http://www.sacbee.com/content/politics/story/9902826p-10825043c.html
Water turns to bad blood
The Klamath basin's problems stir up animosities
rather than solutions.
Followed by KBC response.
By David Whitney -- Bee Washington Bureau
Published 2:15 am PDT Tuesday, July 6, 2004
WASHINGTON - The Klamath River flows for 250
miles from Upper Klamath Lake in Oregon to the
Pacific Ocean, south of Crescent City on
California's North Coast. All along its route,
people and wildlife are in trouble because there is
too little water.
In 2001, protests erupted over a water cutoff for
Klamath basin farmers to help endangered sucker
fish, long a staple of the upland Klamath Indians. A
year later, more than 30,000 salmon died and rotted
just upriver from the Klamath's mouth because the
flow was too little and the water too warm.
The scarcity pits angry farmer against angry
fisherman, upper river against lower river,
congressman against congressman - a problem so
complex and intractable that it just seems easier to
fight about it than to work for a solution.
"There is so much bad blood between these groups
that even getting them to the table is next to
impossible," said Bill Gaines, a lobbyist for the
California Waterfowl Association, which is concerned
about habitat for the millions of migrating ducks
and geese that also depend on the basin's precious
water.
Increasingly, farmers and fishermen talk about how
the politicians are so busy fighting that the
opportunity for consensus is being squandered while
more fish die and more farmers and fishermen see
their livelihoods evaporate.
"We are all trying to use this water to make a
dollar, whether it's commercial fishermen, rafters
or the guy trying to grow a crop on the ground,"
said Blair Hart, a farmer who for 17 years has been
a board member of the Shasta River Resource
Conservation District.
"This is not a Democrat versus Republican issue,"
Hart said. "They all need to put their political
differences aside and craft a solution so that those
of us on the ground here ... can get on with the
rest of our lives."
The message may be taking hold in Washington.
The four congressmen who represent the Klamath River
and basin - Democrat Mike Thompson of St. Helena and
Republicans Wally Herger of Marysville, John
Doolittle of Roseville and Greg Walden of Oregon -
said in recent interviews that the search for
consensus may be possible.
It won't be easy.
It will have to begin with finding common ground,
starting with the easiest pieces of the puzzle in an
effort to rebuild trust, they said. And it will take
putting aside political differences.
"The only issue that anyone should be concerned with
is how to resolve the vexing problem that there's
too much demand for too little water," Thompson
said. "If everyone were willing to work together on
that, we could make some real progress. But there's
unfortunately been politics getting in the way of
problem-solving. And whenever you have that, it's a
recipe for disaster."
Walden pointed to slow but steady progress, much of
it under the radar screen of the larger war.
He said a huge fish screen has gone in to stop
millions of small suckerfish from being washed onto
farmland to die. Consensus is coming together on
removing Chiloquin Dam to give the fish access again
to vital Sprague River habitat, and perhaps to
rebuild some fish ladders. Federal funding for basin
improvements has more than doubled since 2001, to
more than $28 million this year.
"I think there is greater opportunity now to work
more collaboratively on solutions," he said. "But I
think you need to take a piece at a time instead of
a giant, comprehensive plan."
Almost certainly such a plan would include large
amounts of money for modernizing irrigation systems,
measuring water withdrawals, buying up water rights
from some willing sellers, restoring banks on the
Shasta and Scott rivers, and maybe even building a
new dam and reservoir to provide summertime cold
water for downstream salmon.
Doolittle could be the key to any deal. He is fast
becoming a powerful player on water policy. He sits
on the House Appropriations Committee's water and
power subcommittee that funds water projects. Last
year he cut a groundbreaking deal with Rep. Robert
Matsui, D-Sacramento, that ended a 14-year battle
over Sacramento-area flood control and put $138
million under his direction for water projects in
his sprawling district.
Doolittle said the question in his mind is whether
the four congressmen could follow the Sacramento
model and negotiate a deal without outside
interference. The Matsui-Doolittle agreement was
approved by Congress without a hearing and was
virtually unmentioned on the House and Senate floors
despite its $400 million-plus cost.
