Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
New leader at the BOR — again
Jason Phillips agency’s
fourth new manager in eight years
by
Lee Juillerat, Herald and News 11/23/10
Sabo
Arroyave
Fry
Phillips
When Jason Phillips
takes over Jan. 1 as manager of the Bureau of Reclamation’s
Klamath Basin Area Office, he’ll be the fourth manager in
eight years.
Dave Sabo, who arrived
in February 2002 in the aftermath of the 2001 Klamath Basin
water crisis, left in March 2006. He was followed by Pablo
Arroyave, who held the job from August 2006 to August 2008.
Sue Fry, who began in
January 2009, was recently appointed to lead Reclamation’s
new office in Sacramento that will focus on the San
Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Estuary.
The Klamath Basin
manager’s job is a key post because the office oversees the
management of the Klamath Reclamation Project, which
provides water to 240,000 acres of irrigated farmland in
southern Klamath County and northeastern Siskiyou County.
The Project also
provides water to the Klamath National wildlife refuges and
manages Reclamation’s ongoing Klamath Basin restoration
programs.
Basin water
issues
The question some people
are asking is how the turnover affects the Basin’s often
volatile water issues.
“I see it as a good
thing because it’s an opportunity for new ideas and new
people to come into Basin,” Fry said. “The Klamath Basin is
a special place because it is a microcosm of water problems
in the West.”
“The turnover has not
been a bad thing for the Basin,” agreed Arroyave,
Mid-Pacific Region’s deputy regional director. His
responsibilities include oversight for the region’s five
offices, including Klamath Falls.
Former managers for the
Klamath Basin BOR office say they keep in touch with Basin
issues new managers easily transition into the position.
“I’ve stayed very close
to the Klamath Basin issues,” said Sabo, who keeps in touch
with Basin water users and agency managers, and reviews
Basin water-related websites.
Arroyave, Sabo and Fry
moved to what they describe as more stressful, tougher jobs,
and Arroyave and Sabo still have regrets about leaving.
“I was offered
opportunities to move up and I did,” Sabo said.
Moving on and up
He transferred from
Klamath Falls to Reclamation’s Salt Lake City, Utah, office
as an assistant and later a deputy regional director and now
works in Denver as Reclamation’s senior adviser for
hydropower.
Arroyave received a
promotion, and he said the move was necessary for family
reasons. “I still miss Klamath Falls a lot,” he said.
“Klamath has been one of
the most fun jobs I’ve had, and one of the hardest,” Fry
said, noting that moving to Sacramento is also being done
for personal reasons.
Fry and the others also
say their experiences in the Klamath Basin helped them in
their work.
“One thing I’ve learned
in Klamath Falls is when you make a decision you have to see
what else that decision is going to impact,” Fry said.
“It helped me in my interactions with the Tribes and
irrigators and other groups,” Arroyave said. “The experience
there served me well.”
Agency’s frequent turnover likely frustrating, official
says
Not everyone is pleased
to see frequent turnaround in managers for the Bureau of
Reclamation’s Klamath Falls area office.
“I think it’s probably
frustrating to most of the people I work for,” said Greg
Addington, executive director of the Klamath Water Users
Association. “It takes time to develop a relationship with
folks and develop a sense of trust, and then they move on.”
On the positive side,
Addington said the managers have been promoted “and we run
into them in our region and Washington, D.C., and that
helps.”
Tom Mallams, president
of the Klamath Off-Project Water Users, said he believes the
frequent transfers are politically motivated.
“I think it’s indicative
of big government trying to push the agendas people don’t
want,” he said, adding that he believes Basin Reclamation
managers are directed to push support for the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement, which his group opposes.
Side Bar
Managing one of the world's largest systems
The U. S. Bureau of Reclamation is a federal
agency that oversees water resource management, specifically
water diversion, delivery, storage and hydroelectric power
generation projects throughout the western U.S.
The
Klamath Falls office is part of the Mid-Pacific Region,
which is headquartered in Sacramento and includes offices in
Shasta Lake, Folsom and Fresno in California, and Carson
City in Nevada. The region includes lands from Klamath
Falls south to Bakersfield, Calif., along with most of
northwestern Nevada.
The
region manages one of the largest water storage and
conveyance systems in the world, including 20 dams and
reservoirs.
Reclamation: Phillips well-suited to lead
Jason Phillips, who takes over as the Bureau of
Reclamation's Klamath Basin office manager, has managed
several water resources programs for Reclamation since 2001,
including the Upper San Joaquin River Basin Storage
Investigation and San Luis Drainage Feature Re-evalution.
He
previously worked for the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers in
Portland and Sacramento. He has a civil engineering degree
from Portland State University.
"Jason
Phillips' past experience and demonstrated skills managing
complex water management programs make him extremely
well-suited to lead the Klamath Basin Area Office," Donald
Glaser, Reclamation's Mid-Pacific regional director, said in
a press release.
Reasons for turnover in the Klamath Basin office
Turnover of Bureau of Reclamation's Klamath
Basin office managers has happened for good reasons, said
Pedro "Pete" Lucero, public affairs officer for the Bureau
of Reclamation's Mid-Pacific Region office.
"In
the Klamath Basin area office, the region has been very
successful in recruiting high caliber managers with unique
skills in developing and nurturing relationships,
partnering, collaborating and problem solving," he said.
"Those
qualities are highly sought after in government, making
Klamath Basin managers uniquely qualified to manage complex
programs and areas with Reclamation."
Because Reclamation is a tight-knit organization, managers
moving from one job to another are not uncommon, Lucero
said.
"Moving within the organization is healthy and allows new
perspectives and broad-based skill building for individuals
and improves the organization by providing experience to
managers and employees by seeing other areas, gaining
insight, bring new tools to the table."
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Page Updated: Wednesday November 24, 2010 02:00 AM Pacific
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