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Long Lake part of the answer to water problems
July 23, 2007 Herald and News editorial
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http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2007/07/23/viewpoints/viewpoints/views.txt
Long Lake is living up to its name.
The dry lake could provide badly needed water storage and that possibility
lives on in the long-running tests and studies being done by the Bureau of
Reclamation.
The latest word is that it will take three years to complete the studies.
Pablo Arroyave, the Bureau’s manager for the Klamath Reclamation Project,
told a meeting of the Klamath River Compact Commission earlier this month
that at the end of the three years, “the challenge then becomes getting
funding.”
The Bureau has the study on a “fast” track that allowed it to proceed
without congressional approval, and the Bureau deserves credit for that.
But, still, it’s a long, long process, and as people come and go in federal
agencies and elsewhere the agencies need to stay focused on the proposal’s
potential.
There’s a lot at stake.
Long Lake is one of a series of usually dry lake beds west of Klamath Falls
and has been investigated in the past for water storage.
The storage is vitally important. The region’s climate has turned drier, but
the demands on the Klamath River remain heavy.
One of those demands is the Klamath Project, which usually irrigates about
190,000 acres. While it isn’t the only thing that depends on the Klamath
River, it’s the only one that the federal government can readily tap to
regulate flows on the river and the water on Upper Klamath Lake which fish
depend on.
More water storage would help everyone ??” irrigators and the fish at both
ends of the river and the people who depend on them.
Water stored in “wet” years could be available in dry ones and, unlike water
storage in Upper Klamath Lake, it would be deep-water storage. That’s a huge
consideration. Long lake would store about the same amount of water as Upper
Klamath, but with only 10 percent of the water surface. It would be about
160 feet deep. The average depth of Upper Klamath Lake is 8 feet.
Upper Klamath loses 290,000 acre-feet a year to evaporation. The loss
projected for Long Lake would be 8,000.
The water, though, would be a supplement to Upper Klamath, which is the
principal reservoir for the project as well as being the origin of the
Klamath River.
That “extra” water wouldn’t necessarily be available every year. That would
depend on what the precipitation is from year to year and how the lake’s
storage is allocated.
Long Lake is a part of the answer to the Klamath Basin’s complex problems,
not the whole answer. It would, however, provide additional flexibility in
meeting the needs of agriculture, fish and even power, depending on what
becomes of the Klamath River hydroelectric dams.
This assumes the project comes back as doable and desirable.
It’s going to take awhile that answer. Federal officials, political leaders
and water users need to keep pushing it along.
Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |