Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Dam removal deal near;
Negotiations are
expected to conclude today
A final draft
agreement on removal of four hydroelectric dams on the
Klamath River could be available as soon as
Wednesday morning.
Oregon Gov. Ted
Kulongoski’s office and others involved in negotiations
confirmed Monday that final negotiations on the
PacifiCorp-owned dams, a key aspect of the broader
Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement, are anticipated to conclude today.
“I don’t see anything
that says that’s not going to happen,” said Greg Addington,
executive director of Klamath Basin Water Users
Association, one of the original KBRA stakeholders.
Weeks of review by
organizations and governments impacted by the agreement
should follow as it is synchronized with the
KBRA. The overall agreement affects a large part of the
area economy, water rights, irrigation, fisheries, power
rates, tribal lands and more..
Those in negotiations
said they are optimistic about the dam removal document.
One opponent of the KBRA and dam removal criticized the
expected outcome.
“It’s obvious it’s not
what the public wants,” said Tom Mallams, president of the
Klamath Off-Project Water Users. Mallams did not
participate in negotiations.
Talks took a
year
Irrigators, tribal
representatives, the commercial fishing industry and
environmentalists met with Portland-based PacifiCorp and
state and federal authorities for nearly a year to work
out a hydropower agreement.
Those in negotiations
originally planned to have a document finished by the end
of June,
but the
deadline was pushed to September.
Jeff Mitchell, Klamath
Tribal Council member, was hesitant to say when the
hydropower agreement would be released, though he
confirmed that negotiators met in Portland Monday and were
working toward that goal.
“We’ll know tomorrow
(Tuesday) afternoon,” he said.
PacifiCorp spokesman
Art Sasse confirmed in an e-mail that negotiators are
hopeful of releasing a draft hydropower agreement to the
public early Wednesday, but said that he had nothing to
report or confirm beyond that.
Concluding
talks
Becky Hyde of the
Upper Klamath Water Users Association, Addington and Craig
Tucker of the Karuk Tribe said discussions were going well
and were optimistic that negotiations should
conclude today.
They said, though,
that nothing will be signed for a number of weeks. The
hydropower agreement will be made public as those involved
work to coordinate it with the restoration agreement, and
the final package will again be presented to the public.
“This thing will be
under a lot of public scrutiny in the coming weeks, which
is expected and necessary,” Tucker said.
Mallams said he’s not
fully aware of what
will be in the hydropower agreement, but he discounted the
meetings for not involving everyone who will be impacted
by the hydropower and restoration agreements.
“It’s going to doom
irrigated agriculture in the Klamath Basin,” he said.
A call for comment to Siskiyou County Supervisor Jim Cook
was not immediately returned. Susan Fry, area manager for
the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation office in Klamath Falls,
declined comment and referred requests to the bureau’s
Washington, D.C. office.
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Page Updated: Wednesday September 30, 2009 03:00 AM Pacific
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