Klamath's water woes run deep
followed by commentary of Barbara
Hall, Klamath Bucket Brigade
With a shrinking water table, it's clear the
government must reduce demand for water in the
Klamath Basin
Sunday, May 09, 2004
N ow the thirst for water in the Klamath Basin
is drying up wells and shrinking the water table.
The day is here when the Bush administration must
concede that there is too much demand for too
little water in the Klamath.
It is not enough to keep raining federal tax
money on the basin in hopes of avoiding hard
decisions about a supply of water that is simply
too small to adequately meet the demands of
farmers, fish and wildlife. Millions of tax
dollars that paid for emergency wells and a
federal water bank have not resolved the
underlying water crisis in the basin.
Instead, the government's decision to pay
farmers to irrigate crops with billions of gallons
of water from wells is quickly drying up the
Klamath's groundwater. The water table has plunged
as much as 20 feet in just three years, according
to a report last Sunday by The Oregonian's Michael
Milstein.
It has also left the Klamath as a rare place in
this country where American taxpayers not only are
subsidizing the crops that farmers are growing,
but also paying for their irrigation.
None of this is sustainable. You can't forever
chase a dwindling supply of groundwater by
drilling ever deeper. You can't keep going to the
well of government subsidies, either.
Yet the Oregon Water Resources Department keeps
right on issuing groundwater permits, some for
wells that could yield millions of gallons of
water a day, even though the dangers of that
policy seem obvious. And the Bush administration
has shown no sign of conceding that it's time to
begin reducing demand for water in the Klamath,
even by allowing willing sellers to retire their
farms and irrigation permits.
By now there is overwhelming evidence that
there's not enough water to go around. In 2001,
Klamath Project farmers suffered when water
supplies were abruptly cut off to protect
endangered fish in Klamath Lake and Klamath River.
The next year farmers got full irrigation
deliveries, but tens of thousands of salmon died
in the too-low, too-warm Klamath River.
Every year the wildlife refuges of the Klamath
Basin, some of the most important lands in the
Pacific Flyway, are left without adequate water.
Last summer the refuges went six straight weeks
without any water deliveries.
There's a scramble now to consider other hugely
expensive solutions to the water shortage in the
Klamath. One irrigation district wants to drill
large wells in north Klamath County and pour the
water into Upper Klamath Lake for use by farmers.
Another is pitching the idea for a new 19,000-acre
reservoir on a former lake bed south of Klamath
Falls.
Those ideas may hold some promise. So might
many other efforts now under way in the basin,
including projects to increase habitat for
endangered suckers and potentially allow farmers
to take more water out of Klamath Lake.
Yet it seems clear that the only real long-term
solution is to bring water demand in line with the
actual, sustainable supply in the basin. The water
table is dropping as much as 5 feet a year.
There's no future in that.
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The following response is by Barbara Hall,
Klamath Bucket Brigade
The editorial board of the Oregonian should
really check their facts before once again
repeating old tired lies. But as we all know,
every time a lie is repeated and spun, it gains
strength as the truth. How many times do we have
to put up with this before they start doing their
homework and start reporting the truth?
The only crop that is subsidized in the
Klamath Project is wheat! Onions, potatoes, mint,
horseradish, alfalfa, and grass hay are not
subsidized! How many times do we have to repeat
that?
And the government is not paying for our
irrigation; only paying farmers to pump water from
their drought wells to satisfy the NOAA/NMFS
tribal trust ordered water bank.
And the only reason we now have a "water
shortage" in the Klamath Project is because of
governmental laws such as the ESA and those tribal
trust obligations. And one section of the ESA
says that reservoir water can't be used for
endangered or threatened species. What do you
think Upper Klamath Lake is? It's a reservoir
built and paid for by the farmers in the Klamath
Project.
Before 2001, there was plenty of water to go
around - farmers, fish (both suckers and salmon),
and refuges got water even in bad drought years.
The Klamath Project takes only 4 to 5% of the
total water available in the entire upper and
lower Klamath Basins. I'm sick and tired of our
farmers and ranchers being made the scapegoat for
everything that happens in the entire 1.4 MILLION
acres of the entire Klamath River Basin when the
Klamath Project is only 220,000 acres. Our measly
400,000 acre-feet of water is chicken feed
compared to the average of 12 Million acre-feet of
Klamath River water that flows out into the
Pacific.