Secretary of Interior Sally Jewell, left, and Oregon Gov. Kate Brown sign extra copies of the historic Klamath River Basin agreements Wednesday morning in Klamath, Calif., just before the official ceremony.
The landmark Klamath agreements signed Wednesday are only one piece of the Basin’s water solution, groups say.
Audubon California commended the deal while pointing out that Klamath wildlife refuges remain without water certainty and adequate water supplies to support migrating waterfowl.
“We’re excited to
see the removal of
the Klamath River
dams, and this is a
good first step to
addressing some of
the problems in the
Basin,” said Audubon
California Director
of Public Policy
Michael Lynes.
“Unfortunately,
today’s deal does
not provide anything
for the Klamath
Basin national
wildlife refuges,
which provide
habitat for 80
percent of the
waterfowl along the
Pacific Flyway and
which have been
chronically shorted
on water supplies
for decades.”
The comment is in
response to a
Wednesday ceremony
in which Secretary
of the Interior
Sally Jewell signed
a pact that gave the
go-ahead for
removing four dams
from the Klamath
River.
Dams,
irrigators
At the Klamath,
Calif., ceremony,
Jewell and other
leaders signed an
amended draft of the
Klamath
Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement
(KHSA) and another
agreement called the
Klamath Power and
Facilities
Agreement. The KHSA
calls for removing
the J.C. Boyle Dam,
Copco 1 and 2 and
Iron Gate Dam from
the Klamath River.
The power agreement
helps protect Basin
farmers from extra
costs or financial
impacts that may
result from enacting
the KHSA.
“One agreement lays
out a path toward a
history-making
project to remove
dams and restore a
river that is an
icon, and a second
agreement helps
protect the water
supply for farmers
and ranchers and
makes sure they
won’t bear new costs
because of dam
removal,” Democratic
Oregon senators Ron
Wyden and Jeff
Merkley said in a
joint statement.
Now that entities
governing the dams
and the Klamath
watershed have
signed in support of
dam removal, the
last obstacle
standing in the way
of a free-flowing
river is a nod from
the Federal Energy
Regulatory
Commission (FERC).
Opposition
planned
Siskiyou County
Supervisor Grace
Bennett said she
plans to oppose dam
removal during
FERC’s public
comment process.
“We are going to be
very vocal,” she
said. “This is a
real tragedy for the
Klamath River and
the people who live
along the Klamath
River in Siskiyou
County.”
Siskiyou County
Supervisor Brandon
Criss said he will
also continue
opposing dam
removal.
“I think the dams
have had a proven
benefit for the
(Basin) farming
community,” Criss
said.
Klamath Irrigation
District (KID) Board
Chairman Brent
Cheyne said he does
not support dam
removal, but the KID
board has not taken
a formal position on
the issue.
Dan Keppen,
executive director
of Family Farm
Alliance, said
severing dam removal
from the
controversial
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement, a now
defunct attempt at a
Basin-wide water
settlement, could
provide a new
opportunity for the
community to band
together.
Water
certainty, tribal
land
“There is certainly
more work to be done
— to provide
long-term certainty
over water supply
for agriculture, to
maintain healthy
flows in the river,
and to restore land
taken from the
Klamath Tribes — and
Congress will still
need to help bring
all of these issues
to resolution,”
Wyden said.
WaterWatch of Oregon
Spokesman Jim
McCarthy said
amending the KHSA is
“a major step
forward for the
health of the
Klamath River and
the communities of
the Klamath Basin.”
He said WaterWatch
applauds the revived
dam removal effort
but opposes the
power pact.
“This agreement
combines a few true
win-win elements for
farmers and fish
with several costly
and
counterproductive
sweetheart deals for
Klamath Project
agribusiness,”
McCarthy said.
Doug LaMalfa, R-Calif.,
a vocal opponent of
dam removal, said in
a statement that he
doesn’t believe the
agreements protect
agriculture and
electric ratepayers.
“Dam removal does
nothing to address
these issues,”
LaMalfa said.
The Klamath County
commissioners could
not be reached for
comment.