https://www.heraldandnews.com/news/local_news/small-fortune-coming-to-klamath-basin-for-ecosystem-restoration/article_475ddffa-0780-58dc-89bc-8a9d1e23f22c.html
Small fortune coming to Klamath Basin for
ecosystem restoration
More than
$160 million will be headed to
the Klamath Basin over the next five years, thanks to the
recent passage of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act
by Congress. It is likely the largest singular federal
investment in the basin to date, and it could help watershed
restoration efforts take a big step forward.
Signed into law
by President Biden on November 15, the funding package will
allocate $162 million to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
specifically for “Klamath Basin restoration activities,”
according to the text of the bill. That includes planning
and designing projects, applying for permits, paying
contractors and maintaining projects after they’re
completed, among other purposes.
Those familiar
with the funding say it’s a unique opportunity for the
Klamath Basin to get to work on large-scale projects that
measurably, positively impact water quality and species
habitat.
“There’s
nothing like money to bring folks together,” said Dan Keppen,
executive director of the Family Farm Alliance, which helped lead
a bipartisan coalition that secured billions of dollars of
investment in Western water infrastructure through this
legislation.
Keppen said the
funding will be huge — and the fact that so much was set
aside specifically for the Klamath Basin is unique.
“To my
knowledge, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a single line-item
go to Klamath for this amount of money,” he said. “If you
look at this entire bill, there’s not a lot of places that
got that specific attention.”
Also notable is
the money’s flexibility — not only in the kinds of projects
it can fund, but in the time USFWS has to disburse it.
Whereas much of the federal COVID-19 related relief funding
expired at the end of the last fiscal year, unused Klamath
infrastructure money can roll over into subsequent years.
Federal agencies have until mid-January to figure out
exactly how they’re going to spend their windfalls.
Senators Jeff
Merkley (D-Ore.) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) secured the funding
thanks to their high-ranking positions in that legislative
chamber.
“There’s no
shortage of places to work on habitat restoration,” Merkley
said. “The details are going to be worked out by the experts
on what’s going to be most cost-effective.”
Because the
agency is still in the process of coming up with a plan for
how to distribute the money, USFWS was unable to provide a
statement on what it may be used for and how projects will
be identified. But other sources say much of it will be
distributed through the Service’s Yreka office to projects
up and down the watershed. Stan Swerdloff, aquatics director
for the Klamath Tribes, said basin tribes, agricultural
groups and other stakeholders will be looped in to inform
the agency’s spending decisions in the coming weeks.
“This is a big
opportunity, and I think everybody’s going to be very
careful and very detail-oriented in putting the whole
package together. It’s got to hit the right pressure
points,” he said. “We’ve shared some of our requests with
them, but nothing formal yet.”
Essentially, a plan already exists for implementing
wide-scale restoration in the Klamath Basin through the Integrated
Fisheries Restoration and Monitoring Plan (IFRMP),
a multi-year effort that identifies key restoration
priorities throughout the watershed — from recreating
instream habitat for anadromous fish in the Lower Basin to
reducing nutrient loading in the Upper Basin.
“We have a
pretty good understanding of what works and a pretty good
understanding of where it needs to be done,” said Clayton
Creager, watershed stewardship coordinator for California’s
North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board. “We’ve
learned a lot from the investments we’ve already made.”
However,
because the infrastructure funding is several hundred
million dollars less than the total estimated cost of
implementing the IFRMP, stakeholders and federal agencies
must further prioritize which projects can help them get the
most bang for their buck and put them on a path toward
completing the rest of their restoration goals. It remains
to be seen whether small amounts of money will go out to a
variety of projects throughout the basin, or whether
stakeholders will target a specific type of activity or
area.
Swerdloff said
he hopes significant funding will go to floodplain
reconnection and de-channelization of the Sprague River,
which drives the majority of the phosphorus loading into
Upper Klamath Lake. If projects can help slow water down and
allow sediment to settle out on the Sprague’s historic
floodplain, and allow more flexibility for downstream
water allocations in the future. However, that requires
voluntary cooperation from landowners along the tributary in
addition to funding.
Sources said a
big chunk of the money will help fund the expansion of Gone
Fishing, the Service’s sucker hatchery operation on Lower
Klamath Lake Road, though USFWS did not confirm that.
Keppen
said it would be wise to identify projects that all groups
can agree on, like rehabilitating the hundreds of thousands
of acres of forest in the basin that burned this summer and
threaten to wash debris and sediment into streams over the
coming months. The Klamath Tribes, Trout Unlimited, USFWS
and other restoration-focused groups are already working with
federal agencies to mitigate for the influx of eroded
nutrients expected to flow from the Bootleg Fire scar into
Upper Klamath Lake.
“That’s an area
we should all be working on together, because we all benefit
from an improved watershed,” Keppen said. “And, in fact, if
we don’t get on it in a concerted way, we’re going to have
some problems. We have an opportunity to start to rebuild
some of these watersheds and get them to function as
watersheds.”
Other pots
of money established by the
$1.2-trillion infrastructure bill could also lend themselves
to solving Klamath issues, even though they weren’t
earmarked specifically for the basin.
The Bureau of
Reclamation, for example, received $8.3 billion to
rehabilitate aging infrastructure in its water projects,
implement recycling and reuse initiatives, establish surface
and groundwater storage and conveyance infrastructure,
implement multi-benefit irrigation activities and restore
ecosystems. Klamath Project irrigators and irrigation
districts could use that money to modernize their systems
and reduce water demand.
There are also
billions of dollars set aside in the bill for drinking water
programs, which could combine with state and local money to
address the nearly 300 domestic wells that dried up in
Klamath County this summer. Tribes across the U.S. can also
access $86 million for projects related to climate
resilience and adaptation, and federal agencies will be
authorized to spend more than $2 billion on forest
restoration over the next five years.
In a sense,
Keppen said the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act
broadens the definition of what the federal government would
typically consider “infrastructure.” Especially in the
Klamath Basin, where few viable options exist to build
traditional, Reclamation-era reservoirs and pipes, the feds
are giving increased attention to reviving the watershed’s
natural ability to store, clean and release water.
“This isn’t
just dams and canals — it’s all of the above, including
substantial dollars for ecosystem projects,” Keppen said.
“We’re never going to have a better chance to tackle the
water situation than we do now.”
While $162
million isn’t enough to solve the Klamath Basin’s water
woes, some said the money could lay out a sort of proving
ground for whether the watershed can come together and make
positive change. It’s an opportunity to show the federal
government that, despite years of crisis and tension,
there’s still a desire among stakeholders to collaborate on
solutions.
“These dollars,
if they’re used in the right way, could generate confidence
to put more money into some sort of a long-term fix,” Keppen
said.
Creager said
while the money may not fund all projects on private land,
it could also help create a “culture” of restoration in the
basin that gets more people involved down the road. While
projects with willing landowners behind them aren’t always
the projects that could give biologists and engineers the
most environmental bang for their buck, funding and
implementing them could encourage more landowners to get on
board with restoration.
“We need to
demonstrate good faith that restoration practices are good
for operations,” Creager said. “This is a time when we can
show that we can do this together, and I think the Klamath
Basin is ready. Even though we’re so polarized and so
fractured, we’ve done a lot of the groundwork to help make
the most effective use of this money. I think we really
deserve this chance.”
Swerdloff said
it’s crucial to use this money wisely, for the benefit of
the Klamath’s species and communities. As far as
infrastructure — both natural and human-created — is
concerned, there’s no shortage of worthy places to spend it.
“We’ll see how
it flows,” he said. “This is a great opportunity for the
basin — let’s not squander it. Let’s get the work done.”
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