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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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| Humboldt County
Supervisors Endorse Study of Proposed Long Lake Project
Responding to a diplomatic move initiated by Klamath County Commissioner
John Elliott, the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors on September 7th
unanimously supported funding for a technical analysis of the proposed
Long Lake project. Humboldt County followed up two days later with a
formal letter of support to the Bureau of Reclamation.
"We commend John Elliott for pursuing evaluation of this project, and
his willingness to present this issue before Humboldt County," wrote
Humboldt County Board Chair Jill Geist to the Bureau of Reclamation’s
Dave Sabo. "Please give this project careful consideration towards
developing realistic solutions for the Klamath Basin."
Initial studies of Long Lake, a potential offstream storage site near
Upper Klamath Lake, show that the facility could capture surplus flows
in the Klamath River system and store between 380,000 and 550,000
acre-feet of water. The stored water could then be used for meeting
Klamath River instream flow objectives, thus increasing Klamath Project
water supply reliability.
"The Long Lake project has the potential to be a significant part of
the overall solution towards water concerns in the Klamath Basin, and
warrants detailed evaluation," wrote Geist. "The water retention
off-stream storage opportunities offered by Long Lake could be
significant in addressing water quality, water supply and natural
resource protection associated with the Klamath River."
The Humboldt supervisors encouraged the inclusion of universities and
tribes in the study process. |
Upper Basin
Representatives Featured on Klamath Panel in Missoula this Friday
A contingent of stakeholder and agency representatives from the Upper
Klamath Basin will be traveling to Missoula, Montana this week to
participate in the 28th Annual Public Land Law Conference at
the University of Montana School of Law. The conference will feature a
two-hour panel, moderated by University of California professor Holly
Doremus, entitled "Managing Intractable Disputes: The Case of the
Klamath – Framing the Solutions: What is Working? What is not Working?
How Can the Situation be Improved?".
Panel participants include Klamath County Commissioner Steve West,
Jeff Mitchell of the Klamath Tribes, Becky Hyde representing Sustainable
Northwest, Bureau of Reclamation Area Manager Dave Sabo, John Enbring
(U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service California-Nevada Office) and Dan Keppen
of the Klamath Water Users Association. Each panelist will deliver a
15-minute presentation, following a 45-minute overview presented by
Professor Doremus. Commissioner West has played a key liaison role
between the university organizers and the local panelists.
"One of the most important purposes of our panel is to "ground
truth", if you will, what is happening in the Klamath Basin," said
Commissioner West. "We are not academics, but we are the experts.
We are the people on the ground who are dealing with the problems first
hand everyday and that is the perspective the organizers are looking
for."
For more information on the panel and the conference, you can visit
the website set up by the University of Montana:
http://www2.umt.edu/publicland/.
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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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Reclamation Works to
Establish a Klamath River-Wide Committee
By Liz Bowen, assistant
editor, Pioneer Press
Already it
is controversial, but as the deputy area director of the Bureau of
Reclamation responded to questions and comments, she emphasized the need
for an entire river-long advisory group. The current name for this
work-in-progress is Conservation Implementation Program, or CIP for
short.
Christine
Karas, the deputy director of the Klamath Project, told the group of 60
local residents, "We want to make sure we hear you. To be
responsive to your concerns."
Since the 2001 drought and resulting
confiscation of irrigation water, to 90 percent of the 1,400 farmers in
the Klamath BAsin, everyone has agreed on one issue: The Klamath River
situation is complex. The confiscation of irrigation water was
driven by "biological opinions" from federal agencies regarding
rfederally Endangered Species Act listed sucker fish in the Upper
Klamath Lake and coho salmon that return to the Klamath River and its
tributaries.
Since
2002, water was returned to the nearly 100 year-old
Klamath (agricultural farming) Project, which also resulted in several
thousand small landowners in and around Klamath Falls receiving water
for lawns, gardens and livestock. But the water is still being fought
over. Each year is a challenge.
