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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
July 23, 2004 |
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50th Annual Meeting Highlighted by Governor’s Remarks,
President’s Note
The 50th
Annual Meeting of the Klamath Water Users Association featured a
positive, common sense address by Oregon’s governor, and a
congratulatory message from the president of the United States.
Tuesday’s event drew nearly 250 attendees to Reames Country Club in
Klamath Falls to hear Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski speak of his
commitment to implement a watershed-wide approach to tackle the problems
of the Klamath River watershed. Reliable water supplies for irrigated
agriculture are an important part of that approach.
"The time has come for
predictability and stability," he said on Tuesday.
Also at the meeting,
Klamath County Commissioner Steve West read aloud a statement received
by KWUA the night before from President George Bush (see full text of
letter, this page).
In between speeches by
Governor Kulongoski, Association President Steve Kandra, Executive
Director Dan Keppen and consultants working for the association, the
audience was also treated to two short films produced by local
filmmakers. Anders Tomlinson, a Tulelake independent filmmaker
introduced "Three Voices", a three-minute film that merged footage of
Governor Kulongoski’s 2003 visit to the "A" Canal Headgates with
interviews of Kandra and Klamath refuge complex manager Ron Cole and
spectacular waterfowl footage. Don Haynes and his staff at Oregon
Institute of Technology also showed a 10-minute documentary on Klamath
Project water deliveries entitled "Where the Water Goes".
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President Bush’s Written Statement to the KWUA 50th
Annual Meeting
THE
WHITE HOUSE
July
19, 2004
I send greetings to
those gathered for the 50th annual meeting of the Klamath
Water Users Association.
The Klamath Basin is
a place of extraordinary natural beauty and productivity. It is a
home of intricate river systems and scenic forests, as well as a
habitat for wildlife and fish. By promoting locally led conservation
and stakeholder-driven solutions, the Klamath Water Users
Association helps to ensure water quality and abundance in the
basin, while continuing the tradition of working the land and
protecting it for future generations.
I commend the efforts
of Governor Ted Kulongoski, Association President Steve Kandra,
Klamath County officials, and everyone involved to ensure that this
remarkable place remains a source of pride for our citizens, our
communities, and our Nation.
Laura joins me in
sending best wishes for a memorable event.
Signed,
George Bush |
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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
July 23, 2004 |
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Klamath Field Hearing
and Committee Approval of Bills Put Spotlight on ESA
Just four days after
a congressional field hearing in Klamath Falls focused on proposed
improvements to how the Endangered Species Act (ESA) is implemented,
the House Resources Committee passed two bills integral to the
effort of modernizing the ESA. The following two stories, one that
appeared in Ag Alert, and another culled from congressional
press releases, summarize these important developments.
Sound Science
Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing
Reprinted with
permission granted by the California Farm Bureau Federation.
By Christine Souza
Assistant Editor, Ag Alert
Several hundred people met in Klamath Falls, Ore., on Saturday for a
congressional field hearing where legislators discussed the pros and
cons of the Endangered Species Act and the act's impact on the
Klamath Project, one of the nation's oldest federal irrigation
projects.
"Thirty years ago,
Congress had the best of intentions when it passed the ESA. In 30
years, only seven species of 1,300 have been recovered and those are
mainly due to other conservation laws. That means that the ESA has a
success rate of less than 1 percent," said Rep. Ken Calvert,
R-Corona,
chairman of House Resources Subcommittee on Water and Power. "Today
represents a historic opportunity to right the wrongs of the past
and bring
about positive change for the benefit of the American people and
wildlife. We can bring the ESA into the 21st century while helping
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Sound Science Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing (Cont’d)
communities in the
Klamath Basin have economic and water certainty."
Members of the House
Resources Subcommittee on Water and Power, including Congressmen
Wally Herger, R-Chico; John Doolittle, R-Granite Bay; George
Radanovich, R-Mariposa; and Greg Walden, R-Oregon, met in Klamath
Falls for
the oversight field hearing on "The Endangered Species Act 30 Years
Later: The Klamath Project."
