The session was another in a series of meetings cabinet-level
secretaries, Addington said.
Walden pledged to seek legislation that would address predation of
salmon by sea lions.
“We stand with our hands tied behind our back while the sea lions
have a feast,” he said.
Walden believes there’s a window of opportunity while the Bush
administration is still in office to get congressional help for water
issues, including disaster relief money for fishermen. It will take a
new administration — whether Republican or Democrat — time to become
acquainted with the Klamath Basin’s complex problems, he said.
That’s time fishermen don’t have, according to commercial fisherman
Rick Goche of Charleston, one of those whose fishing season was all
but canceled this year due to poor salmon runs on the Klamath River.
“I don’t call it relief,” he said of potential federal money. “It
is compensation for something that’s been taken from us.” federal
agencies that dictate water flows from Upper Klamath Lake.
“Our biological opinions are such that on a certain date you need a
certain amount of water,” Carleton said. Instead, the needs of
irrigators and fishermen should dictate flow levels, he said.
Greg Addington of the Klamath Water Users Association urged that
provisions of the 2002 Conservation Implementation Agreement be used
as a blueprint for solving water problems. He said the document urges
a watershed-wide approach in seeking solutions.
It was approved by the governors of Oregon and California as well
as four agriculturalists and fishermen have held this year.
Participants say they must give Congress a unified message to win
short- and long-term solutions for Klamath Basin water issues.
“When it comes to decision-making we really haven’t had a voice,”
said Dick Carleton of Carleton Farms. “We hope to change that.”
Water needs
Farmers say they need reliable supplies of water for irrigation.
Fishermen say they need sufficient water for fish, and it needs to be
cold water.
Several people who spoke Saturday criticized biological opinions.
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