http://www.theworldlink.com/articles/2006/10/23/news/news01102306.txt
| World Photos by Susan Chambers Gold Beach fisherman Scott
Boley, left; Merrill potato and alfalfa farmer Dick Carleton; and
Charleston fisherman Paul Merz talk during lunch in Merrill during
the Potato Festival on Saturday. Several fishermen traveled to the
Klamath Basin to continue discussions about how fishermen and
farmers can work together to develop solutions to water issues
that affect several entities along the Klamath River. |
 |
MERRILL - Suits and ties were left at home on Friday and Saturday
when trollers from Oregon and California met with farmers and ranchers
from the Klamath Basin.
At several meetings, which coincided with the 69th-annual Potato
Festival, members from both groups got together dressed in the upscale
work clothes of their professions: jeans or Dockers, T-shirts, plaid
or striped dress shirts, chamois shirts, work boots, tennis shoes,
Romeos or slip-on work shoes and baseball caps.
But the casual dress didn't detract from the seriousness of their
meetings. Both have been victims of dire Klamath River problems - the
farmers left with no water in 2001 and the salmon fishermen left
without a season this year.
This weekend, though, they were just a bunch of folks used to dealing
with immediate problems in the course of their respective businesses,
this time carrying that situation one step further, to the bigger
issue of the Klamath River system.
Like trollers who experience broken equipment while fishing, when
something breaks during harvest, farmers grab their tools and fix it.
It's that can-do attitude that brought both groups together in the
first place. Farmers and fishermen have worked over the summer, during
both potato harvests and limited salmon harvests, to build alliances
and brainstorm ideas about their industries and the Klamath River
system.
Agreement
They all want the same thing: a fix for an ailing river.
Unlike rumors perpetuated for years, fishermen and farmers are not at
odds, they said.
“We found we have much in common,” said potato and alfalfa farmer Dick
Carleton.
Trollers and irrigators got together on Friday for a public meeting in
Merrill and again on Saturday for a private meeting with Rep. Greg
Walden, R-Ore., and later to ride on a float in the Potato Festival
parade. The sign on the float read “Farmers and fishermen united” and
the float received cheers and applause from watchers along the parade
route. Newport fisherman Bob Kemp, one of the first trollers to talk
with Merrill potato farmer Dick Carleton, also had a booth set up at
the festival to show visitors a fresh troll-caught Chinook and an
albacore tuna on ice. Kemp also had literature about salmon and tuna
trolling, a slide show on a laptop and canned products to distribute.
Much time at the meetings, and the float and the displays, were to
further the communication between the stakeholders and their
communities. Both groups view education about each other's industries
as key to furthering the cooperative effort.
For example, some festival-goers asked how many salmon could be caught
with one net, but ocean trollers use only hooks, not nets, and catch
fish one at a time.
But it was at the meeting with Walden that fishermen and farmers hoped
to further the solutions process, building on sessions held in Coos
Bay and Charleston during the spring and summer.
Options
Many fishermen and farmers are frustrated with the “random acts of
restoration,” as Family Farm Alliance Executive Director Dan Keppen
said, and want to see real solutions.
“We've been waiting for 20 years for the alphabet agencies to fix the
Klamath,” troller Rick Goche, from Coquille, said, agreeing with
Keppen. “Now is the time to fix it from the bottom up.”
To that end, several ideas that fishermen and farmers reached by
consensus were proposed:
n Review hatcheries operations: The hatcheries are important to sport
and commercial fishing, but the efficiency of those operations could
be improved. What, exactly, are the roles for mitigation hatcheries
and are they achieving the goals for which they were built? Asked Greg
Addington, executive director of the Klamath Water Users Association.
n Promote more genetic fish testing: A pilot project this summer in
Oregon that identifies the DNA of salmon and can provide the origin of
the fish, from which river an individual salmon started, could provide
fishery management in real time in the future.
n Klamath River dam removal: Fishermen said that yes, that's an
option, but it's likely to take a couple decades to realize and should
be studied more. Furthermore, some fishermen are concerned that if the
dams are removed, the Klamath River may dry up during drought years
and be more inhibitive to fish passage. “Dam removal is more of a
political issue than a scientific issue,” Charleston fisherman Paul
Merz said.
n Use an established plan: A National Academy of Sciences report from
a few years ago provided a blueprint for restoration, and both states
and the alphabet soup of federal agencies signed off on it, Addington
said, but it's been put on the shelf.
n Involve users in the decision-making process: Fishermen and farmers
agreed - and so did Deputy Secretary of Commerce David Sampson this
summer - that natural resource users can provide some of the best
ideas for solutions.
n Sea lions: Predation by sea lions at the mouths of rivers is taking
a toll on salmon. Lethal options should be considered to eliminate
some of the predators.
n Farm Bill: Fishermen also asked to be recognized under the Farm
Bill. It has incentives and allowances that would also help trollers.
Overall, though, the main item that the 20 men could agree on was
water storage.
Long Lake
One of the main issues affecting salmon is the timing of water
releases through the dams on the Klamath River and the origin of the
water.
Often, water released downstream is warm - too warm for fish in a
shallow river and also so warm that disease and parasites spread more
quickly. Timing also is a factor: Fish and farmers may need the water
releases at the same time.
But that could change with the addition of Long Lake.
Long Lake is a potential offstream reservoir site near Upper Klamath
Lake. Potentially, it could capture surplus flows in the Klamath River
system and store upwards of 500,000 acre-feet of water, which then
could be used for meeting water flows in the Klamath River.
The storage would hold water in a narrow, deep reservoir, keeping the
water colder than its current storage in the shallow Upper Klamath.
Walden asked what two things, two primary things, the fishermen and
farmers could ask of the federal government, what would they be?
The response was simple: direct assistance for fishermen for this
year's lost season and acknowledging the ground-up approach by
stakeholders. Long Lake would be at the top of that list, water users
said.
Walden said both of those could be considered.
“There is pretty broad-based support (for the Klamath River issues) in
Congress,” Walden said.
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