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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 21, 2004 |
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Local Rancher to Receive National NRCS "Excellence in
Conservation Award" Mike Byrne, an Upper Klamath Basin
rancher who has long been active in the local agricultural community,
will be recognized for his leadership in conservation next week by U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman and Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) chief Bruce Knight. The award will be presented in
conjunction with the annual NRCS Honor Awards Ceremony to be held in
Washington, D.C., next Friday, June 25th.
The purpose of the Excellence in Conservation Awards Program is to r ecognize
the valuable contributions that those outside of the federal government
make to conserve natural resources on private land.
Byrne has been an effective community leader in advocating conservation
measures, particularly in recent years. In addition to serving in
leadership roles in the California Cattlemen’s Association, the
California Farm Bureau Federation, the National Cattlemen’s Beef
Association and numerous local organizations, Byrne has been a key
player in helping to resolve water and endangered species issues in the
Klamath Basin. Byrne was, and continues to be, a spokesperson for
conservation-minded farmers and ranchers – speaking to local and
national news media, legislative representatives, and government
officials.
"Mike Byrne represents the best of what citizenship in America
means," U.S. Congressman Greg Walden (R-OR) said in a floor speech in
the U.S. House of Representatives after the 2001 Klamath Project water
shutoff. "He’s been in the trenches every day, in town hall meetings, in
meetings with federal, state, and local authorities and around kitchen
tables throughout the basin."
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Byrne to be Honored for Leadership Role in Klamath
Conservation Efforts (Cont’d) Byrne brought the local
Resource Conservation District to a leadership role in upper basin
communities. The district is now a critical part of a coalition of
Klamath Basin districts working toward long-range solutions for the
problems facing the Klamath Basin. Byrne was also a key player in
securing special funding in the 2002 Farm Bill, a total of $50 million,
for water conservation in the Klamath Basin through the Environmental
Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). According to an NRCS spokesperson,
his leadership and influence have "contributed significantly to the
outstanding participation rate in conservation programs in the basin".
Last year, according to NRCS, there were 884 sign ups for Klamath Basin
EQIP alone in California.
Byrne and his brother Dan have also completed projects on their ranch
near Clear Lake, California. He helped broker a Challenge Cost Share
Agreement between the U.S. Forest Service and the Klamath Water Users
Association in the mid 1990s that allowed biological assessments of
management activities involving grazing allotments on Modoc National
Forest land that furnish water to the Clear Lake watershed. Byrne also
spearheaded an effort with the Modoc National Forest and Lava Beds
Resource Conservation District during the same time period to construct
38 miles of riparian fencing and a new water source along Mowitz Creek,
near the Clear Lake National Wildlife Refuge.
"I will accept this award on behalf of the Klamath Basin. It’s not my
award; it’s our award," said Byrne. "I believe Ronald Reagan was right
when he said there is no limit to what you can achieve if you do not
care who gets credit for it."
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 21, 2004 |
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Executive Director Leaves Water for Life, Inc. for New Opportunity
Water for Life’s Executive
Director, Brad Harper, announced that he is resigning from the
non-profit organization effective July 2, 2004. Harper is proud of Water
for Life and its accomplishments since he joined the group in 1999.
"I am impressed with our
achievements during my five years with Water for Life," says Harper. "We
stood up for Klamath Basin producers threatened by federal litigation,
we provided important legal services to our members, we successfully
prevented the passage of legislation that would have been harmful to
family farmers and ranchers, we brought the issue of water rights
ownership back to the forefront of debate, and so much more."
Harper is leaving Water for
Life to become corporate counsel for a heavy transportation engineering
firm in Portland.
"I’m really excited about
this new career opportunity," says Harper.
Water for Life President,
Doug Whitsett, praised Harper’s service.
"The board will miss having
Brad as our Executive Director and we wish him all the best. He will be
difficult to replace."
Whitsett said Water for Life
will begin an extensive search for a new director as soon as possible.
Water for Life, Inc. is a
non-profit organization founded by farmers and ranchers in 1990 to
represent the interests of agricultural water users.
Source: Water
for Life Press Release
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Herger and Blumenauer Address Klamath Refuges on House Floor
A potential fight on the
floor of the House of Representatives for the third year in a row was
averted Wednesday when Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) agreed not to offer
up a controversial Klamath wildlife refuge amendment to an Interior
Department appropriations bill. Although the proposed amendment failed
to materialize, the issue still became a topic of discussion in the
House, as both Blumenauer and Rep. Wally Herger (R-CA) voiced their
views on Klamath water issues. The floor statements of both congressmen
are printed in full, starting on Page 3 of this Weekly Update.