Talk of consensus is most discomfiting to Herger,
who many say is so embittered by the 2001 water
cutoff to farmers that he sees compromise as just
another word for more bad news.
To be sure, environmentalists have targeted leased
farmlands on the Lower Klamath Lake and Tule Lake
national wildlife refuges for extinction, believing
that they should be bought by the federal government
and restored into wetlands.
That view has been one of the most polarizing
assertions in the Klamath basin, and Herger contends
Thompson is one of its leading advocates, making him
virtually impossible to work with.
Hope for consensus comes just as the House Resources
Committee is preparing for a July 17 hearing in
Klamath Falls on the Endangered Species Act.
Committee Chairman Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, is the
leading champion in the House of rewriting the
controversial act. Many feel the hearing, which is
likely to be attended only by Republicans, plays
into the hands of those who believe that rewriting
the act will make the basin's water problems
suddenly disappear.
"This definitely won't bring people together," said
Alice Kellum, chair of the Klamath River Compact
Commission, an Oregon-California group created in
1957 to, among other things, prevent the export of
Klamath water to Southern California.
Doolittle said, however, that a comprehensive
solution for the Klamath basin and the river it
sustains could only come after there is a consensus
on what's made the watershed so sick.
"At some point we've got to have a stipulated set of
facts we can agree upon," Doolittle said.
"Representative Matsui and I had that for
Sacramento. Here, we don't have it. If we can get
it, then that's the foundation that builds a
solution."
______________________
KBC response to
Bee article
1. Editor claims there is too little
water. There is more water now in the lake and
river than before the Klamath Project was built,
because much of our water, up to a 30-40-foot deep
lake, had no way to make it back into the river
until irrigators paid for a diversion of our lake.
2. Editor blames the fish die-off on
the amount of river
flow and warm water. Does he believe
that more warm water from Klamath Lake would help
the temperature? He parrots the 'environmentalists'
while disregarding the National Academy of Science
(NAS) that says that more warm Klamath Water would
not have prevented the die-off. The Klamath Project
irrigators only use 3 1/2 percent of the water at
the mouth of the Klamath.
3. We (I was there) met with
commercial coastal fishermen, and also river
fishermen. They did not blame us at all. Yuroks and
PCFFA and environmental groups chose to blame the
Klamath Irrigators 200 miles from the Trinity fish
die off, regardless of the NAS science and even
before the water was tested.
4. Editor says that we aren't at the
table making solutions. We were excluded from
the table when the Department of Justice, with the
Bureau of Indian Affairs, hired Dr. Hardy to create
science to go against the irrigators in the water
adjudication process. Tribes were there. Agencies
were there. Irrigators were turned away at the
door.
5. Irrigators and tribes and
agencies reached a consensus 'at the table' that the
Chiloquin Dam, blocking over 90% of sucker fish
habitat, needs to go. The government's response was
to pay the tribes to study it more, while 90% of
'endangered' suckers are blocked. Who says we don't
find solutions?
6. Democrat Mike Thompson, St. Helen
(hundreds of miles from the Klamath Basin) is bent
on downsizing agriculture in the Klamath Basin by
taking farming out of the wildlife refuges.
According to California Waterfowl Association, Ph.D.
Robert McLandress, UC Davis, farms provided
over half of the food for waterfowl, "70 million
pounds of food" (HERE
FOR AUDIO). "It is the most important waterfowl area in North
America."
7.
Final comment: When the locals sit down, like
regarding Chiloquin Dam, we do just fine and find a
solution. If agencies wanted a solution to de-list the
suckers, the dam would have been out last year. We
get Congressmen like Thompson from other places with
an agenda.. People like Hatfield committee member
Rich McIntyre lives far away, is a past Waterwatch
board member and American Land Conservancy (ALC)
"counselor" who has long advocated selling out
our farms at a profit to ALC, and getting government
funds for the Barnes Ranch which ALC would profit,
and he is not from here either.
8.
Final final comment:
According to the NRC report "neither the flows
nor temperatures that occurred during the fish kill
were unprecedented, and the committee agreed that
neither flow nor temperature conditions alone can
explain the fish kill."
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