The
tribes and fishermen who depend on fish
from the Klamath River can't seem to catch
a break. There was a smidgen of good news
last week, when Commerce Secretary Carlos
Gutierrez declared a commercial fishing
disaster on the West Coast. The
declaration frees up grants for salmon
fishermen hit by restrictions aimed at
saving depleted salmon that spawn in the
Klamath.
Yet as everyone knows, fewer hooks in
the water won't replenish the once-mighty
runs of chinook and coho in the Klamath,
California's second-largest river. Salmon
and other fish need viable habitat and
clean, cool water. The emergence of a
noxious algae bloom in Klamath reservoirs
has again demonstrated that this river is
sick.
Go online to
sacbee.com to see images of the algae,
microcystis aeruginosa. It has turned
parts of the Copco and Iron Gate
reservoirs into a pea-green mess. This
algae is as nasty as it looks. Health
officials are urging people not to touch
it or breathe the fumes it emits.
As the Los Angeles Times recently noted
in a five-part series, these algae blooms
-- caused partly by man-made pollution --
threaten rivers and oceans worldwide. In
the Klamath, fertilizers from farms on the
Oregon-California border flow downstream.
The reservoirs warm up the water and the
nutrients, creating perfect conditions for
noxious algae.
A company called PacifiCorp owns the
hydroelectric dams that impound these
reservoirs, which were created solely for
power purposes. PacifiCorp is now going
through a federal relicensing process.
Indian tribes, environmental groups and
state and federal wildlife agencies are
exploring if the dams could be removed,
both to improve water quality and to
improve passage of salmon.
The relicensing process has been
contentious, with lots of the usual
finger-pointing we've seen on the Klamath
for years. Yet all parties are close to an
agreement.
They need to reach it soon. The Klamath
will require millions of federal dollars
for dam removal and other restoration
plans, yet this basin faces competition.
On the San Joaquin River, once warring
parties are close to a restoration
agreement.
Whoever gets there first will stand a
better chance of impounding the
congressional gravy.