http://users.sisqtel.net/armstrng/opinion091407.htm
Feds taking
irrigation water for fish
Siskiyou County Supervisor Marcia Armstrong District 5,
9/14/07
It has always been understood on some
level that the state and federal agencies really wanted to
take water currently used for irrigation and livestock
watering and allocate it to salmon and steelhead fish
production. We have seen wave after wave of endangered
species and water quality regulations. Many have been
designed to shoe horn in another small water allocation for
fish ahead of long-standing vested pre-1914 agricultural
water rights without paying just compensation for a property
taking.
When I served on the federal
Klamath River Fisheries Task Force, it became clear to me
that the driving force behind the tribes and fishermen was
economic. The goal was to increase the production of Chinook
salmon to harvest for commercial purposes. The underlying
strategy was to redirect the economic use of water from
agriculture in
Siskiyou
County to commercial fish production
for the benefit of tribes and fishermen.
The agricultural community of
Siskiyou
County has worked hard to survive the
stream of regulatory level 5 hurricanes that have hit our
shores. The Resource Advisory Councils (RCDs) are now in the
process of finalizing a programmatic state Incidental Take
Permit (ITP) for coho and a watershed-wide 1602 streambed
alteration/diversion permit. Each of these will redirect
water from agriculture to fish. In addition, the Water
Quality Control Board is imposing Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDLs)
limitations on activities that impact fish. In
Scott
Valley, the eye is on controlling and
limiting groundwater use. In the Shasta Valley, the
objective is to take 45 cubic ft./sec. of water used by
agriculture and reallocate it to instream fish production.
We have not yet seen the further demands on agriculture from
the final riparian and other regulatory policies being
developed by this Board.
Recently, the California
Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) came before the Board of
Supervisors to present yet one more of the shoe-horn
maneuvers to take water from agriculture. This one revolves
around Section 5937 of the Fish and Game code which states:
“The owner of any dam shall allow sufficient water at all
times to pass through a fishway, or in the absence of a
fishway, allow sufficient water to pass over, around or
through the dam, to keep in good condition any fish that
maybe planted or exist below the dam.”
This is not a new regulation. In
the past, there has been at least one clash over section
5937 on the
Scott
River. The mainstem river
historically goes subsurface at some point in the summer. At
that time, the CDFG traps fish stranded in the isolated
pools for re-release. In this case, diversion ditch users
were cited for leaving insufficient water in the stream to
keep fish pooled up below the dam in good condition during a
long holiday weekend when the CDFG did not come to trap
them.
Current plans are to establish
what “good condition” means. The CDFG is giving CalTrout –
not a friend of agriculture, grant money to do a “flow
study” on the Shasta
River to “develop the relationship
between flow and habitat availability for the different life
stages of coho.” They will start on a small scale with CDFG,
Bureau of Land management and Nature Conservancy lands on
the Shasta. Within five years, ultimate plans to do the
studies on both the Shasta and the Scott on a watershed wide
basis. We now have the meaning of “good condition” going
from “alive” to commanding stream flow for maximized fish
habitat. This is another way of saying they are about to
subordinate more ag water use rights and allocate them to
fish production without paying for them.
The DFG is using the terms “pilot
strategy,” “in cooperation with the community” and
“broad-based technical advisory committee” to make it sound
like this evolved from our local processes. I can tell you,
there is no buy in by the Board of Supervisors on this.
There was no cooperation with the community. This was sprung
upon us completely out of the blue, born purely of a
partnership between the CDFG and fishing/environmental
groups. It is a complete slap in the face to the people of
Siskiyou
County. |