Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Adjudicating Water
Who Gets What and Why
by Sara Hottman, Herald and News 12/11/11
Klamath
Tribes council member Jeff Mitchell stands in front of
rapids near
the Blue
Pool, an area of deep water on the Williamson River south of
Chiloquin
that has spiritual significance to the Klamath Tribes. An
administrative law judge recently ruled in favor of the
Tribes on their
in-stream
claims on the Williamson River and other rivers and streams
that feed into Upper Klamath Lake. H&N photos
by Ty Beaver
Last week’s water
adjudication decision signaled the imminent end of an era
for Upper Basin irrigators.
An administrative law
judge recommended the adjudicator in the Klamath Basin
adjudication process confirm the Klamath Tribes’ water
claims on the Sprague, Sycan, Williamson and Wood rivers and
their tributaries.
Ultimately that means
for the first time, Upper Basin irrigators won’t have free
reign of their pumps. They’ll be subject to senior water
rights — dating as far back as the beginning of time
— resulting in the
potential for many dry years for junior water right holders.
But that’s Oregon water
law: first in time is first in right. After 36 years and
more than 700 claims and 5,000 contests, Klamath Basin
adjudication is wrapping up with an adjudicator deciding who
has the strongest right to water among farmers, ranchers and
tribes.
“It’s going to be really
messy,” said Larry Dunsmoor, a fish biologist for the
Klamath Tribes who has worked in the area for 30 years.
“There’s going to be a lot of people who say this is just
between the Tribes and agriculture as a whole. The truth is
(outside the Tribes) there would still be calls placed and
the junior people asked to shut off.
“Adjudication will
produce winners and losers. That’s why we say that. …
There’s no sharing. It’s who gets how much and what the
pecking order is.”
Rapids in the Williamson River churn south of Chiloquin.
The Williamson River is one of five rivers, along with
their tributaries, that feed into Upper Klamath Lake.
The order
Each proposed order is a
recommendation from a judge to the adjudicator, who will
make the final determination. Those who challenged the
Tribes’ water claims may appeal the order, which the
adjudicator will weigh with the judge’s conclusions.
Officials said it’s
unlikely the adjudicator will veer far from the proposed
order.
“The adjudicator
received a tremendous amount of information,” said Tom Paul,
deputy director of the Oregon Water Resources Department,
which enforces water rights. “I don’t expect him
to outright dismiss the
order, but I also don’t think the order will stand as-is.”
Meanwhile, the Tribes
are postponing celebration and Upper Basin contestants are
hoping the appeals process reduces their claim.
“This was a victory for
fish and for tribal treaty rights,” said Jeff Mitchell, a
Klamath Tribes council member. “The proposed order clearly
says that there’s no (diminution) of tribal treaty rights
and the tribes deserve water to protect habitat of
reservation resources.
“But we caution that
this is just one step in the process. Now we need to turn
our attention to finding a balance between competing
interests.”
Tom Mallams, an Upper
Basin contestant, cites as
hope the fact that
adjudication reduced the Tribes’ original water claims
significantly as new studies were conducted to provide hard
data for testimony.
“Their claims dropped
because they claimed amounts that could not hold up in
court,” he said. “Even if (the final determination) does
hurt the irrigators, we’re so much better off than where we
would have been without the adjudication.”
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The future of water adjudication
Next year, an
administrative law judge will deliver a proposed order
on the Klamath Tribes’ water claims in Upper Klamath
Lake and the Klamath River.
“Those claims
could have consequences for both Project irrigators and
upstream irrigators,” said Greg Addington, director of
Klamath Water Users Association. “The Project irrigators
and the Tribes have already reached settlement about
those claims and how they will or will not affect
Project water supply.
“We support
efforts for the upstream irrigators and the Tribes to
reach agreements as well.”
Regardless of
next year’s adjudication decision, the Project and
Tribes are signatories of the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement, in which both parties make concessions to get
what they want.
The Tribes
concede some of their rightful water and some
water-related claims against the federal government in
exchange for removal of four Klamath River dams and
acquisition of the Mazama Tree Farm, a 90-acre parcel
that was part of their original reservation. Dam
removal, the Tribes say, would restore fish passage on
the river.