Members of the
subcommittee and invited witnesses discussed the application of the
ESA and possible scientific solutions to updating and improving the
act. During the hearing the subcommittee also addressed the National
Academy of Sciences report which may serve as a blueprint for change
in the Klamath Basin and the nation.
"The field hearing is a great forum to focus the spotlight on
preventing another injustice like the one that occurred in 2001 in
the Klamath Basin,"
said Dan Keppen, Klamath Water Users Association executive director.
"Constructive approaches can be taken to move in a new direction,
and the road map that can take us there is the (National Academy of
Sciences) report."
The Klamath Project
was the subject of international coverage in 2001 when ESA
regulations protecting suckerfish and coho salmon forced the bulk of
the project to virtually shut down its water delivery system for
almost the entire growing season. This action left 1,400 farm
families without water for their crops and many were forced to go
out of business. Local business leaders estimate that the
termination of water deliveries in
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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
July 23, 2004 |
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Sound Science Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing (Cont’d)
2001 inflicted $200
million worth of economic damage on the Klamath Basin community.
The National Academy of Sciences report on Klamath River fish,
completed last year, questions some of the underlying endangered
species science
behind the water shutoff of 2001. The report also recommends a
watershed-wide approach to solving the fishery challenges of the
Klamath
Basin in its solution, Keppen said.
Since the Klamath
Project water shutoff of 2001, the ESA of 1973, meant to protect
species in danger of becoming extinct, has been at the heart of the
controversy in the struggle for water among farmers,
environmentalists, Native American tribes and fishermen. The
controversy was still evident on
Saturday as varying interests came together for a rally outside the
Ross Ragland Theater just prior to the hearing.
Comprised of farmers
and other community members, the group outside the theater was
peaceful as they listened to speakers talk about the need to
revamp the ESA. But the peaceful mood at the rally changed when
members of the Klamath tribes marched loudly toward the front of the
theater, sounding drums and shouting over those speaking in front of
the theater. Nonetheless, invited speakers continued to deliver
their messages about the ESA.
California Farm Bureau Federation President Bill Pauli was one of
about 10 speakers at the rally, as well as Oregon Farm Bureau
Federation President
Barry Beshue. Pauli emphasized the need for interested parties to
work together.
"It is great that we can be here to talk about the issues that all
affect us collectively. As farmers and
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Sound Science Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing (Cont’d)
ranchers, and as
Native Americans, I think we'd
rather not be here today. We'd rather be back home with our
families," Pauli said. "It is important that we be part of the
process because through the
process we will come together to find a solution to protect species,
recover species and have jobs and opportunity for all of us in our
community."
Part of the solution, Pauli said, is using science and peer review
to improve the recovery of a species.
"The actions that we
have taken in the Klamath Basin and the subsequent National Academy
of Sciences analysis highlight the need to reconcile the
ESA's legal framework and its scientific foundation," Pauli said.
"According to the NAS, the current structure of the ESA creates a
situation where the agencies, those people from outside of our
communities, can make ESA decisions that satisfy the demands of the
ESA with an analysis that would not satisfy the demands of
scientific review or peer review that is needed in modern science
today. The Klamath Basin provides a unique opportunity to utilize
the best science and the best minds to represent all of us to find
common solutions for species, people-including tribes and farmers
and ranchers."
When polled
individually, every witness on the hearing panel agreed that peer
review is necessary.
Jim Lecky of the National Marine Fisheries Service and Steve
Thompson, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service regional director, both
acknowledged that as the ESA is currently implemented, the agencies
are making decisions that are not necessarily science based.
"These (ESA
decisions) aren't scientific decisions
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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
July 23, 2004 |
|
Sound Science Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing (Cont’d)
necessarily. We are
often required to make decisions in the absence of science," Lecky
said.
"There's no reason
why we can't acquire by law independent, peer-reviewed science for
every major aspect of the ESA and use that science to make the
best informed decisions in the decision-making process," Calvert
said. "Everyone should support this effort if they truly care about
protecting and recovering endangered species."
"There needs to be outside independent peer review of decisions to
list or delist a species, work on recovery programs and
consultations. We do this
(peer review) in many areas. The Food and Drug Administration has 30
peer review groups," Walden added.
