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
reclamation projects developed in the western
United States.
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.
The reality is this - 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
public 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. Today, I will not 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, and I will not even touch upon the
related efforts to assist with meeting Upper
Klamath Lake levels, or our efforts to 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. I would like to briefly summarize what
our irrigators have done in recent years, and I
believe it will tell a completely different
story.
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.
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 start with 2002, which began the first of
three years where irrigators have stepped up to
meet a steadily increasing demand to meet
environmental and tribal trust water demands in
the Klamath River watershed.
In 2003 - 59,651 acre-feet of water bank
water plus 30,000 AF were generated through
voluntary groundwater pumping and conservation
efforts undertaken by local water users, with no
federal compensation.
This year, 75,000 AF of water bank water plus
13,000 AF of water pulled from the stored refuge
and irrigation water were generated to meet ESA
and tribal trust needs.
Next year, the NOAA Fisheries biological
opinion calls for a massive 100,000 AF water
bank, regardless of actual hydrological
conditions.
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?
In the past two years, nearly 90,000
acre-feet of water each year were
reallocated away from the Klamath Project and
towards ESA and tribal trust needs because
farmers have idled land and pumped their own
groundwater, and because 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 local 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.