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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
July 1, 2004 |
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Governor Kulongoski to be Honored at KWUA 50th Annual Meeting
on July 20th
Local water users at the 50th
Annual Meeting of the Klamath Water Users Association will honor Oregon
Governor Ted Kulongoski next month. The meeting will be held at the
Reames Golf and Country Club in Klamath Falls on Tuesday, July 20, 2004.
"It is an honor to us and a
testimony to his commitment to our Basin that Governor Kulongoski is
coming to our meeting", said Dan Keppen, KWUA Executive Director. "We
want to publicly thank him for his efforts to promote the economic,
social and environmental viability of the agricultural community served
by the Klamath Irrigation Project. Our fiftieth anniversary is a special
occasion, and we’re lucky to have such a special guest attend."
The luncheon buffet will be
opened at 11:15 a.m. and the meeting is scheduled to begin at noon. The
governor will stay for the first hour of a 90-minute program.
In the past year, Governor
Kulongoski and his staff have taken clear action to address three
primary requests put forward by the irrigation community in early 2003.
The governor and his resources advisors last year allowed Oregon to make
its presence felt in the PCFFA, et al. v USBR, et al litigation
by submitted an amicus brief to the court. And, according to
water users, he has promoted balanced Klamath River watershed-wide
planning and management, as well as supporting local water users efforts
to educate the public about the importance of agriculture to Oregon’s
environment.
"The award we intend to
present the governor at our
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Governor to be Honored at KWUA 50th Annual Meeting on July 20th
(Continued)
annual meeting is intended to
honor him in front of our community for showing that he cares about the
Klamath Basin and is committed to the continued long-term viability of
agriculture in the Basin. The Governor has displayed a much needed
willingness to cut through political polarization and to seek real
solutions," said Steve Kandra, KWUA President.
Kulongoski will also deliver
brief remarks at the water users meeting. In the first hour of the
program, a short film entitled "Where the Water Goes" by OIT community
television director Don Haynes will be shown. Local independent
filmmaker Anders Tomlinson will also present a brief video clip that
summarizes Kulongoski’s 2003 visit to the Klamath Basin. Kandra, Keppen,
and others will review 2003 and discuss critical water challenges facing
local water users in 2004 and beyond. The second half of the meeting
will feature presentations made by KWUA consultants that will focus on
federal political issues, the association’s involvement with power
matters, ongoing litigation, and hydrology.
If you are interested in
attending the KWUA Annual meeting, please send a $5 check to:
Klamath Water Users
Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite
3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
The Klamath Water Users
Association is a non-profit corporation based in Klamath Falls, Oregon
that represents the rural irrigation districts, local special districts,
and private concerns who operate on both sides of the California-Oregon
border.
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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
July 1, 2004 |
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Coho Decision Postponed, Again
Pioneer Press, Fort Jones,
California
Wednesday, June 30, 2004
Vol. 32, No. 33
Page 1, column 2
By Liz Bowen, Assistant
Editor, Pioneer Press, Fort Jones, California
The extraordinary efforts of
farmers, ranchers and timber were recognized on Friday, when the
California Fish and Game Commission voted 3 to 2 to postpone the final
vote for listing the coho salmon to the California Endangered Species
Act.
So coho limbo continues, at
least, until August; and it may linger for another six to seven months.
The shocking postponement of
the decision is full of legal twists and turns, but it will provide
farmers, ranchers and timber folks with several more months of relief
from expected regulations regarding water use.
A decision to list the coho
was expected.
Leaders of enviro groups that
petitioned the state commission with reasons why the coho should be
listed, were aghast with anger at the postponement.
Before the meeting, the new
commissioner, Marilyn Hendrickson, was somewhat of a question. How would
this newly appointed commissioner (by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger)
vote?
After touring Shasta Valley
and Mendocino County and seeing first-hand the fish screens and other
projects completed by farmers and landowners, she spoke in favor of less
regulation. Voluntary actions were providing the recovery projects
needed to aid coho. Fish habitat and enhancement improvements were
showcased. Hendrickson was impressed.
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Coho Decision Postponed (Cont’d)
The new director of the
California Fish and Game Department, Ryan Broddrick, was also on the
north
state tour with Hendrickson,
when it was held several weeks ago. He too spoke of the great work that
has been accomplished by agriculturists.
President Jim Kellogg changed
his mind.
But it was Commissioner Jim
Kellogg, who shocked those attending the state Fish and Game Commission
meeting on June 25. Kellogg is now president of the commission. He
became the pivotal vote, aligning himself with Hendrickson and the
previous commission president, Michael Flores, in voting to postpone the
decision.
