In the wake of the July 17 congressional field
hearing held in Klamath Falls, Ore., I
have been altogether confused by media
statements and opinion pieces written by
outraged opponents of the Klamath Irrigation
Project. These critics apparently either
missed the hearing, or perhaps attended another
hearing that I was unaware of. The July
17 hearing in Klamath Falls – organized by U.S.
House of Representatives Resources
Committee – has been tagged by critics of
Klamath Basin farmers and ranchers as yet
another attempt to “gut,” “dismantle” or
“cripple” the federal Endangered Species Act.
In fact, nothing could be further from the
truth. I was at the hearing, and what I
witnessed was an amazing degree of agreement,
coming from very diverse panelists,
about the importance of applying common-sense
solutions to resources decisions that
impact real people.
Three strong, overriding themes were voiced by
virtually all of the government,
education, tribal, agriculture, conservation,
and fishing interests who testified at the July
17 hearing.
1. The witnesses at the hearing agreed that
developing new surface storage supplies
would help diffuse the tension between competing
water interests in the Klamath Basin.
2. The need to cooperate and implement a
watershed-wide solution to the challenges
facing the Klamath Basin – a strong theme
contained in a 2003 National Research
Council committee report on Klamath River fish
recovery – came out loud and clear at
the Klamath Falls hearing.
3. The diverse panelists agreed, to the voiced
approval of 700 audience members, that
peer review of critical resources decisions —
like the review conducted by the NRC
committee of the federal decision to curtail
Upper Klamath Lake irrigation supplies in
2001 — is a good thing.
As with the recent hearing, much spin and
counter-spin followed the NRC
committee’s reports, which effectively found no
scientific basis for the 2001 cut-off to
the Klamath Project. Proponents of the agency
decisions (opponents of the Klamath
Project) correctly point out that the NRC
committee did not say the decisions were
“wrong” or “arbitrary.” And, they say, “Science
is uncertain, we all know that: hence, no
big deal.”
For anyone who endured the consequences of the
2001 decisions, the efforts to
minimize the significance of the NRC committee’s
findings are absurd. In 2001, a
desperate community was looked in the eye and
told, “sorry, we know it may hurt, but
‘the science’ is compelling and requires you to
go without water.” This was wrong,
literally, and as a matter of policy. For
whatever reason, the agencies had become too
close to, and too much a part of, the
side-taking that had come to dominate issues
surrounding the Klamath Project. For this reason
alone, outside review was needed.
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., and Sen. Gordon Smith,
R-Ore., have introduced
legislation that would require the establishment
of standards for scientific and
commercial data that are used to make decisions
under the ESA. It would also require
that relatively greater weight be given to data
that have been field-tested or peerreviewed.
The former requirement would help clarify when
such things as “personal
observations” or mere folklore are considered by
the agencies to be reliable enough to
make decisions with potentially profound
effects. The provision of the legislation
generating greatest attention would require peer
review of ESA listing decisions and ESA
section 7 consultations by a disinterested
panel, and create procedures for that process.
There is nothing inherent in peer review that
either favors or disfavors economic
interests. If the administration of the ESA has
reached such a point that oversight is
perceived as critical, the act is not working.
The Klamath peer review and the recent field
hearing underscore the point. That peer
review process not only forced a reconsideration
of otherwise-unchecked disastrous
decisions, it pointed to a better approach for
species recovery. We would be remiss to
ignore the precedent set by the NRC committee’s
report. The recent hearing in Klamath
Falls was just one forum to remind the public
not to forget the disastrous 2001 decision in
the Klamath Basin, and to urge our policy makers
to do everything in their means to
avoid repeating it, in Klamath or anyplace else.
Dan Keppen is executive director for the Klamath
Water Users Association, a nonprofit
corporation that represents 1,400 family farms
and 5,000 water customers served
by the federal Klamath Project in California and
Oregon. He has more than 15 years of
engineering and policy experience in western
water issues. The author acknowledges
contributions to this opinion piece from a paper
prepared by association attorney Paul
Simmons (Somach, Simmons & Dunn,
Sacramento) for the American Bar Association
Environmental Section Fall 2004 Meeting.