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from ITSSD President Lawrence Kogan 2/26/19 ITSSD Summary of Comments Regarding the SWRCB Draft Environmental Impact Report for the Lower Klamath Project License Surrender Pacificorp Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Project No. 14803 February 26, 2019.
"Attached is the 30-page
comment submission sent to the California State Water
Resources Control Board by
the Institute for Trade, Standards and Sustainable
Development (ITSSD), and its President, Lawrence Kogan. These
comments respond to/oppose
the SWRCB's draft EIR supporting KRRC's
application with FERC for license transfer and surrender,
and ultimate decommissioning of PacifiCorp's Lower
Klamath Project,
for the purpose of removing the four Klamath River dams.
Although the comments were
submitted after the Feb. 26, 2019 at noon deadline, it
appears, at this time, that the State of California has
accepted the comments.
In sum, the comments
emphasize how USEPA, not the FERC, should have jurisdiction
over dam removal, which should not occur in any event, given
USEPA's prior and ongoing failure to conduct the necessary
toxicological human health risk assessments of the reservoir
bottom sediments bearing toxic substances from the four
PacifiCorp Klamath River dams. The Copco 1 and 2 dams,
which are the oldest of the four dams, have been in
operation for approximately between 90 and 100 years, and
thus, harbor the same number of years' worth of hazardous
toxic materials gathered from upstream industrial,
commercial, and agricultural activities. JC Boyce and Iron
Gate dams, meanwhile have been in operation no fewer than
between 56 and 70 years, and also harbor the same number of
years' worth of such upstream hazardous toxic materials.
USEPA cleverly abdicated its
role in reviewing whether dam removal is in the best
interest of the public, and effectively shifted federal
jurisdiction from itself to the FERC, and to the States of
California and Oregon, by preventing California from
including in its total daily maximum load calculation for
the "impaired" Klamath River the % of contribution from all
four Klamath River dams' reservoir sediments and water
columns to the Klamath River's total point source and
nonpoint source pollutants. This effectively bypassed Clean
Water Act Section 303(d)'s requirements, in favor of Clean
Water Act Section 401 state water quality certificates tied
to FERC dam licensing.
The ITSSD also incorporated
in Section VI of its submission, a constitutional discussion
contained in the 100-page memorandum ITSSD sent to Congress
earlier in the week. The memorandum argued that Congress
must consent to and ratify the changes the Klamath basin
agreements effectively make to the 1957 Klamath River Basin
Compact before dam removal can proceed.
Readers are encouraged to
share this information and to contact their representatives.
Laurence Kogan, President, ITSSD / Institute for Trades, Standards, and Sustainable Development" ==================================================== In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml |
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