Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Plan in place to ease moderate drought
Basin irrigation
officials say idling will save 10,000 acre-feet of water
this summer
by
JOEL ASCHBRENNER,
Herald and News 5/31/12
Irrigation officials
unveiled a plan this week to save about 10,000 acre-feet of
water by paying farmers and ranchers to leave their crops or
pastures dry later in the growing season. There also are
plans to pump groundwater and store water above Upper
Klamath Lake to ensure producers can irrigate late in the
summer.
“I think everybody is
doing all they can to stay within the law and
The severity of the
drought could change with the weather, but Bureau of
Reclamation officials predicted earlier this month
irrigators on the Klamath Reclamation
This will be the first
year the Klamath Water and Power Agency has offered partial
season land idling, said KWAPA executive director Hollie
Cannon. Waiting to idle land until late in the season will
ensure that those who sign up from the program will be able
to produce some crops from their land, he said.
For alfalfa farmers, who
cut the perennial forage crop several times throughout the
summer, it may mean they get one fewer harvest this summer.
For ranchers with irrigated pasture, it may mean they have
to feed their herd hay earlier in the season.
“We want as many
irrigators receiving water as possible because that’s what
creates the economy here,” Cannon said.
The partial-season land
idling program will involve at least 8,000 acres, Cannon
said.
In addition to land
idling, KWAPA plans to pay irrigators to pump 40,000 acre
feet of groundwater. The agency also has contracted with
Reclamation to store about 13,000 acre feet of water in
diked areas near Agency Lake above Upper Klamath Lake for
irrigators to use late in the summer.
“Between those three, we
think we will be very close,” to covering the predicted
water shortage, Cannon said.
Side Bars
Klamath
Water and Power Agency paying irrigators to let land sit
idle
The Klamath Water
and Power Agency will pay irrigators to idle their land
for part of the growing season in order to spare
irrigation water for other producers.
The program
is first-come, first-served and, the agency is accepting
applications now. Payment rates differ based on when
irrigators begin idling land and what type of crop they
are idling. The earlier they forgo irrigation water, the
more they get paid.
Payment rates are prorated from the amount irrigators
bid earlier this year to idle their land for the entire
season, when it is was believed full- season land
idling would be
necessary.
The first land
idling period begins June 15 and the deadline to apply
is Tuesday, June 5.
To be eligible, the
parcel of land must cover at least five acres on the
Klamath Reclamation Project and receive surface water
from Upper Klamath Lake or the Klamath River. The land
must be growing crops now and cannot be irrigated with
surface or well water through the end of the growing
season.
Applications are available at from KWAPA at 735
Commercial St., Suite 4000, by calling 541-850 -2503 or
online
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Page Updated: Friday June 01, 2012 12:36 AM Pacific
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