Project
irrigators, in return, would have more senior water
rights (the Tribes would take on a 1908 water right
instead of the awarded time immemorial) and would not be
impacted by the Tribes’ water rights if irrigators use
no more than 380,000 acre-feet of water.
But the KBRA
has yet to be funded by Congress. A congressman with a
key committee position has vowed to halt legislation
that permits dam removal — a critical component of the
agreement. And a vocal contingency of opponents has said
it will fight for adjudication, not the KBRA, to be the
final word.
Federal
lawmakers responded to last week’s adjudication
decision:
Sen.
Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: “The administrative law
judge’s decision affirming that the Klamath Tribes have
significant water rights underscores the importance of a
longterm solution in the Klamath Basin and is yet
another reminder why we must implement the KBRA.
“We do not
need more lawyers and litigation where one side wins and
the other is left with little to no water. The KBRA,
painstakingly negotiated by the local collaborative
effort of which the Klamath Tribes was a part and
continues to endorse, is the only avenue I’ve seen that
would put these water disputes behind us and let
everyone in the Basin focus on creating jobs and moving
forward. Action to put the KBRA into law will help
provide stability to the entire community as well as
help the local economy.”
Sen.
Ron Wyden, D-Ore.: “I commend Sen. Merkley for
seeking to implement the Klamath Basin water settlement
agreement and the dam removal agreement. A lot of
progress has been made in resolving water issues in the
Basin and it’s time for Congress to take up these
issues. This bill will now be coming to the Senate
Energy and Natural Resources Committee for action. The
subcommittee, which I chair, will be holding a hearing
on the agreements and water management early next year
in the Klamath Basin, which I will chair. I am
determined to make sure that during the Committee’s
deliberations all sides are heard and all issues and
solutions are examined and I am going to hold off
co-sponsoring Sen. Merkley’s bill to underscore that
commitment.”
Rep.
Wally Herger, R-Calif.: Herger’s communications
director, Bryan Cleveland, said the congressman’s op-ed
published Dec. 2 in the Siskiyou Daily News reflected
his views. “If the science does not justify the proposal
to remove the dams, or if the cost/ benefit ratio is so
out-ofkilter that it does not pass the straight-face
test, then PacifiCorp should be owed the opportunity to
seek a new license that contains reasonable and
affordable conditions. But the bottom line is we must
continue working to reform the environmental laws that
are making life so difficult for farmers and energy
producers alike.”
Rep.
Greg Walden, R-Ore.: Walden’s office did not
respond to the Herald and News’ inquiry before deadline,
but he has been notably non-committal to a position on
the KBRA, saying the process should remain in locals’
hands. Supporters of the agreements are calling on him
to take a position, calling his endorsement key to
Congressional support.
Rep.
Tom McClintock, R-Calif.: McClintock’s office
did not respond to the Herald and News’ inquiry before
deadline, but he has said he is vehemently opposed to
dam removal, a critical component of the KBRA, though he
is apathetic to the agreement itself. “My problem is
specifically with spending a quarter of a billion
dollars to tear down four perfectly good hydroelectric
dams … I intend to do everything I can to stop the
unnecessary destruction of dams.”
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Upper Basin to feel greatest
impact
Pumps may be shut off during low water
years
Even if the final
determination is only a shadow of the proposed order,
irrigation in the Upper Basin would change dramatically:
those irrigators will face limitations akin to those
Klamath Reclamation Project irrigators have been
grappling with for years.
The Tribes,
with their beginning-of-time priority date, could call
their water rights to keep the minimum water flows a
judge agreed are necessary to maintain their fish and
wildlife habitats.
To achieve
flows, pumps
feeding junior water rights are shut down until the
senior water right is met.
Not only
that, Oregon Water Resources before the order could not
enforce water rights being adjudicated so Upper Basin
irrigators with senior water rights could not call their
right, leaving junior water right holders the ability to
pump freely.
