Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
http://pioneer.olivesoftware.com/Olive/ODE/HeraldandNews/
About
the adjudication process
Herald and News 1/6/10 Adjudication impacts anyone who uses surface water. In the Klamath Basin, that primarily includes irrigators who use surface water for ranching and farming, the Klamath Tribes who want to preserve traditional fisheries and federal officials who need water to sustain wetlands and other lands. The process consists of two phases: administrative and judicial.
The administrative phase
involves the state’s water resources department, which collects
documentation pertaining to water right claims, as well as any
contests or challenges to those claims. Nearly all the claims and challenges (were) are settled administratively. Those remaining — 56 claims and 201 challenges — involve the Klamath Tribes. An order is expected in 2012. Once there is an order,The regular appeals process applies, and the issue can potentially appear before the U.S. Supreme Court. An adjudication order can be sent back through any administrative portion if the courts deem that necessary. It is not unheard of for water adjudication legal proceedings to continue for half a century or more. |
Page Updated: Monday January 02, 2012 03:13 AM Pacific
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