Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Federal agencies
await budget news
Cuts expected by many offices
by
ELON GLUCKLICH and SARA HOTTMAN, Herald and News 4/27/11
The budget, which would
take effect Oct. 1 if implemented, proposes cuts to numerous
federal departments, including the U.S. Forest Service and
Department of the Interior agencies, Bureau of Land
Management and Bureau of Reclamation. And departments such
as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, slated for a modest
budget increase, are rethinking the way they provide
services.
While it’s likely the
House of Representatives and Senate will modify the
president’s proposal in coming months, some local managers
of federal offices expect to have less money to work with in
the coming years.
“This is a budget
scenario that’s going to play out for probably many (budget)
cycles,” said Ron Cole, refuge manager at the Klamath Basin
National Wildlife Refuges Complex, a Fish and Wildlife
service.
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation
The U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation will face a $108 million cut to its budget as
its parent agency, the Department of the Interior, absorbs a
$72 million cut in the president’s proposed fiscal year 2012
budget. Several agencies in the Department of Interior will
see their budgets increase.
The Interior’s nearly
$12.1 billion budget is divided among nine agencies and
other costs, including land settlement payments. Interior
agencies that operate locally include the Bureau of
Reclamation, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey, National Parks
Service, and Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Reclamation overall will
work with a proposed $805.2 million budget, allotting a
proposed $192 million to the Mid-Pacific Region, which
includes the Klamath Reclamation Project, the Central Valley
Project in California,
and the Newlands Project
in Nevada. That allocation is down $27 million from this
year.
Under that plan, the
Klamath Project would experience a $3.9 million cut from
this year’s budget level.
However, Don Glaser,
regional director of the Mid-Pacific Region, said the Bureau
considers the region a high priority.
Last month, when the
federal government was still operating on continuing budget
resolutions, which cut Department of the Interior funding
with each continuance, Glaser told Klamath Project growers
the Bureau was aware of their needs.
“Every other region in
Reclamation took cuts in 2011 so that high priority projects
in the Mid-Pacific Region were funded,” he said, adding,
“Secretary Salazar is committed to finding solutions to
water-related conflicts in the Central Valley and the
Klamath Basin.”
U.S. Forest Service
The U.S. Forest Service
would receive $5.1 billion for 2012 under the president’s
proposed budget. That is down $178 million from what was
proposed for 2011, and it means forest service agencies
around the country could operate with fewer resources in the
coming year.
It’s still uncertain
what impact the proposed budget would have on local forest
service agencies. Spokeswoman Erica Hupp with the Fremont-Winema
National Forest said the department hasn’t yet received any
budget or the budget paperwork that will allow it to target
certain reductions in this budget year.
“We don’t have any
budget numbers,” Hupp said. “We’re still waiting to hear
from our regional office” in Portland.
Bureau of Land Management
The president’s 2012
budget contains $1.13 billion for Bureau of Land
Management operations
nationwide. It’s a $12 million decrease from the 2011
budget.
Assuming those figures
don’t change dramatically, local agencies like the Lakeview
BLM office will work in the next year with a flat budget, if
not a slight decrease.
Scott Stoffel, spokesman
with the Lakeview BLM office, said the Bureau is “currently
in the process of analyzing” what the proposed budget would
mean for the agency on a local level. There’s still a fair
deal of uncertainty in the budget, he said, but added the
Bureau would accept whatever budget figure was reached.
“We support the
president’s budget,”
Stoffel said. “And we’re ready to work within the (allotted)
funding levels.”
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service is slated for $1.7 billion in 2012 under
the president’s proposed budget. The figure represents a
$47.9 million increase over the service’s current budget.
But local fish and
wildlife agencies aren’t likely to see any increases any
time soon.
“We’ll probably have
some diminished budgets” in the coming years, said Ron Cole,
refuge manager at the Klamath Basin National Wildlife
Refuges Complex, a Fish and Wildlife
Cole said specifics
haven’t yet been targeted to narrow down the service’s
budget. But, he said, he wouldn’t be surprised to see fewer
employees budgeted for the wildlife refuge and other Fish
and Wildlife agencies.
“I can see maybe that
we’re going to be going back to having a workforce that’s
smaller, and has hopefully a broader foundation of
expertise,” he said.
Side Bar
|
Page Updated: Thursday April 28, 2011 02:48 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2001 - 2011, All Rights Reserved