KWUA / Klamath Water
Users Association News
RELEASE
March 30, 2020
Agreement Buys Time on New
Klamath Project Ops Plan
Stipulation in
Yurok Tribe’s Lawsuit Avoids
Injunction Hearing and Risk
A federal judge has approved
a proposal to withdraw a
legal action that could have
potentially sent an
additional 50,000 acre-feet
(AF) of Upper Klamath Lake
downstream, avoiding a
potential “worst-case”
scenario for local
irrigators.
On March 27, parties in a
federal lawsuit brought by
the Yurok Tribe and Pacific
Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Association
filed documents that put the
case on hold and withdraw a
motion for a preliminary
injunction that otherwise
would have been decided
before this irrigation
season. Federal District
Court Judge William Orrick
approved the stipulation the
same day.
“The plaintiffs had asked
for an injunction that could
have reduced irrigation
water by 50,000 acre-feet
(AF) in this already-bad
year,” said Klamath
Irrigation District and
Klamath Water Users
Association Board member
Jerry Enman. “Fortunately,
that worst-case scenario was
avoided.”
This action followed the
Bureau of Reclamation’s
(Reclamation’s) release last
week of a proposed interim
Klamath Project operations
plan that would be in effect
through September 2022.
That plan increases flows to
the Klamath River, but with
less annual impact to
irrigation than the
injunction that was being
requested. That impact will
be 23,000 in some hydrologic
conditions, and no impact in
other conditions.
The lawsuit was filed last
summer, and challenged an
alleged violations of the
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
under the five-year plan
adopted in April. Later, it
was learned that an outside
consultant had provided
federal agencies with
erroneous data that had been
used in their ESA analysis.
Based on the finding,
Reclamation announced that
it would re-initiate the ESA
consultation process, and it
proposed a new plan last
December.
Reclamation’s
initially-proposed December
plan was set aside and
replaced by the new plan
released on March 27, which
must be formally reviewed
and approved by the National
Marine Fisheries Service and
Fish and Wildlife Service.
“For agriculture, the net
result is very similar to
Reclamation’s proposed plan
from last December,” said
KWUA President Tricia Hill.
Mrs. Hill stated that
overall, there has been an
“unfortunate and very
disappointing” series of
events related to the recent
ESA consultation process,
but KWUA, which intervened
in the lawsuit, recognized
the court stipulation as the
best way to deal with a bad
situation.
“We do not like the place it
leaves us, but it’s the
least of a few evils, and at
least creates time to do
things right the next time,”
she said. Hill also added
that it was very important
to irrigators to avoid the
kind of disastrous delay in
starting irrigation that
occurred under an injunction
that Judge Orrick issued in
2017.
Reclamation has signed an
agreement with KWUA and
Project districts to provide
irrigators greater
participation in the ESA
process, according to KWUA
Executive Director Paul
Simmons. “That hasn’t
occurred recently because
they had to act so fast. We
can’t change the past but we
can do much better in the
future.” |