In 2003, for the second year
in a row, refuge lease land legislation introduced by Rep. Blumenauer
was defeated in the House of Representatives. Last year’s failed
legislation aimed to prohibit the Bureau of Reclamation from issuing
leases to farmers planting alfalfa or row crops in the Lower Klamath and
Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuges. This year, Rep. Blumenauer drafted
an amendment that, on the surface, proposed to study the water needs of
the national wildlife refuges.
"I have drafted language and
shared it with committee staff to require the Fish and Wildlife Service
to undertake a study of the water needs of the refuges both in terms of
how much water and when during the year the water is needed," said
Blumenauer on Wednesday. That amendment was never offered up by
Blumenauer, who expressed interest in working further with congressional
committee staff on the refuge water issue. Rep. Herger offered up a
different perspective.
"The studies (Blumenauer)
proposed will not provide solutions for the Klamath Basin,"
Herger said yesterday in a statement on the House floor.
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 21, 2004 |
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Statement by Rep. Earl Blumenauer on Klamath Refuge Water Needs
-On Wednesday, June 16th,
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) spoke on the floor of the House of
Representatives about a potential Klamath refuge amendment he had
drafted – but never offered up - to an Interior Department
appropriations bill. Source: Congressional Record -
Mr. Chairman, in times past I
have come to the floor debating ways to deal with reducing the demand
for water in the Klamath Basin while being able to fulfill our many
obligations. The problems in the Klamath Basin are not going away this
year. As we begin another summer, it looks as though there will not be
enough water to go around to meet these multiple demands that
fundamentally result from the Federal Government’s promising more water
than nature or creative plumbing can deliver.
The land management on the
refuges in the basin continues to be guided by two priorities that are
not just in competition but are fundamentally incompatible: The
reclamation of wetlands for agriculture and the preservation of wetlands
and habitat for wildlife. The situation is further complicated by the
Klamath Basin tribes, four of them, which have a longstanding and unique
role in the basin which
predates the water allocation decisions and environmental regulations.
It is likely by the time this Congress completes the appropriations
process we will have more conflicts in the basin. I hope not but I fear
there may be additional fish kills and certainly another summer of dry
refuges.
In the past I have come to
the floor to discuss ways in the Klamath basin to reduce the water
demands in the wildlife refuge which hosts 80 percent
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Statement by Rep. Earl Blumenauer on Klamath Refuge Water Needs (Cont’d)
of the waterfowl in the
Pacific flyway. They have been called The Everglades of the West.
Unfortunately, they are the only refuges in the country where farming
occurs purely for commercial purposes instead of including some benefit
for wildlife.
But one of the problems that
has taken place in the debate, and we have had exhaustive discussions,
has been a fundamental lack of factual understanding.
And I thought this year, Mr.
Chairman, it might be possible to look more broadly at the underlying
challenges facing the wildlife refuges in terms of water use and supply.
I have drafted language and
shared it with committee staff to require the Fish and Wildlife Service
to undertake a study of the water needs of the refuges both in terms of
how much water and when during the year the water is needed. Much of the
difficulty in finding common solutions has stemmed from our inability to
have a comprehensive understanding of the competing
demands. And I would hope
that it would be possible in the course of a study to examine water
deliveries, the amount of water necessary to be available to sustain the
wetlands, issues that deal with providing the sufficient water for the
wildlife refuges, feasibility of water storage.
I have a series of elements
here in the study, but rather than offering up an amendment at this
point because I realize the committee has had a very difficult time and
they have a carefully balanced item, but as it works its way through the
process I was wondering if it would be possible to work with the
committee and the staff to see if there is some way to coax this
information from the process.
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 21, 2004 |
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Congressman Herger Responds to Rep. Blumenauer on Klamath Water Issues
-On Thursday, June 17th,
Rep. Wally Herger (R-CA), who represents irrigators on the California
side of the Klamath Project, responded on the floor of the House of
Representatives to an earlier speech by Rep. Earl Blumenauer (see p. 3)
Source: Office of Rep. Herger-
Mr. Chairman, I want to thank
you for engaging in this colloquy with me about the need to increase
water storage in the Klamath Basin, and to seek balanced solutions that
will allow everyone to get well together, rather than unfairly targeting
agriculture as the problem.
Mr. Chairman, first please
allow me to clarify some inaccuracies in a colloquy that occurred last
night involving my colleague from Oregon. Allow me to point out that the
gentleman from Oregon who engaged in that colloquy with you last
evening, through which he professed concern about the Klamath Basin,
does not represent that area. In fact, his district is nearly 300 miles
away and, to my knowledge, he has never visited the lease lands. I want
to clarify that for the record, because I think there was a
misunderstanding. In fact, the three members of Congress who actually do
represent the citizens of that area--myself, Congressman Walden and
Congressman Doolittle--do not support the position of the gentleman from
Oregon.
