* Yes, in 2001 'their' the farmers
water was taken. This was water that
used to be a huge lake, was rerouted and
stored in Klamath Lake specifically for
irrigation, artificially elevating
Klamath Lake. Yes, this water was theirs
in storage paid for by them. In part of
the basin some of the rerouted water
historically had no way to reach the
Klamath River before a tunnel was built
through a mountain, to put this into the
river.
* In 2002, this was a record run of
salmon in the Klamath River, 3rd
highest. Klamath Water Users warned
officials that putting excessively warm
water in the river to artificially
elevate it would kill the fish.
* Chemicals used in the Klamath Basin
agriculture have some of the most
stringent regulations in the
nation--they are not "lethal levels."
The Fish and Wildlife Service has done
numerous studies, each one finding that
there have been absolutely no adverse
effects on animal life from pesticides
on farmland, no dead or ill fish or
birds or animals. The National Academy
of Science concluded that Klamath
Irrigation practices were not to blame
for fish dying 200 miles downstream in
2002. They also said that lake levels
and river flows are not factors in
salmon survival. )
* Mr Miller does not explain what
"meaningful agricultural reform" means,
however environmental groups seem to
feel that eliminating agriculture is the
answer to all of the river woes despite
contradictory conclusions of the
National Academy of Science. The 100,000
acre feet of agriculture land converted
to wetlands in the Klamath Basin has
worsened water quality and used 2ce the
amount of water used by agriculture.
______________________________________________________
The Klamath River
Dispute
by
Colin Miller June 2006
The Klamath River story of
Northwestern California and Southern
Oregon is as tragic as it is convoluted,
and the legal battles and controversy
surrounding it are as dirty and as
overheated as the river itself.
Fishing rights' clash with aggressive
farmers, and the conflict on the Klamath
has created a strange bedfellows
alliance between commercial fishermen
and Native Americans. The two groups,
normally opposed on political grounds,
have come together with
environmentalists and environmental
justice groups in lawsuits filed against
the U.S. government for failing to
adhere to the Endangered Species Act (ESA)
and save the few remaining salmon. Each
year, the populations of threatened
Chinook and endangered Coho salmon
coming up the Klamath have dropped.
The conflict came to a dramatic head
during a drought in 2001, when the
Bureau of Reclamation (the federal
irrigation division responsible for
monitoring the water levels on the
Klamath) opened the dam floodgates to
provide cool water for two species of
suckerfish in Klamath Lake and for the
salmon that would be coming up for the
fall runs. The farmers of Southern
Oregon were apoplectic at losing 75% of
"their" water. Incensed, the farmers
filed a lawsuit and engaged in massive
protests, drawing the national spotlight
in the months running up to Oregon
Republican Senator Gordon Smith's
re-election campaign. Within months, the
water was turned back on for the
farmers, despite the wealth of
scientific evidence documenting the
salmons' tenuous position in a dying
ecosystem.
By September of the following year,
the catastrophic dimension of the
government's decision to allow
irrigation was revealed. The 2002 salmon
harvest was tragically small.
Approximately 80,000 salmon lay gasping
for breath on the banks of the Klamath,
unable to reach their spawning grounds
alive. Since then, each year's salmon
run has gone lower, suffering from
disease and high heat, pushing the
"endangered" salmon species near
extinction and the "threatened" species
closer to an "endangered" listing. If
Congressman Richard Pombo of California
has his way, the Endangered Species Act
may yet be reformed and crippled to the
extent that the listings as they stand
hold even less water, so to speak, than
they already do.
The impact on commercial fishermen of
the North Coast, and indeed, for salmon
fishermen from Seattle to San Francisco,
has been grave. Because it is impossible
to determine the origins of ocean-going
salmon (which always return to their
birthplaces to spawn) the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has mandated an
extremely low allowable wild salmon
harvest, limited by the endangered
salmon runs of the Klamath. As hard as
it has been for these fishermen, Indians
of the Klamath have been, and will
continue to be hit the hardest, because
of the subsistence nature of the tribal
fishery.
The Karuk people were once one of the
wealthiest indigenous groups in all of
California. Today, the 4,000-member
Karuk Nation is the second-largest tribe
in the state and one of the poorest.
About 90% of Karuk families in Siskiyou
County live in extreme poverty.
Historically, the Karuk customarily ate
more than 450 pounds of fish per person
per year, an average of 1.2 pounds per
day, comprising 50% of their total diet.
Last year, the Karuk caught just 100
fish ?five pounds of fish per person per
year. Not only does this number mock the
idea of "subsistence" fishing, it
doesn't even provide for their
ceremonial rites. Last year, the Karuk
people bought Alaskan salmon.
While dam removal is fundamental to
the pursuit of both justice and
sustainability, it resolves only one
facet of a complex problem. Incompatible
extractive land-uses continue to cause
disproportionately negative impacts on
the health and survival of both salmon
and Klamath Basin tribes. The Klamath
Water Users Association, representing
mostly farming interests, contends that
dams are actually serving to protect
salmons' health and the overall
ecological well-being of the Klamath
River Basin, by allowing sediment,
pesticides, and herbicides to "settle"
in reservoirs, rather than flowing
freely into the river. These claims
could not be more misguided.
A combination of 55 agro-industrial
chemicals used on farms upstream, made
more toxic to fish in their synergistic
effects, combined with extremely high
water temperatures due to dams, are
still finding their way into the river
in lethal quantities.
The tribes first sued PacifiCorp for
a $1 billion in a Court of Federal
Claims, but their case was dismissed
because the 1864 treaty guaranteeing
Klamath Basin Indians the "exclusive
right of taking fish in the streams and
lakes" predates the existence of the
company or its dams! Failing that, in
late 2002, they sought representation
under Earthjustice lawyer Kristine
Boyles, together with a large group of
high-profile environmental groups to sue
the Federal government for failing to
protect the endangered Coho salmon, and
the threatened Chinook salmon and bull
trout. As expected, the Federal court
threw the case out, but Earthjustice
appealed.
In October 2005, the Ninth Circuit
Federal Appeals Court unexpectedly
overturned the Federal government's plan
to "protect" Coho salmon by providing
status quo amounts of irrigation water
to farmers for the next decade.
Unfortunately, the appeal derives the
strength of its argument entirely from
its argument that the Bush
Administration's plan for the Klamath
would violate the Endangered Species Act
(ESA). Were the ESA to be weakened, the
Ninth Circuit decision could be
repealed, bringing the tribes to the
next nationally-fought legislative
battle. This battle would be waged not
just by indigenous advocacy and
Environmental Justice groups, but by
mainstream environmentalists as well.
California Republican Congressman
Richard Pombo has sponsored House
Resolution 3824, which the House
subsequently approved. Should HR 3824
pass in the Senate, it would undermine
the Endangered Species Act, removing
every restrictive provision and altering
the system by forcing taxpayers to
reimburse would-be habitat-destroyers if
they voluntarily decided to protect
endangered wildlife.
This bill would prove devastating to
the future of the dwindling Klamath
River salmon population, which was once
teeming with life. The future of the
Klamath River depends on prudent policy
including dam removal and meaningful
agriculture reform. The Klamath River
salmon run's alarmingly small population
is a warning of the river's poor health.
The Klamath has fueled culture,
subsistence, and industry for millennia.
It is up to both the federal government
and the people to determine that the day
for justice has finally come. Then, the
salmon may finally return to their
ancestral home.