Walden stated that some indicate that peer review would be too
costly to implement. The question of whether peer review should be
required was posed
to William Lewis, who chaired the National Research Council's
Committee on Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath River
Basin.
Lewis expressed that he does not believe every decision needs to be
peer reviewed, but added a fresh pair of eyes would be beneficial to
see if the
agency is headed down the right track. The difficulty, Lewis said,
is agencies are often required by law to make a decision where there
is no
scientific information at all.
Dave Vogel, Natural Resource Scientists Inc. senior scientist, who
has worked on the fisheries issues of the Klamath Basin for a number
of years, gave his thoughts about independent peer review.
"Biological opinions
are inconsistently applied
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Sound Science Emphasized at Klamath Falls ESA Hearing (Cont’d)
throughout the United
States. Peer review would be a tremendous start," Vogel said.
In the Klamath Basin,
the science associated with the species evolved, but the ESA did not
adapt or incorporate that science, Vogel said.
"At the time of the
1988 listing of the suckers as endangered species, the information
on population status, geographic distribution and recruitment
was either in error or the sucker population has demonstrated a
remarkable improvement over the past decade. I believe it was a
combination of both,"
Vogel said. "The two sucker populations are now conclusively known
to be much greater in size, demonstrating major increases in
recruitment, and are found over a much broader geographic range than
originally reported in the 1988 ESA listing notice. Despite this
indisputable empirical evidence,
current implementation of the ESA does not provide the flexibility
necessary to down-list or delist the species."
Deb Crisp, Tulelake Growers Association executive director, attended
the field hearing and said she believes it was a great success.
"The hearing brought
to light the devastation to rural communities that can be caused by
the abuse of the Endangered Species Act. I believe it is a goal
of the committee to implement constructive changes to the ESA that
protect species but allows agriculture to provide a safe domestic
food supply,"
Crisp said. "I hope our members of Congress can now go back and
influence their fellow representatives to pass Greg Walden's bill,
HR 1662, which calls for independent peer review."
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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
July 23, 2004 |
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Committee Votes to Modernize Endangered Species Act
The House Committee
on Resources on Wednesday passed two bills integral to the effort of
modernizing the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Specifically, the
committee approved H.R. 2933, the Critical Habitat Reform Act,
sponsored by Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-CA) and H.R. 1662, the Sound
Science for ESA Planning Act, sponsored by Rep. Greg Walden (R-OR).
Signed into law 30
years ago by President Nixon, the ESA was intended to conserve and
recover species identified as threatened or
endangered to healthy populations. The mechanics of the ESA have not
been updated since. After thirty years, the law has recovered
12 of 1300 listed species, for a cumulative
success rate of .01%.
"Despite this law's
noble intent, the ESA has recovered less than one percent of the
species on its list in the last thirty years," Chairman Richard W.
Pombo (R-CA) said. "Unintended consequences have rendered it a
failed managed-care program that checks species in, but never checks
them out. These bills will modernize the law to improve our results
for recovery, and in that regard, there is certainly nowhere to go
but up."
"Some have asserted
that these bills would somehow gut or weaken the Endangered Species
Act," Pombo continued. "To them I ask, how could we possibly make
this law any weaker than its unintended consequences have - and its
results show - over the last thirty years? A few environmental
groups may have a financial stake in the status quo, but clearly,
species recovery is what is at stake if we do not modernize this law
for the 21st century.
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Committee Votes to Modernize Endangered Species Act (Continued)
The Cardoza
legislation adjusts the deadline under which the FWS is required to
designate critical habitat, giving the agency more time to collect
useable data.
"We are reforming a
flawed process responsibly with bipartisan support," Rep. Cardoza
said on Wednesday. "Today's passage brings us one step closer to
making critical habitat designations work."
The Walden
legislation is intended to strengthen the scientific foundation of
species recovery efforts by integrating a peer-review tool into ESA
decision-making processes. Unlike laws such as the Safe Drinking
Water Act, the Marine Mammal Protection Act, and numerous laws that
affect the Food and Drug Administration, the Department of
Education, and the Department of Labor, and the Department of
Commerce, the ESA currently has no peer review requirement.
"I am proud that H.R.