Karas is on the second draft
of a proposal for creating the Klamath River watershed-wide committee
that will be supported by federal agencies, both with expertise and
finances. But there is mistrust by landowners.
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Reclamation Works to
Establish a Klamath River-Wide Committee (Cont’d)
"The CIP is needed to coordinate and empower all the groups," said
Karas, "so that their collective efforts can bring in more (financial)
resources," for recovery projects.
When asked why the Bureau of Reclamation is the lead agency in
developing a river-long committee, Karas said, "We can’t meet our
customers needs, so we need to resolve this issue. Find better ways to
operate."
There are several government-delegated groups already meeting, but
Karas said that they each are working on just a "small part" of the
Klamath River. There needs to be a committee working on the bigger
picture.
Don Howell, president of the Siskiyou Resource Conservation District
in Scott Valley, said he was "concerned about a loss of local control,"
if a committee was developed with federal agencies as the facilitators.
Scott Murphy, a Scott Valley farmer, said that he had reservations,
because of possible strings that could attach the independent farmers in
California with the federal Klamath Project.
Leo Bergeron, president of the Greenhorn Grange, accused the federal
agencies of adding another layer of bureaucracy and feeding a
multi-billion dollar industry – government and employee pockets.
"Your bureaucratic system will not work for us," he said and added
that the CIP process is based on biological opinions that have not been
verified as accurate.
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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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| Reclamation Works to Establish a Klamath
River-Wide Committee (Cont’d) Karas then encouraged Bergeron to
get involved in the CIP committee and prove that the suckers really are
not endangered.
"Communication up and down the river is a problem," said Karas.
Blair Hart, a Shasta Valley rancher, said that agriculture has "paid
a heavy price" and the landowners are on the brink of losing their
businesses. "We need something that will keep everybody whole."
Supervisor Armstrong Offered Alternative
At half-time, Siskiyou County Board of Supervisor for District 5,
Marcia Armstrong offered an alternative to the organizational process of
the proposed CIP.
The county supervisors have agreed to three things: One – In the
present form, this is a top-down decision making structure; Two – it
duplicates efforts at the state and federal level; Three – the CIP fails
to address current individual water rights.
Then she offered an alternative organizational system that may
encourage local buy-in. Previously she had met with agricultural leaders
from both the Shasta and Scott Valleys.
"It needs to be a bottoms-up approach," she said, which started with
local government of board of supervisors and tribes.
One board of supervisor member of each of the five counties involved
and one representative from each tribe should make up the coordinating
council, she suggested. |
Reclamation Works to
Establish a Klamath River-Wide Committee (Cont’d)
Those individuals will in
turn listen to their constituents and set priorities on recovery and
improvement programs. Agencies would have an advisory role and would
provide the funding.
"This takes out bureaucracies
and politics," said Armstrong.
Present CIP Draft is
Available
The draft CIP can be emailed
by Karas. Contact her at
ckaras@mp.usbr.gov or by U.S. mail at 6600 Washburn Way, Klamath
Falls, Oregon, 97603.
Four other meetings will be
held tonight in Arcata; Sept. 30, at the Klamath Community Center in
Klamath; Oct. 21, in Chiloquin, Oregon; and Oct. 22, at the Klamath
County Fairgrounds in Klamath Falls.
(Reprinted with permission of
the Pioneer Press)
CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
Thursday, September 30 -Friday, October 1, 2004. 28th Annual Public
Land Law Conference. University of Montana, Missoula, Montana.
Tuesday, October 12, 2004. Klamath Soil and Water Conservation
District Annual Dinner Meeting. 7:00 p.m. Midland Community Park Hall,
Midland, Oregon. John McDonald, the Executive Director of the Oregon
Association of Conservation Districts will be the guest speaker.
Presentations of conservation awards to landowners who implemented
outstanding projects on their property will be awarded. Please call
883-6932 extension 101 for reservations.
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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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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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