Time to Take Action
Klamath Basin Water Crisis
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own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
 

 http://www.oregonlive.com/editorials/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/editorial/106708351639070.xml

Beyond farmers vs. fish
The Oregonian 10/26/03

The bitter tug-of-water over warm, polluted water won't save fish or solve the Klamath crisis, says the best science

A new report on the Klamath Basin should put an end to the obsession with saving threatened fish almost solely by taking water from farmers.
    
A national panel of scientists argues persuasively that it's wrong to keep fighting over warm, polluted water in Klamath Lake, which probably would not restore coho salmon or native suckers in any case. The real solution, they say, is a basin-wide effort that includes removing three dams, restoring large areas of wetlands and returning more clean, cool water to lakes and streams.

It could take decades, or longer, to accomplish the broad changes laid out by the National Research Council in its report released last week. The report describes a prescription for the Klamath Basin that is more costly, more politically difficult and, in some cases, even more unlikely than prying water out of Klamath Project farmers.

The scientists call not only for breaching the Chiloquin Dam, a small span that blocks access to sucker spawning habitat on the Sprague River. They also suggest that salmon recovery may require the breaching of Iron Gate Dam on the Klamath River, a major producer of electricity, and Dwinnell Dam in California's Siskiyou County, which would drain a reservoir surrounded by hundreds of homes.

They also propose reflooding lakes and wetlands throughout the Klamath Basin in Oregon and Northern California -- using water that has to come from somewhere, and fertile land that in some parts of the basin is now covered with potatoes and alfalfa.

The researchers also proposed shutting down a major hatchery for years to determine if the stocked fish are overwhelming native coho salmon in the Klamath River.

These proposals may prove every bit as tough, complicated and controversial as the policies that led to the shutoff of water to Klamath farmers in the dry summer of 2001, and the die-off of 33,000 salmon in the shrunken lower river last year.

Yet they are different in a significant way, too. The council's plan would spread the burden for fish and wildlife recovery throughout the entire Klamath Basin, where it fairly belongs, rather than putting the full weight on one group of farmers.

The real risk of this plan, which the Bush administration intends to use as a policy road map, is that it offers so little to fish and wildlife in the short term. It's not clear, for example, what the government would do to keep Klamath wildlife refuges from going dry in the next few summers, or how it will prevent additional fish kills.

It's also uncertain what would happen if the government fails to take on the most challenging recommendations, such as breaching dams and reflooding wetlands now being farmed. If diverting irrigation water isn't the solution, dam breaching is untenable and only some small portion of wetlands is restored, just how will salmon and suckers be saved?

The Bush administration has had a keen interest in the Klamath Basin almost from the time President Bush took office, and the farm crisis exploded there. The administration has focused primarily on defending the interests of farmers, not on resolving the underlying water shortage in the basin.

Now scientists have produced an ambitious to-do list to save the endangered species and preserve farms in the Klamath Basin. The Klamath crisis is not all on the farmers anymore.

It's on the Bush administration.


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