As Kellogg said that he had
changed his mind, the collective polarized group held its breath. It was
at the end of a long day, including two hours of testimony by
representatives from both sides of the coho issue. This was something
that was not expected.
Kellogg, like Hendrickson and
Broddrick, said that he also toured projects completed by farmers
recently and told the other commissioners that all of them should see
the strides made to restore streams and rivers.
"They are not just talking
the talk, they are walking the walk," said Kellogg.
"It was totally unexpected,"
said Don Howell, a leader of the SOSS, Save Our Shasta and Scott Valleys
and Towns coalition. ‘We don’t know when, how or where Mr. Kellogg saw
the work accomplished by agriculture, but he was obviously impressed."
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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
July 1, 2004 |
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Coho Decision Postponed (Cont’d)
Howell traveled to the
commission meeting with fellow SOSS leaders, Dave Dealey and Bill Krum.
The three Siskiyou county citizens, gave testimony to the commission
along with timber representatives, cattlemen, Grange and Farm Bureau.
Del Norte supervisor supports
Klamath agriculture.
Another voice added strength
to the resource folks, when a supervisor from Del Norte County spoke in
favor of the restoration work completed by agriculture and timber.
Charles Blackburn, the Del Norte supervisor, had just returned from a
conference in the Klamath Basin. He too had witnessed the pro-active
fish projects implemented by Klamath farmers.
Still disagree on science.
A frustrating aspect to the
shocking outcome of the commission meeting, was the non-acceptance of
new coho data that was submitted to the Department of Fish and Game.
Michael Valentine, the lead attorney for the department, said that the
information submitted from the last several years had been studied and
the officials did not believe there was an increase in coho numbers, in
comparison to the last 30 years of decline.
Agriculture, timber and SOSS
hired biologist Chuck Hansen to update the data on coho. When the
department was pushed to list the coho with the state Endangered Species
Act (ESA) in 2001, there was little data that was considered viable and
true science.
Much of the information used
by the petitioners for the listing and the department came from a Brown
and Moyles study compiled in the 1980s from
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Coho Decision Postponed (Cont’d)
1970s stream studies. The
terms "absence" of coho and "presence" of coho were used in the studies.
The fish were not counted.
The coho issue is far from
over.
The petitioners, like
Zeke Grader, leader of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Associations, is likely to bring a lawsuit against the
commission for postponing the listing. Grader demanded agricultural
water from the Klamath Basin. There are no fish, he said, because there
is no water. Unfortunately for Grader, the coho counts from the last two
years are up. Even the chinook salmon have had large runs, making
Grader’s statement a falsehood.
Commissioner Bob Hattoy, a
Sierra Club advocate, also demanded water for fish from the Klamath
Bureau of Reclamation project.
It was Commissioner Michael
Flores, who spoke of the "extraordinary" work accomplished by farmers in
Siskiyou County and made the motion to postpone the listing. He asked
that the department work closely with federal NOAA Fisheries agency in
developing an Incidental Take Permit, which would provide protection
from strangling regulations for basic agricultural practices.
Hendrickson seconded. Hattoy
and Commissioner Sam Schuchat voted "no" and Kellogg was the deciding
third "yes" vote.
The commission is expected to
address the postponement decision at its August 26-27 meeting in Morro
Bay, California.
-Permission granted by the
Pioneer Press to reprint this article in full -
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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
July 1, 2004 |
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Coho Decision Sparks State Senate Leader to Block Commission Appointee
The recent decision by the
California Fish and Game Commission (Commission) to delay listing the
coho salmon under the California Endangered Species Act has sparked
Democrats in the State Senate to block the appointment of one of the
commissioners who voted in favor of the delay (see related story
starting on Page 2). Senate President Pro Tem John Burton (D-San
Francisco) has blocked Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s appointment of
Marilyn Hendrickson to the Commission after Hendrickson last Friday
voted to delay plans to include the coho on the state’s list of
threatened and endangered species.
"We aren’t happy with her,"
Burton told the Los Angeles Times this week. "We are going to
have a meeting with her and straighten things out – or find a new
commissioner."
Hendrickson told the Times
"I’m not the least bit perturbed" after Burton pulled her name from a
confirmation hearing list. She has until March to be confirmed by the
Senate and term limits will force Burton out of office later this year.
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Kennedy Reelected President of
Family Farm Alliance
Bill Kennedy, a Poe Valley
rancher and alternate board member for the Klamath Water Users
Association, was reelected by board colleagues as the Family Farm
Alliance’s president.
The Family Farm Alliance is a
powerful advocate for family farmers, ranchers, irrigation districts,
and allied industries in seventeen Western states. The Alliance is
focused on one mission - To ensure the availability of reliable,
affordable irrigation water supplies to Western farmers and ranchers
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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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