Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
press_release_jul182003 http://www.klamathtribes.org/press_release_jul182003.htm FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 18, 2003 Contacts: Allen Foreman, Tribal Chairman, 541-783-2219 Bud Ullman, Tribesı water attorney, 541-783-3081 Don Wharton, Native American Rights Fund (land issues) 303-447-8760 Joe Browder, Washington D.C., 202-546-3720 Monica Shovlin, The Ulum Group, 541-434-7028 A Delicate Balance: Klamath Tribes Respond To Court Decision Ordering Rewrite of Klamath Basin Water Plan Klamath Falls, Ore. The Klamath Tribes reminded the Bureau of Reclamation of their existing legal obligations to protect endangered fish in Upper Klamath Lake today in response to a ruling in Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermenıs Association v. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in Oakland, Calif. U.S. District Court Judge Saundra Brown Armstrong said the agency must rewrite its 10-year plan for providing water to the Lower Klamath River and protecting threatened salmon there, but she stopped short of ordering the Bureau to change its policy this year and send more water to the river immediately. ³We remind the Bureau that watersheds are a single, intact and interconnected entity, regardless of state borders or other jurisdictions,² said Foreman. ³Additional flows for salmon on the Lower Klamath River must not jeopardize the endangered Lost River and short-nose suckers living upstream in Upper Klamath Lake.² Foreman observed that for years the Bureau of Reclamation has been ³robbing Peter to pay Paul² because Klamath Basin water has been over-promised to too many interests. The Klamath Tribes had asked Judge Armstrong to be mindful of the effects of her decision on the water supply in Upper Klamath Lake needed for tribal fisheries, and her order does not interfere with Lake water supply. Chairman Foreman emphasized that the BOR also must take into account effects its remedy will have on the upstream water supply. Foreman noted that Upper Klamath Lake provides a significant portion of the Lower Klamath River stream flow and that BOR is legally obligated to protect Upper Klamath Lakeıs water supply against diversions that harm fish. Fisheries in the lake must be protected to comply with the United Statesı obligation to restore abundant Klamath Tribesı fisheries under the Treaty of 1864, and to comply with the Endangered Species Act (ESA) by meeting the water needs of the Lost River and short-nose suckers. Foreman also cited Kandra v. United States, in which the U.S. argued that an adequate water supply in the lake is essential to satisfying legal requirements. The supply must be protected against diversion for irrigation because, as the court recognized, ³(o)nce that water is diverted to other uses, it may not be recaptured² and the effect on fisheries canıt be undone if the remaining water quantities are inadequate. Klamath tribal fisheries have been closed for 17 consecutive years. They were originally closed in 1986 because fish populations were declining at an alarming rate. The Lost River and short-nose suckers were listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1988. Pollution of Upper Klamath Lake and its tributaries, along with agricultural withdrawals from the lake and streams, contributed to the decline. |
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