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KWAPA board OKs fund plan for Langell
Valley
by SARA
HOTTMAN, Herald and News 7/1/10
The Klamath Water and
Power Agency board of directors last week settled on a
procedure to distribute federal money to landowners in Langell
Valley Irrigation District who are being forced into land
idling and groundwater pumping programs.
Many irrigators had agreed
to idle land after the Bureau of Reclamation announced there
would be no irrigation deliveries from Clear Lake Reservoir.
Following an application
and acreage verification, the agency will draw up a contract
with each landowner, and then directly pay owners their
portion of the
$315,315 from the Department of the Interior, said Hollie
Cannon, KWAPA director.
The amount of money each
farmer and rancher receives is yet to be determined, Cannon
said.
Nearly 9,174 acres may
participate in the program, and the money will be divided
equally among the landowners who
request to participate. If
all eligible owners participate, they could be paid as little
as $34.37 per acre.
At the public meeting
Friday afternoon, the board fielded questions about whether
more money would be directed to Langell Valley landowners.
The irrigation district
hopes $10 million of drought relief attached to a federal
appropriations bill, which has been working its way through in
the Senate for months, comes through since its landowners
received considerably less compensation than others in the
area. Malin and Shasta View irrigation districts were paid
$220 per acre to idle their land.
“They’re just hoping,”
Cannon said. “The amount of money landowners are receiving out
there is virtually nothing compared to what they need to stay
in business. So obviously the landowners out there are hoping
there’s going to be something in addition to this.”
The bill would allocate
money for drought mitigation in Western states, Cannon said,
so KWAPA doesn’t know how many states will receive money, how
the money will be distributed, or if the Bureau of Reclamation
will tap KWAPA to distribute it.
Cannon doesn’t know how
long it will take for the federal government’s current offerings
to reach
Langell Valley farmers and ranchers, but he said K WA PA is
geared up for quick turnaround.
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Page Updated: Friday July 02, 2010 02:42 AM Pacific
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