The new $16
million fish screens at the headgates on the A Canal apparently have
done a job.
They had two jobs to do, actually, and
while we don't know if they've done both of them, they've certainly done
one.
In building
the fish screens, the federal government has eliminated a source of
contention between irrigators on the Klamath Reclamation Project and the
Klamath Tribes, to whom the suckers are an important part of their
religion and culture, and, historically, as food. Two species of the
sucker have come under the special protection of the Endangered Species
Act.
We still
don't know - and we don't know that anyone does - whether construction
of fish screens to keep suckers from going into the irrigation canal
significantly improves the long-term survival of the suckers because
nobody seems to have a firm handle on just how many suckers there are.
But at least
irrigators, Tribes and the government don't have to fight over the issue
of the fish screens any more. They're built, and they're working. They
circulate the fish back into Upper Klamath Lake above the Link River
Dam.
Recently a
team of federal employees worked their way through the A Canal after the
water from Upper Klamath Lake was shut off and didn't find any stranded
suckers.
Before the
fish screens were put in two years ago, the recovery team found up to
10,000 suckers left after the irrigation season ended. This year, there
were very few left.
In an area
that is seldom short of things to fight over when it comes to water, the
elimination of one is a big help.
The "H&N
view" represents the opinion of the newspaper's editorial board. Most of
the editorials are written by Pat Bushey, including this one.