Klamath Project
Shut Down
Shrinking water supplies leave irrigators in lurch
By Dylan Darling
Published Wednesday June 25, 2003
Federal water managers today ordered a temporary
shutdown of the Klamath Project in order to conserve
enough water in the Upper Klamath Lake to protect
endangered suckers.
Klamath Reclamation Project Manager Dave Sabo said
this morning that irrigation diversion through the A
Canal will be suspended until it is clear the Bureau
can meet a lake level requirement on June 30.
"We will be shutting down the project until we get
to the lake levels we need," Sabo said. "I'm
expecting we would start (deliveries) before or on
the first of July."
Additional shutdowns may be necessary through the
rest of the summer, he added.
It was not immediately known whether there would be
any affect on irrigators on the Klamath Project's
east side, which does not rely on Upper Klamath
Lake.
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation official met with Klamath
Basin water managers via conference call Tuesday and
today to discuss water conditions.
Under the Endangered Species Act, water levels in
Upper Klamath Lake and the Klamath River are
stipulated in biological opinions issued by the U.S
Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine
Fisheries Service.
Friday, the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation told Basin
water managers that they needed to cut the demand on
irrigation water by almost a quarter to keep the
lake above the elevation required by the Service's
biological opinion, which is designed to protect
endangered suckers in the lake.
On Monday, Dan Keppen, executive director of the
Klamath Water Users Association, said irrigation
water deliveries could be cut severely.
Keppen said irrigators have already taken several
measures to save water.
Keppen said threats to water deliveries can't be
blamed on recent hot weather
"Since Friday we have done everything we can to cut
the demand," he said.
Cecil Lesley, branch chief for land and water
operations in the Bureau's Klamath Basin Area
Office, said, however, that inflows into Upper
Klamath Lake have been dropping rapidly.
"It's been for about a week now that flows have
fallen off considerably swifter than we thought they
would," he said.
The drop came despite a cool weekend and has Bureau
officials looking into Upper Basin water usage to
find out why the inflows have been going down.
The root of the situation is the June 13 shift of
water year types by the Bureau.
Because of a wet April that boosted stream flow
forecasts, the Bureau changed the water year type
from "dry" to "below average." The switch means the
lake needs to be kept 6 inches higher than before
and flows from Iron Gate Dam to be kept at several
hundred cubic feet per second higher.
John Nichols, manager of the Langell Valley
Irrigation District, said his district has tried to
keep the Bureau and other irrigation districts meet
the upped requirements by letting its return flow go
downstream. He said the district has volunteered to
help through the end of the month, but there is not
that much water to go around.
If the lake level goes below what is required by the
biological opinion then there could be lawsuits from
environmental groups that keep a keen eye on the
Basin.
"I don't think sucker fish would care one way or the
other, but there are a whole bunch of people
watching the magic number," Nichols said.
If the year was still classified as dry then the
lake would need to be at 4,141.5 feet above sea
level, instead of the 4,142.1 feet above sea level
called for in a below average year.
Keppen said the current threat to irrigation
deliveries can't be blamed on hot weather
"If there is any reduction, it will not be caused by
Mother Nature, it will be caused by regulations," he
said.
If the Bureau can hit the lake level mark on June
30, then it will be a bit of a break because it
won't need to hit another level until July 31. That
level will need to be 4,140.7 feet above sea level.
If the weather gets hot again, causing more
evaporation and more demand from irrigators, then
more changes to irrigation deliveries would be
needed.
"I can guarantee you that we are going to be in this
spot again in July," Keppen said. |