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Adjudication confirms Tribes’ water rights
Judge verifies Tribes’
claims for six bodies of water; two decisions expected later
By SARA HOTTMAN, Herald
and News 12/4/11
An administrative law
judge in six
separate proposed orders verified the tribes’ entitlement to
the amount of water they say is necessary to maintain
habitats for hunting, fishing, trapping and gathering on the
Williamson River, Sprague River, Sycan River, Wood River,
Klamath Marsh, their tributaries, and springs on the former
reservation, said Bud
Two other decisions on
the most contested water bodies, Upper Klamath Lake and the
Klamath River, are due in April 2012.
With a time immemorial
priority date — the most senior water right — and their
desired water
quantity claims confirmed, Klamath Tribes officials are
calling this a victory in the 36-year-long Klamath Basin
adjudication process.
But, they say, the
decision signals the need for irrigators and tribes to work
together for fair distribution of water.
“The Tribes knew all
along that adjudication is a very blunt instrument to solve
water resource issues in the Basin. That’s why we put so
much effort into the (Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement):
it’s the best tool for resolving water resource issues.”
KBRA
The Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement, or KBRA, is an $800 million agreement
that seeks to establish sustainable water supply and power
rates for irrigators, fund habitat restoration, and help the
Klamath Tribes acquire the 92,000-acre Mazama Tree Farm, all
contingent upon removing four PacifiCorp owned hydroelectric
dams on the Klamath River.
While the agreement was
signed in 2010, it is still awaiting Congressional approval,
required for dam removal and funding its programs.
Supporters say the
adjudication decision vindicates the agreement, in which the
Klamath Tribes receive land in exchange for sacrificing some
of their water rights, which would benefit irrigators.
“Folks opposed to (KBRA)
should be supporting it, because they’re the ones who will
get a benefit,” said Hollie Cannon, director of Klamath
Water and Power Agency. “The concept is everybody gives,
everybody gets. If there’s no KBRA, the tribe has nothing to
get so has no reason to give.
“We’re hoping people
opposed to the KBRA realize what risk they really stand. You
hear anti-KBRA people saying, ‘kill KBRA to have
adjudication.’ Well, they don’t realize all of these years
in the Upper Basin (irrigators) took whatever they wanted
for water because
(Oregon Department of Water Resources) wasn’t regulating
anything. With the order of determination, that picture
changes completely.”
Tom Mallams, a vocal
opponent of the KBRA and a contestant to the Tribes’ water
claims, said the KBRA doesn’t help irrigators who have
junior water rights, which is the main issue in the Upper
Basin.
But, he said,
adjudication allowed irrigators to challenge the Tribes’
claims, forcing them to lower the amount of water the Tribes
said they needed.
“This validates the
adjudication process,” he said. “The tribal instream claim
would never have dropped … The KBRA doesn’t give us
anything. They (reduced) because they claimed amounts that
could not hold up in court.
“Adjudication is a
complaint-driven process. If you don’t protest, you
automatically lose. If we hadn’t been involved, (the Tribes)
would have been granted the full amount they asked for.
Adjudication was a successful venture.”
In the proposed orders,
the reductions are called “downward adjustments” and are
attributed to new information becoming available. Mallams
said that information came to light in part because of
contestants.
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Page Updated: Tuesday December 06, 2011 03:25 AM Pacific
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