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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541)-883-6100
FAX (541)-883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
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Weekly Update
May 28, 2004 |
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Stored Water Release a Sign of Improved Coordination
on Klamath Refuges The Klamath Water Users Association on
Monday participated in a press event that underscored the improved
coordination that is occurring between federal agencies, conservation
groups, and agricultural interests on lower Klamath national wildlife
refuges. At Monday’s event, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation)
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) announced that water
stored in seasonal wetlands on the Lower Klamath National Wildlife
Refuge would be released to meet fish flows on the lower Klamath River.
While the stored water release will not credit the water bank target for
this year – as hoped for by Klamath Project irrigators - it may help
ameliorate concerns of downstream tribes in a year when the spring
runoff originally forecasted to meet environmental and agricultural
water needs failed to materialize.
This year, 75,000 acre-feet of Klamath River water that historically
would have gone to meet irrigation needs is instead being left in the
lake and river system to meet the conditions of the Endangered Species
Act (ESA). In the past two years, at least 80,000 acre-feet of
agricultural water has been redirected to satisfy these same conditions.
This water is available because of a federally-funded water bank program
that compensates farmers to idle farmland, or to use groundwater in
place of Klamath Project surface water. Next year, due to water bank
requirements – and regardless of actual hydrologic conditions - 100,000
acre-feet of water will be directed away from agriculture to meet ESA
requirements. Water users believe the current federal water bank
management is hampered by rigid scheduling requirements, a problem that
may be remedied by providing more management flexibility.
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Water Release a Sign of Improved Coordination on
Refuges (Cont’d) "The agencies have 75,000
acre-feet of additional water to manage this year; they should be able
to use that water in as flexible a manner as possible," said Steve
Kandra, who farms near Merrill, Oregon and Tulelake, California. "At the
same time, they should be accountable for how it is managed."
In the past six months, local water users have noted improved
coordination between refuge managers and the agricultural community,
including opportunities organized by USFWS for farmers to meet state and
national conservation leaders, including representatives from the
National Audubon Society. Dave Eshbaugh, Executive Director of Audubon
Oregon, was present at Monday’s press event, as were representatives
from waterfowl associations.
"We are beginning to see more representatives from the conservation
community who appear to be willing to work in a collaborative manner
with Klamath Basin farmers and ranchers," said KWUA Executive Director
Dan Keppen. "We know that extreme elements on both sides of the water
management issue will still operate as usual. I’m encouraged that
mainstream conservation groups like Audubon are starting to recognize
that landowners share a unique relationship with the refuges, and that
they play a positive role in improving things for farmers and wildlife."
In recent years, local growers and irrigation districts have operated
facilities to deliver water to Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge.
Water users, Ducks Unlimited, and California Waterfowl Association have
jointly proposed and pledged support for additional projects to benefit
refuge water supplies and habitats.
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541)-883-6100
FAX (541)-883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
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Weekly Update
May 28, 2004 |
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| Tulelake Private Well Owners Asked to
Provide Water for the Environment
As Klamath Basin water supply concerns mount, every effort is being
taken to avoid the threat of water curtailment to the agriculture
industry served by the Klamath Reclamation Project. Twelve private well
owners on the California side of the Klamath Basin have been asked by
the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to provide well water to assist with
maintaining higher levels in upper Klamath Lake for endangered fish. The
so-called "Coppock Bay" groundwater pumpers are one of three
consolidated groups of well pumpers who developed proposals this year
capable of quickly generating groundwater supplies to offset demands out
of Upper Klamath Lake. Tulelake Irrigation District and the "Mid-Basin"
coalition are two other organizations that provide this capability.
Minimum lake levels in Upper Klamath Lake are mandated by the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service Biological opinion to avoid jeopardizing two
species of sucker fish. These levels are reflective of the "year type"
determined by precipitation and runoff predictions.
The Coppock Bay well owners who have agreed to pump ground water to
maintain higher lake levels will pump only the water needed to irrigate
the lands that they farm, up to 3 acre-feet per acre. At this time, the
Bureau of Reclamation will call for the groundwater on an "as needed"
basis.
The Bureau of Reclamation’s 2004 Pilot Water Bank Program was
implemented in April. Some farmlands have been idled and some well
owners are participating in the ground water substitution program. Under
contract with the Bureau of Reclamation, participating farmers will not
use Klamath Project lake water for irrigation but will be
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Tulelake Well Owners
Asked to Provide Water for the Environment (Cont’d)
compensated instead for using their wells to irrigate their fields.
This program is intended to provide more water for endangered sucker
fish in Upper Klamath Lake and threatened coho salmon downstream in the
Klamath River. By maintaining higher lake levels, the possibility of a
water curtailment in reduced.
"The water is not being sold," said Tulelake farmer Monte Seus. "The
water that is being replaced by the well water will be available to all
who depend on and use water from Upper Klamath Lake."
Ongoing aquifer studies by the Oregon Water Resources Department, the
California Department of Water Resources, and the U.S. Geological Survey
will continue to monitor ground water levels in an effort to better
understand the aquifer.
In the past – including in 2001, when Upper Klamath Lake supplies
were curtailed - well owners have pumped "environmental water" at their
own expense in an effort to assist fish and wildlife in the basin and to
avoid costly litigation. Last year, approximately 30,000 acre-feet of
water was pumped by Oregon well owners and Tulelake Irrigation District
– with no federal compensation – to help the Bureau of Reclamation meet
the minimum lake level and river flow requirements mandated by fishery
agency biological opinions.
"Hopefully, the future will not require continued well pumping and
farmers will enjoy a more abundant supply of Klamath Lake water that
will sustain fish, wildlife, agriculture, and Native American rights,"
said Gary Wright, who owns a ranch near Tulelake.
