http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/news/x1683618854/Supervisors-release-CDM-statement
Supervisors release CDM statement
by David Smith, Siskiyou Daily News March 11, 2009
Yreka, Calif. - At their March 3 meeting, the Siskiyou County
Board of Supervisors issued a statement with regard to a report
released by Camp, Dresser and McKee,Inc. (CDM). The report,
released earlier this year by the Department of the Interior at
the behest of the supervisors, details potential costs associated
with dam decommissioning and removal along the Klamath River.
In the statement, the supervisors say, “The Board of Supervisors
only recently learned of the existence of this Report and is
becoming concerned that decisions are being made in Oregon and
elsewhere without adequate consideration of the additional
millions of dollars and likely billions identified for completion
of sound environmental review and removal of the dams.”
The supervisors go on to say, “It is disappointing to the Board to
discover that the United States has had a report in its possession
since July 2008, and possibly earlier, that identifies a
significant impact that it did not feel compelled to more timely
share with the participants.”
A preface to the report states that the report was originally
intended for internal use in determining various possible
additional costs that may arise in a dam removal scenario, and
states, “We understand the potential for those who oppose dam
removal to identify isolated portions of the analysis and
postulations of the CDM Report regarding quantification of risk.
But because the Secretary will undertake his own analysis,
informed by all the parties to the Final Agreement for Dam
Removal, these postulations are of limited applicability in the
final analysis..
“We encourage the parties to focus on the Report’s true value: its
identification of factors and data gaps in the science that must
be addressed in order for the Secretarial determination of 2012 to
be fully informed and sound.”
It is also stated that the estimated costs do not include any
offsetting benefits or alternative methods of decommissioning or
removal.
The supervisors also state, referencing Oregon’s Senate Bill 76
introduced by Governor Ted Kulongoski, “It is the opinion of the
Board of Supervisors that the legislators in Oregon may have
wished to have this in hand prior to their imposition of $180
Million in costs on their ratepayers.”
The bill allows PacifiCorp to add a surcharge to ratepayers’ bills
to fund a $200 million trust fund set up to pay for costs of dam
removal.
The surcharge is capped at $200 million, spread across
PacifiCorp’s ratepayers over a period of 10 years, and the
language of the bill includes a stipulation that if money is
collected into the fund and dam removal is not pursued, the money
will either be directly refunded to the customers or otherwise
used to benefit them.
The supervisors’ statement also details qualms about the estimated
additional costs of dam removal, its lack of inclusion in the
process and also what they claim may be an attempt to circumvent
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and National
Environmental Policy Act guidelines, with regard to dam removal
and decommissioning strategy..
The board, assuring that it will continue to fight to be heard in
the dam process, says in the statement, “The Board will continue
to vigorously assert the rights of the County of Siskiyou;
however, the citizens of this County should be aware that the
substantial forces arrayed against the County and the vast sums
available to them are likely to significantly affect our efforts
given the current economic situation and drastic cuts in funding
available to the County.” |