Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Statement
Congressman Greg Walden
Subcommittee on
Energy and Minerals
Committee on Resources
February 4, 2003
Thank you, Madame Chairman. I would like to begin
my remarks by commending you and the distinguished
chairman of the full committee for holding this
hearing today on the need for sound science and
scientific review. As you know, these topics are
near and dear to the hearts of many of the
constituents I represent in the Klamath Basin of
southern Oregon. In fact, I challenge anyone to
find a group that has been more negatively
affected by the inadequacy of the science used in
making decisions under the Endangered Species Act.
So what happened in the Klamath Basin? What
happened to inflict more than $200 million in
damage to the local economy? What happened to
turn the fields of the Basin into a scene
reminiscent of the Grapes of Wrath?
Madame Chairman, on April 6, 2001, the federal
government told the farmers and ranchers of the
Basin that they wouldn't be receiving any water
deliveries for 2001 -- a first in the nearly 100
year history of the Bureau of Reclamation's
Klamath Project. They were told that instead of
sending water down the "A" canal and other canals
in the Project, water levels would be maintained
in the Upper Klamath Lake for the Lost River and
shortnose sucker fish. The irrigators were then
hit with another whammy when the National Marine
Fisheries Service stipulated in its biological
opinion that the Bureau of Reclamation would need
to release water from Iron Gate dam to help the
listed salmon in the Klamath River.
In short, it was a case of one federal agency
demanding high water levels be maintained in the
lake while another federal agency demanded higher
stream flows down the river. Combined, the two
new demands left no water for the farmers.
Most people who are unfamiliar with the
intricacies of the ESA would think that a decision
bringing such major social, economic and
environmental consequences would be thoroughly
reviewed to ensure that the data and government
decisions were rock solid. After all, the
government is charged with protecting the
endangered fish and with providing water to the
farmers.
This Committee held a hearing before some 1,500
people at the fairgrounds in Klamath Falls in 2001
and we called on the Administration to have these
decisions peer-reviewed. To get an independent
group of scientists to review the data used by the
government and determine if those decisions and
those data were sound.
The Bush Administration called on the prestigious
National Research Council and its National Academy
of Sciences to conduct this review. After months
of careful review, the independent scientists
reached their stunning conclusion:
"In allowing professional judgment to override
site-specific evidence in some cases during
2001...the agencies accepted a high risk of error
in proposing actions that the available evidence
indicated to be of doubtful utility."
Moreover, the report found that some of the
biologists' proposed actions lacked "substantial
scientific support."
And what did this esteemed panel say about the
maintaining of higher lake levels in Upper Klamath
Lake for the suckers? They found that,
There is no evidence of a causal connection
between water level and water quality or fish
mortality over the broad operating range in the
199Os, the period for which the most complete data
are available for Upper Klamath Lake. Neither
mass mortality of fish nor extremes of poor water
quality shows any detectable relationship to water
level. Thus, despite theoretical speculations,
there is no basis in evidence for optimism that
manipulation of water levels has the potential to
moderate mass mortality of suckers in Upper
Klamath Lake.
We learned from the NAS that the decisions made
either weren't based on adequate science or were
made by misinterpreting the data they had. In
either case, more than 1,000 farm families didn't
receive vital irrigation water and nearly 2 dozen
farmers went bankrupt.
I pledged then and there to pursue changes in the
ESA to require outside, independent peer review of
the decisions made by the government when it comes
to listing or delisting a species and in
formulation of recovery plans .
HR 1662 would require the Secretary of the
Interior to accept and acknowledge receipt of
landowner data and include that data in the
rulemaking record.
It provides the public with the opportunity to
seek a second opinion before a federal agency
makes a decision to list, delist, consult or
recover. When the survival of a species hangs in
the balance, doesn't it make sense to make sure
the government makes the right decisions?
If you went to a doctor and he said to you, ``we
are going to have to take off your right leg,''
you'd probably want a second opinion. Right now
under the Endangered Species Act plants, animals
and people don't have the chance to seek a second
opinion; you just get cut you off at the knees.
That is why I feel so strongly about this issue
and why we have tried to take a very reasonable
and prudent course to improve the decision-making
process and make sure the science is valid and the
decisions are sound. Too much is at stake to do
less than that.
HR 1662 would require the NAS to select a
qualified list of reviewers to conduct an
analysis, which would then be submitted to the
Secretary of the Interior. At her discretion,
the Secretary would then pick three names off this
list to conduct a thorough review of the science
used in determining whether to list, delist,
consult or recover.
Let's look at some of the other issues that would
be decided by HR 1662.
Currently, the ESA gives the Secretary broad
discretion in developing recovery plans. Public
input is restricted to comment on a draft
recovery plan. Nothing else, that is it.
My legislation requires agencies that are
preparing recovery plans to identify, solicit, and
accept scientific or commercial information that
would assist in preparing the recovery plan. In
other words, get more information, get better
information, do it right and involve the public
more.
HR 1662 would also set minimum standards for
scientific and commercial data not now required by
the ESA. The listing actions must be supported by
field data on the species and they must accept
data on species collected by landowners.
Finally, HR 1662 would require the Secretary to
solicit and consider information provided by the
States; and also allow an individual to submit and
gain information used in crafting a biological
opinion by being able to:
·
Submit and discuss with the Fish and Wildlife
Service, or relevant federal agency information
about the proposed action and possible reasonable
and prudent alternatives. Basically, it allows us
to see if there are some alternatives out there
that would be better than what a federal agency is
proposing.
·
Obtain information used to develop the biological
opinion and reasonable and prudent alternatives.
In other words, we ought to have a right to know
where Fish and Wildlife obtained their data before
it is incorporated into a final biological
decision.
·
Provide comments prior to publication of the final
biological opinion. If these comments aren't
included in the final biop, the Fish and Wildlife
Service or other federal agency must explain why
these suggestions were rejected.
These modest changes benefit all citizens who want
to participate in what should be a much more
inclusive public process, and they make the ESA
process more transparent.
At last count, Madame Chairman, HR 1662 has 62
bipartisan cosponsors has been endorsed by 14
Oregon and National based organizations.
I thank you for inviting me to testify today, and
I yield back the balance of my time.
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