“Water right
holders upstream, because there are very few areas
adjudicated up there … have had the ability to divert
what they need to satisfy what their right says,” said
Tom Paul, deputy director of Oregon Water Resources
Department.
Larry
Dunsmoor, who works on the Sprague River, said unlimited
use is evident.
“In the
middle of the summer when it gets hot and everybody
starts to irrigate, the river just drops,” he said.
“With the proposed order, flows would change that.”
More
water in streams
Flows
confirmed in adjudication are subject to a slew of
variables — water year, habitat, reach of water, etc.
But in short,
the range of f lows in the Tribes’ water right is higher
than what has historically remained in the rivers and
streams after irrigation.
Several
contestants
contacted by the Herald and News would not comment on
adjudication, citing lack of knowledge in the
proceedings, including Roger Nicholson, the rancher
behind Water For Life Inc., who has long been active in
the process.
In a press
release announcing the adjudication decision, the
Klamath Tribes said, “Some interests in the Basin
advised people that the Tribes’ water rights are
minimal, but those interests have been proven wrong.
People who followed that advice have obviously been
misled in a situation where they are risking a lot.”
Bill Ganong,
an attorney
for irrigation districts involved in adjudication,
agreed, saying there’s no doubt the confirmed f lows
will affect irrigators upstream of Upper Klamath Lake.
The farther
upstream they are, the less water they’ll have if the
Tribes call their water right.
“… It is
clear,” Ganong said, “that for some stream segments,
especially in the Sprague River drainage, the
enforcement of Tribal rights in the amounts provided in
the proposed orders would have a profound impact on the
use of surface water for irrigation.”
Historical data on river flows
Recently confirmed Tribal water rights would require
more water to remain in streams and rivers from which
Upper Basin irrigators draw water.
The
U.S. Geological Survey tracks flows on water bodies,
including minimum daily flows, which vary with the
amount of water in the rivers or stream. Here is a
sample of, historically, the highest minimum flow
recorded for a month, lowest minimum flow recorded for a
month, and proposed order's minimums.
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A quick guide to what this means
After 36 years and
more than 700 claims and 5,000 contests, the Klamath
Basin adjudication process only has about six more
claims to settle.
In a proposed
order last week, a judge confirmed the Klamath Tribes’
claims to water in the Sprague, Sycan, Williamson and
Wood rivers and their tributaries. Once the final
determination is settled, the order, whatever form it
takes, becomes enforceable.
What does
that mean for people in the Klamath Basin?
Non-irrigators: Adjudication does not affect
well water, and the Oregon Water Resources Department
does not require groundwater permits for domestic wells
or small agricultural uses, such as trough water.
Surface irrigation water is not regulated for lawns or
gardens up to one-half an acre.
On-Project irrigators: Water rights claims on
upstream reaches don’t affect irrigators on the Klamath
Reclamation Project, and could actually be beneficial,
since the confirmed claims require flows that are higher
than what is currently in the rivers. Those rivers feed
Upper Klamath Lake, which must meet a minimum water
level for irrigators to receive full water deliveries.
However, the
proposed order for the Tribes’ claims on Upper Klamath
Lake and Klamath River, to be ruled on in April, likely
will affect the Project’s water.
Off-Project irrigators: Irrigators above Upper
Klamath Lake are most affected by the recent proposed
orders.
The Oregon
Water Resources Department could not enforce water
rights until they were adjudicated, so irrigators in the
area have been able to pump without restriction. But
once the final determination is made, the Tribes may
call their water rights and pumps will be shut off,
starting with the most junior water rights, until their
rightful flows are met.
Irrigators
with junior rights will either go without water or use
well water.
Klamath Tribes:
While the
proposed order still needs to go through an appeals and
confirmation process, the Klamath Tribes received
validation for their water claims after decades of
contentious court battles.
Officials say
the final determination will likely reflect the proposed
order. That will give the Tribes power to act on their
time immemorial priority date and call their water right
when they deem it necessary to maintain fish and
wildlife habitats for hunting, fishing, trapping and
gathering rights guaranteed by the treaty of 1894.
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Page Updated: Monday December 12, 2011 03:19 AM Pacific
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