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541)-883-6100
FAX (541)-883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 28, 2004 |
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| ACWA Tour of Trinity River Highlights
New Flow Management Regime The Association of California
Water Agencies (ACWA) last Friday hosted a tour of the Trinity River,
which focused primarily on the extensive efforts underway to restore the
fisheries of the Klamath River’s largest tributary. A Klamath Water
Users Association (KWUA) representative joined the tour at the Trinity
River Hatchery, located near Lewiston, California, and provided the 30
tour participants with an update on Klamath Project issues.
Earlier in the day, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation officials outlined the
importance of the Trinity River to providing power and water to
California’s Central Valley Project. The Trinity River Diversion of the
Central Valley Project is composed of Trinity Dam (which controls the
water released into Trinity River) and Clear Creek Tunnel (which
transports water from Lewiston Dam into Whiskeytown Lake in the
Sacramento River Basin). The tour bus made stops at Spring Creek Debris
Dam and Whiskeytown Dam en route to Lewiston Dam and the adjacent
hatchery. After visiting the hatchery, the tour proceeded down the
Trinity River to Salt Flat and Hocker Flat to view river restoration
sites.
While at the hatchery, tour participants were briefed on hatchery
operations, fisheries monitoring, and the goals and objectives of the
Trinity River Restoration Program (TRRP). The purpose of this program is
to restore and maintain the natural production of salmon and steelhead
in the Trinity River mainstem downstream of Lewiston Dam. The
Trinity Record of Decision (ROD) - signed in December 2000 by former
U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt - is currently tied up in federal
court, and the flows it recommends cannot be
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ACWA Tour: Additional
Trinity Water Intended to Restore Channels (Cont’d)
implemented until impacts associated with Central Valley Project water
and power considerations are further refined by the federal government.
While the case has been in court, flows on the river have been set by
U.S. District Judge Oliver Wanger. Wanger had determined this year would
be classified as a "dry year," with the river getting an allocation of
about 453,000 acre-feet. However, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in
April determined that the river should be operated as a "normal year"
this summer, and ordered that flows in the Trinity be increased by
nearly 50 percent more.
Recommendations on how to manage the 200,000 acre-feet of newly
available water ultimately came down to the Trinity River Management
Council (TRMC). While news of the court’s decision led some to believe
that additional water would be available to manage flows for fish
returning to spawn this fall, the TRMC opted differently. It’s
recommendation: use all of the 200,000 acre-feet this spring to
"restore" the channel of the Trinity River below Lewiston Dam.
The results of this decision were clearly evident to the tour
participants having lunch at the hatchery, where speakers had to raise
their voices to compete with the roar of high flows (6,000 cubic feet
per second) being released from Lewiston Dam. These high flows do not
necessarily provide immediate and direct benefits to fish. Rather, the
flows are intended to mimic natural channel dynamics and to "manage"
sediment in the reaches below the dam.
This week, the flows were slowly ramped down, and by June 18th,
they will taper to 2,000 cfs.
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541)-883-6100
FAX (541)-883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
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Weekly Update
May 28, 2004 |
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| CDFG Responds to KWUA Letter Regarding
Klamath Hatchery Operations The California Department of
Fish and Game (CDFG) responded within days to a letter sent by the
Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA) regarding hatchery operations on
the Klamath River. The KWUA letter raised questions and concerns about
CDFG’s management practices at Iron Gate Hatchery. The CDFG letter
addresses many of these concerns, but questions remain.
"We appreciate CDFG’s quick response to our letter," said KWUA
Executive Director Dan Keppen. "However, we will likely request some
additional clarification and information from the department so that we
can fully answer the questions we are getting from our members."
The KWUA letter and CDFG response can be sent to you in electronic
format. Please contact KWUA at 541-883-6100 if you would like copies.
Update on ESA Listing Determinations
Later today, NOAA Fisheries will release proposed rules for the
federal Hatchery Listing Policy and listing determinations for 27 salmon
and steelhead areas throughout the Northwest. Included are 26 previously
listed and one new listing (lower Columbia River coho). Policy officials
anticipate that all will be proposed for listing under the federal ESA,
including coastal coho.
NOAA had sought a slight delay, but was turned down in court for
eight stocks of salmon (Washington and Columbia River), so decided to
release proposed rules for all stocks at the same time, along with their
hatchery policy. Public comments will likely be taken until mid
September 2004; final rule making is slated for June 2005.
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Update on Coho Listing
(Continued) Proposed listings are based on three
primary federal analyses: 1) status of the fish and factors for decline,
2) assessment of hatchery programs and their moderating influence on
extinction risk, and 3) evaluation of conservation efforts (management
of habitat, hatcheries, harvest, etc.) and how well these efforts are
addressing the factors for decline.
"We must be confident that when delisting comes, that it be
legitimate," said Paulette Pyle, from Oregonians for Food and Shelter.
"We can, with great pride, point to the Oregon Plan for Salmon and
Watersheds, SB 1010 plans, and the Forest Practices Act, and know
that no one has done more to restore healthy fish than agriculture and
forestry have in Oregon."
Oregon has taken deliberate action to improve the condition of listed
salmonids, water quality, and watershed health through statewide
implementation of the Oregon Plan for Salmon and Watersheds (The Oregon
Plan). Adopted by the Oregon Legislature in 1997, the Oregon Plan is a
framework for strategic application of resource management programs,
partnered with voluntary restoration actions, designed to ensure the
sustainability of Oregon’s cultural, recreational, economic, and
ecological fishery and watershed resources.
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Tuesday, June 1, 2004 – KWUA Power Committee Meeting. 8:30 a.m.
KWUA Office, 2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3, Klamath Falls.
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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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