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Tribal water right issues may be
resolved
Herald
and News 10/28/06
Klamath water dispute absent from
administration’s list
EUGENE (AP) — With two Western
water rights agreements already in hand,
the Bush administration sees an
opportunity to resolve more tribal
claims within the next year, an aide to
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne said
Friday.
Negotiations over water
disputes in New Mexico, Montana and
California involving 11 tribes, bands or
pueblos are nearing fruition, said
Michael Bogert, counselor to Kempthorne.
The talks could lead to
agreements resulting in federal
legislation — such as a 2004 agreement
involving the Nez Perce of Idaho and the
Gila River Indian Community of Arizona,
Bogert said at a
conference on tribal water rights at the
University of Oregon School of Law.
Absent from list
Notably absent from
Kempthorne’s list was the Klamath water
dispute in Southern Oregon on the
California border, which gained national
attention five years ago when irrigation
water was shut off for much of a farming
season to preserve habitat for fish.
Bogert said the Interior
Department is optimistic about prospects
for progress in the Klamath dispute,
which involves tribes, farmers,
fishermen, threatened and endangered
fish, and a system of hydroelectic dams
currently up for relicensing by the
federal government.
Tribal claims represent some
of the thorniest, most persistent
disputes among Western water fights.
Sometimes, the prospect of decades
in court prompts the parties to
compromise, giving up some part of their
claims to gain certainty about future
supplies for farming, municipal growth
and tribal economic development.
Settlements generally require
not only approval of tribal and state
officials, but also federal legislation.
These settlements can provide
money that allows tribes to develop the
water guaranteed by an agreement
or, as in the case of the Gila
agreement, reduce a portion of the local
debt to the federal government for a
water project.
After Kempthorne became
Interior secretary, he hired Bogert, who
was his legal adviser as governor of
Idaho during negotiations over the Nez
Perce settlement, one of the largest
ever in the West.
Giving up claims
It involved the tribe’s giving
up claims to most Snake River Basin
water in exchange for cash, land,
environmental improvements and a smaller
portion of water.
Because of his experience as
governor, Kempthorne supports ‘‘local,
on-the-ground solutions ... he is not a
fan of top-down, dictated outcomes from
the federal government,’’ Bogert said.
He said the negotiations that
appear ripest are among a total of 19
‘‘looming on the horizon’’ in the
West. Some of the negotiations involve
multiple tribes or tribal units. All, he
said, are in various stages of progress.
Best prospects
Bogert and aides said the
bargaining with the best prospects for
federal action are in:
California, involving the
Soboda Band of Luiseno Indians, where
Bogert said a settlement has been
reached.
New Mexico, with three sets of
negotiations, one involving the Nambe,
Pojoaque, San Ildefonso and Tesuque
pueblos; a second with the Taos Pueblo;
and a third with the Navajo-San Juan.
Montana, with three sets of
negotiations, one involving the Gros
Ventre and Assiniboine of Fort Belknap,
and two more with the Crow and Blackfeet
tribes.