Klamath Courier,
Fort Jones, California
Wednesday, October 5,
2005
Vol , No.
Page , column
Irrigators and BOR
share historic birthday
By Pat Ratliff, Klamath Courier staff writer
KLAMATH FALLS - A crowd of over 230 people
celebrated the centennial birthday of both the
Klamath Project and the Bureau of Reclamation
Tuesday, at the Klamath Water Users Association
annual meeting at Reames Country Club.
Demonstrating the significance of the event, Bureau
of Reclamation Commissioner John Keys attended the
ceremony, along with Klamath Falls Mayor Todd
Kellstrom, District Attorney Ed Caleb, Sheriff Tim
Evinger, and Klamath County Commissioners Al
Swietzer, John Elliott and Bill Brown.
"We are not only celebrating a valuable public and
private partnership, but we also celebrate this
project." Greg Addington told the crowd, "The
Klamath Project is the most efficient and
beneficial in the world. Water used to come to this
basin to die via evaporation, now, because of this
project and affordable power, that water is
recirculated up to seven times and ultimately finds
its way to the Klamath River, where the
water provides fuel for power generation and
increased flows for fish. In addition, this
project provides some of the best wildlife and
waterfowl habitat in the country."
Addington's words were not lost on most in the
crowd, with increased fish counts on most rivers
while commercial fishermen are forced to curtail
fishing by the National Marine Fisheries Service.
Two days later, California was in the middle of its
first power emergency of the season, not being able
to generate enough power to cope with only 90+
degree highs.
"Today, we work on issues like TMDL's, flow studies,
recovery planning, biological opinions, power rates
and reclamation contracts. We do public relations
and education using science and facts to support our
positions." Addington continued, "We work with a
myriad of federal, state and local agencies whose
names and programs are branded in our minds by the
acronyms that define them. We learn the processes,
the laws and the regulations. We go to Salem,
Sacramento and Washington D.C. to lobby elected
officials. We defend our beliefs and values in the
courts, where we assert what we know to be our
rights."
Steve Kandra, President of the KWUA Board of
Directors, also spoke of the work being done by the
group.
"In partnership with Reclamation, the Water Users
are promoting work done by the National Academy of
Science to see that endangered species recovery is
properly dealt with on a watershed wide basis,
instead of the unjust and impractical focus on the
Klamath Irrigation Project operations." Kanda
said, "Soon, an 'Undepleted Flow Study' will have
cleared peer review and will be available to correct
flawed historical water flow perceptions and demands
contained in current Biological Opinions. There is
now political inertia to update the Endangered
Species Act to provide better science and
technical review, along with protecting the property
rights of others."
Scott Seus, Chairman of the KWUA Power Committee,
told of the five attorneys working for the group,
and explained each of the venues they work in.
"Sound expensive? Make no mistake about it, it is."
Seus told the group, "Much of the KWUA budget and
time is being spent on the power issue. I assure
you, it is a worthy cause.
Consider this, were we to go to tariff rates that
PacifiCorp proposes tomorrow, your power rates may
go up as much as 2500% what you currently pay. Not
only would this affect your bottom line, but also
the integrity of an ecosystem that relies on
irrigated agriculture to support the 470 species
that call the Klamath Basin home.
Through EQIP, we the Klamath Basin farmers and the
Federal government will have invested 75 million
dollars in irrigation efficiency by the end of 2007
in an effort to do our part to make the best use of
the water that we use irrigate these lands. That
efficiency is tied to a meter base at the end of a
pump switch. Best use will be overcome by economics,
and economics say flood irrigation will be more cost
effective. Drainage
pumps would become too cost prohibitive to operate,
and thus the Refuge Complex will go dry.
Water quality both here in the Basin and downriver
will decline. Temperature of water will soar in
stagnate pools of water that abound due to a lack of
drainage pumping. Incidentally, the ratepayers
throughout the PacifiCorp territory will ultimately
suffer as well. Efficient use of water here in the
Klamath Basin and drainage pumping out of the
project results in more water in the Klamath River
to be run through the generators that provide clean,
renewable, low cost power to the rest of the
PacifiCorp ratepayers. To replace that power with
natural gas fired generation at today's prices.
Let's just say there is no carpooling in fossil fuel
fired generation."
Dave Solem, Manager of the Klamath Irrigation
District was the Associations Leadership Award
winner, while Lynn Long won the "Community Service
Award.”
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