Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Interior to provide $2 million to Basin
Funding will be used for land idling
by ELON
GLUCKLICH, Herald and News 4/30/10
The U.S. Department of the
Interior announced Thursday it would provide $2 million for
land idling in the Klamath Basin.
The funding would help the
Klamath Water and Power Agency fulf ill its pledge to assist
farmers who choose not to irrigate parts of their land.
Secretary of the Interior
Ken Salazar announced the funding — on top of more than $5
million already released this year — to help conserve water
ahead of the anticipated drought this year.
Land idling is a process
by which farmers cut back on water use by choosing not to
utilize all of their crop space. The practice is often seen in
years when water inf low is expected to be below seasonal
averages.
U. S . Sen . Jeff Merkley,
D- Ore., and U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., applauded the
release of funds as a necessary stop-gap measure to help Basin
farmers stay financially afloat.
“While there’s no
substitute for the water to keep farming, this money will go a
long way to help water users make it through the season
without losing their farms and livelihoods,” Merkley said in a
news release.
The decision to release
the funds comes a month af ter Walden sent a joint letter to
the U.S. Agriculture and Interior Departments, requesting
emergency funds to help with the upcoming drought.
Hollie Cannon, executive
director of Klamath Water and Power Agency (KWAPA) welcomed
the additional money, saying it would be used to help support
area irrigators who have chosen to implement land idling.
“ It is tremendous help
for what we had already committed to do,” he said.
One-third
of funding
Cannon said state and
federal funding has brought KWAPA up to one-third of its total
estimated funding needed
to utilize land idling at a rate that will address the
Basin-wide water shortage.
With current funding
totals, Cannon said, about 18,300 acres of land can be idled.
He hopes additional funding from the federal government can
bring the total to around 54,000 acres.
“We’re working with Sen. Merkley’s office and Rep. Walden’s
office to get the other two-thirds of funds,” he said.
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Page Updated: Saturday May 01, 2010 01:57 AM Pacific
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