The studies he proposed will
not provide solutions for the Klamath Basin. These issues have
been studied and restudied. There is no smoking gun. While the proposed
"studies" and other past efforts to regulate the lease lands are said to
be benign, they are far from that. They are an attempt to undermine
farming. I ask that the committee not support anything that attempts to
misconstrue the
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Herger Responds to Blumenauer on Klamath Water Issues (Continued)
farming situation on the
refuges and wrongly imply that it is a problem or poses a conflict with
wildlife. It simply is not and does not. In fact, quite the contrary.
Agriculture and wildlife are thriving on the refuges.
Finally, Mr. Chairman, let me
clear up one other misconception. The Klamath Basin disaster of 2001 was
not about too much demand. It was about an unbalanced regulatory regime
and scientific failings that caused water to be needlessly taken from
agriculture and from refuges for endangered species. After updating the
law and the science, the other important step for us to achieve balance
is for Congress and the administration to work to increase water
storage.
My concern, Mr. Chairman, is
that new water supplies are not being pursued with the vigor and the
commitment that they require. Congress authorized the "Klamath Basin
Water Supply Enhancement Act" nearly five years ago. However, we have
yet to see significant, measurable progress toward developing new
supplies. Mr. Chairman, we hope to have your support for encouraging the
Secretary of the Interior to put more money and more energy into using
this authority to support aggressively pursue new storage
opportunities--such as a Long Lake Reservoir--which can provide more
water for all interests in the Klamath Basin.
One last thing, Mr. Chairman.
If any of my colleagues want to work to find solutions for the Klamath
Basin, I want to personally invite them to come to the Resources
Committee Field Hearing on July 17th. Rather than uniformed
debate here on the house floor, we will talk to the people on the ground
- Continued on
Page 5 - |
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
May 21, 2004 |
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OIT Filmmaker Awarded for "A" Canal Headgate Documentary
Don Haynes, director of
Oregon Institute of Technology’s (OIT) Klamath Community Television, on
Saturday will receive an Award of Excellence in the 2004 Best of the
Northwest Video Festival for his documentary entitled One Headgate,
Two Uses. The six-minute documentary provides a factual description
of the A Canal headgate and fish screen, the major diversion point of
the Klamath Project. Julienne Turner, Chair of the Alliance for
Community Media Northwest Region notified Haynes last month of the
award, which drew over 100 entry nominations from western states and
Canada.
"I am always conscious that
the image is presented in a controversial manner, but your presentation
was captivating and inviting," said Turner.
The film was the only one to
receive two awards from the Alliance; one for best documentary, and the
other for "Making a Difference".
Haynes and his assistant Josh
Rindfleisch, a videographer and editor who recently moved to Klamath
Falls from Madison, Wisconsin, will soon release a new, 10-minute
documentary entitled Where the Water Goes. Haynes’ latest effort
was developed in close coordination with local water users. Bob Flowers,
who farms near Keno, and Rob Crawford, a Tulelake farmer, assisted
Haynes with access onto property that provided stunning panoramas of the
Klamath Project landscape. Klamath Water Users Association Executive
Director Dan Keppen is the narrator for the film, which follows "one
drop of water" as it winds it way through the various pathways that can
it can follow through the Project, starting from the A
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OIT Filmmaker Awarded for "A" Canal Headgate Documentary (Continued)
Canal and ending at the
Straits Drain discharge to the Klamath River. Keppen and Crawford were
provided a sneak preview of the nearly completed product earlier this
week.
"This film is incredibly
informative and beautifully done," said Crawford. "It gives you a real
appreciation for how complex the Klamath Project plumbing system is. Don
Haynes and the folks at OIT are to be commended for their efforts."
Herger Responds to Blumenauer
on Klamath Water Issues (Cont’d from p. 4)
and engage in a thorough
discussion about the real problems and constructive solutions. We will
talk about what farmers are actually doing for the refuges. We will
discuss the scientific shortcomings and how to fix them for the long
term. We will talk about how to develop more water supplies to create
water supply certainty for all interests.
Mr. Chairman, again, I
appreciate you support for honest debate and balanced solutions. I hope
that we will have your support to implement expeditiously whatever
common sense; balanced solutions might arise from our hearing.
CALENDAR OF
EVENTS
Wednesday, June 23 –
Thursday, June 24, 2004: Klamath River Basin Fisheries Task Force
Meeting. Shilo Inn, Klamath Falls, Oregon.
Friday, June 25, 2004:
California Fish and Game Commission. Crescent City, California.
Potential state listing of coho salmon on Klamath River and tributaries
will be considered.
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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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