The Honorable Mike Thompson
119 Cannon HOB
Washington, D.C. 20002
Dear
Representative Thompson:
Thank you for
this opportunity to submit testimony on behalf
of the Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA). I
am Dan Keppen, and I serve as the executive
director for KWUA, a non-profit corporation that
has represented Klamath Irrigation Project
farmers and ranchers since 1953. KWUA members
include rural and suburban irrigation districts
and other public agencies, as well as private
concerns who operate on both sides of the
California-Oregon border. We represent 5,000
water users, including 1,400 family farms that
encompass over 200,000 acres of irrigated
farmland.
I appreciate
the opportunity to provide our perspective at
this important meeting, and I applaud your
leadership, Congressman Thompson, which helped
to bring together this diverse group of agency
and stakeholder representatives from throughout
this 10.5 million acre watershed. I have
submitted this testimony, as well as additional
information that detail the points I will
present, to your office, which I request that
you include in the record developed for this
briefing.
The family
farmers and ranchers who I represent live over
200 miles from the mouth of the Klamath River.
They receive their water from the federal
Klamath Project, one of the first three
reclamation projects constructed in the western
United States. Next year marks the centennial
anniversary of the congressional act that
authorized its construction.
Because the
Klamath Project has a federal nexus, its
operations are regulated by federal laws,
including the Endangered Species Act, the Clean
Water Act, and federal agency obligations to
meet tribal trust concerns. Even though the
consumptive water use of the Klamath Project
represents just 3-4 percent of the total amount
of water that flows out of the Klamath River
into the Pacific Ocean, and even though the
Project accounts for less than 40 percent of
agricultural acreage in the Upper Klamath Basin,
the federal nexus places incredible focus on the
landowners I represent.
In the three
years that I’ve served in my current position,
I’ve witnessed an amazing barrage of criticism
aimed at Klamath Project operations. This focus
has been intensified in the wake of the 2002
die-off of 34,000 salmon on the Lower Klamath
River. I’ve witnessed a battle that pits
scientist against scientist, press release vs.
press release, and strong statements made on
both sides of the issue.
As we see it,
Judge Saundra’s 2003 court decision and the
independent National Research Council Committee
did not accept arguments that the operation of
the Klamath Project caused the 2002 fish die-off
or that changes in the operation of the Project
at the time would have prevented it. Next month,
per the direction of Judge Armstrong, this
specific issue will be addressed in her court in
Oakland. Until she issues her final judgment,
the indirect cause that attributed to the direct
cause of mortality – massive infection by two
types of pathogens – can only be a question of
debate.
Much of the
focus of today’s briefing has been on the low
flow conditions that were apparent in the
Klamath River in the late summer and fall of
2002. The singular focus on low flows – and the
relative role played by flows in the 2002
mortality event – is really the issue upon which
much of the recent controversy has revolved
around. Today, I will not rise to the bait and
espouse our position on this matter. We are
currently spending significant funds and time
preparing for next month’s court deliberations,
and at that time, our arguments will be
appropriately introduced. Rather, I would like
to use this opportunity today to summarize what
our farmers and ranchers have been doing to
bolster Klamath River flows, Upper Klamath Lake
levels, and help our neighbors on the Lower
Klamath and Tulelake National Wildlife Refuges.
It’s a story, unfortunately, that does not get a
lot of coverage in media outlets outside of the
Upper Basin.
Efforts to
Improve Water Use Efficiency
Despite the
fact that the Klamath Project is one of the most
water-use efficient reclamation projects in the
country, water users have demonstrated their
willingness to participate in actions that might
further stretch tight water supplies.
Over 800
growers have applied for 2002 Farm Bill funding
to help cost-share projects that conserve water.
These projects- which are evaluated on the basis
of their ability to improve on-farm water use
efficiency – require that 25 percent of the
costs be carried by the landowner. This is
especially remarkable, considering that many of
the irrigators who have submitted applications
are still recovering from the negative cash
flows that resulted after the 2001 water cut
off.
We hear
constant criticism from some interests that
Klamath Project irrigators continue to do what
they have done for the past 97 years – irrigate
their lands with the stored water created by the
Project, without heed for new regulatory flows
intended to address fish and tribal trust needs.
I would like to briefly summarize what our
irrigators have done in recent years, and I
believe it will tell a completely different
story.
While our
association worked with the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation prior to 2001 to develop a dry-year
demand reduction program, the curtailment of
water supplies that year, which essentially
reallocated irrigation water to meet the needs
of three fish species protected under the ESA, I
will not talk about the sacrifice made by our
irrigators that year. Instead, I will begin in
2002, which began the first of three years where
irrigators have stepped up to meet a steadily
increasing demand imposed by the U.S. Interior
Department to meet environmental and tribal
trust water demands in the Klamath River
watershed.
2002 Pilot
Water Bank and Voluntary Conservation Efforts
Reclamation’s
2003 water bank ultimately generated 59,651 AF
of water for environmental purposes. This figure
does not include another approx. 30,000 AF
generated through voluntary groundwater pumping
and conservation efforts undertaken by local
water users, with no federal compensation.
2004
Klamath Project Pilot Water Bank
The 2004 bank
is expected to provide over 75,000 AF to meet
biological opinion conditions. This figure does
not include 10,000 AF of stored refuge water
that was originally intended to meet water bank
needs, but was instead redirected by Reclamation
to meet unspecified downstream "tribal trust"
needs last spring. The 2004 figure also does not
reflect the additional water that was sent
downstream last week by the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation to meet tribal trust obligations.
Proposed
2005 Klamath Project Pilot Water Bank
Next year, the
NOAA Fisheries biological opinion calls for a
massive 100,000 AF water bank, regardless of
actual hydrological conditions.
Efforts to
Supplement Refuge Water Supplies
Farmers in the
Tulelake area have long worked to help their
wildlife neighbors in the Tulelake and Lower
Klamath National Wildlife Refuges. This includes
voluntary, early shutdowns of Tulelake
Irrigation District in 1992, 1994 and 2000 to
provide more water for environmental purposes.
Tulelake farmers in 2002 and 2003 worked to
provide whatever water they could to the
refuges, similar to the 2001 effort where
farmers provided groundwater to the refuges
after the water cutoff left them dry. This water
immediately began to replenish the wetlands and
marshes vital to waterfowl, shorebirds and bald
eagles that rely upon them for resting and
feeding opportunities. Local growers are
currently working with the refuge managers to
investigate new opportunities to provide water
to the refuges this fall.
Conclusion
It is clear
that our irrigators have not been idle. We feel
that we are doing all we can to be part of a
constructive solution to meet the challenges we
all face in this watershed. We are modifying our
actions to generate water to meet these
regulatory demands. We have no say in how that
water is actually managed. The question I have
heard the most this past year from our
irrigators is this: Shouldn’t the agencies and
interests who are calling for this water be held
accountable for how this water is used?
This year,
nearly 90,000 acre-feet of water will be
reallocated away from the Klamath Project and
towards ESA and tribal trust needs because
farmers have idled land and pumped their own
groundwater, and the national wildlife refuges
have drained seasonal wetlands. Our Project,
including the refuges, consumptively uses
350,000 acre-feet of water in an average water
year. This year, we took actions that provided
environmental water exceeding 25 percent of that
value. This, despite a widespread community view
that this water is achieving questionable value
for the species it allegedly is intended to
protect.
It’s awfully
difficult to see good people criticized for
trying, in their eyes, to do the right thing. I
hope everyone here today will recognize the
efforts of Klamath Project irrigators, and
consider their contributions as you address
what’s happening on the lower river, 200 miles
from their homes.
Thank you.