1662 is moving forward and appreciate the support shown by my
colleagues," said Rep. Greg Walden. "By modernizing the 30-year-old
ESA to include field-testing and peer review, we can ensure that
sweeping policy decisions are based on sound science, representing
the best interests of species, people and communities. Peer review
is a practice used by the FDA, medical and scientific journals,
Health & Human Services and the Department of Education. It just
makes sense that we employ the same practice when talking about
decisions that could drastically impact entire species."
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Source: House Resources Committee Press Release, July 19, 2004 - |
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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
July 23, 2004 |
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USFWS to Conduct Comprehensive Review of Klamath Sucker Populations
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (USFWS) announced on Wednesday that it will conduct an
extensive review of two Upper Klamath Basin fish species - the Lost
River sucker and the shortnose sucker - that currently have federal
protection as endangered species. The announcement was made at the same
time that the USFWS concluded that the two fish should remain protected
by the Endangered Species Act (ESA) during the review, saying that a
petition to delist the two species does not provide substantial new
information to warrant delisting.
The USFWS believes the study, known as a five-year review under the ESA,
will be a valuable management activity. It is intended to help USFWS,
other agencies and Basin stakeholders to understand more precisely the
condition of the two species, assess the impact of actions now underway
to
help the species, and determine what is needed to assure their recovery.
"Populations of the Klamath suckers declined significantly in the last
decade," said Steve Thompson, manager of the Service's California /
Nevada Operations Office. "But potentially important restoration
measures are under way that create optimism that the Klamath suckers can
be
restored to good health."
For the second time in two years, the Service has found that a petition
filed by the Interactive Citizens United does not contain substantial
scientific information to warrant removing the Los River sucker and the
shortnose sucker from the Federal list of threatened and endangered
species. The two sucker species have been federally listed as endangered
since 1988.
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USFWS to Conduct Review of Sucker Populations: KWUA to Engage (Cont’d)
The petition was
submitted in 2001 by Richard
A.Gierak, representing
Interactive Citizens United. On May 12, 2002, USFWS published a finding
that the delisting petition did not present substantial information.
This finding was challenged by the petitioners, and last September, the
Federal District Court remanded the finding and ordered USFWS to either
reissue the initial finding with additional explanations or to do a
status review. USFWS has concluded that it should conduct a broader
review.
USFWS officials contend that sucker populations increased in the early
1990s, then decreased significantly due to a series of fish die-offs a
few years later, indicating that the population remains at risk. They
say other factors, including poor water quality, compound the problems
of the species.
Dave Vogel, who has been
involved with Klamath Basin fisheries issues since the early 1990s, has
a different perspective, one that he offered to the House Resources
Committee field hearing in Klamath Falls last Saturday.
"At the time of the 1988
listing of the suckers as endangered species, the information on
population status, geographic distribution, and recruitment was either
in error or the sucker populations have demonstrated a remarkable
improvement over the past decade," said Vogel. "I believe it was a
combination of both. The two sucker populations are now conclusively
known to be much greater in size, demonstrating major increases in
recruitment, and are found over a much broader geographic range than
originally reported in the 1988 ESA listing notice."
KWUA will actively engage
in the review 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
July 23, 2004 |
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Historic Potluck Picnic Social Planned
History buffs, irrigators
and local residents are invited to a historic potluck picnic social at
the Pacific Power Keno Recreation Area Park on July 27, 2004 from noon
to 3:00 p.m. The Klamath River Watershed Working Group has organized the
event to share historical perspectives, practices, anecdotes, and
reminiscences of the Klamath River.
Pacific Power
representatives will provide back-ground information on the Keno Dam,
generating facilities, and the irrigation project. Some of the
information gathered at this event may be incorporated into a watershed
assessment collection to show how historical uses around the river have
changed over time. For further information on the Potluck Picnic Social,
contact Danette at (541) 883-7131 or Anita at (541) 884-2015.
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CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Thursday, July 29, 2004 –
University of California Intermountain Research & Extension Center Field
Day. 8:30 a.m. Tulelake, California. This year’s field day and tour
will feature ongoing irrigation research. Lunch will be provided by the
Klamath Basin Hay Growers Association.
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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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