Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Adjudication Con: Agreement would disrupt Oregon water law by Ty Beaver, Herald and News 1/6/10 H&N CORRECTION: The Herald and News misreported paragraph 2: Senator Whitsett irrigates only 18 acres, using groundwater, not 1800 as reported by Beaver.
Whitsett, who
irrigates 1,800 acres outside the Project, said the adjudication
process already provides ample opportunity for people to settle
disputes and claims.
“It’s always
worked,” he said.
Rather,
bypassing adjudication to resolve water conflicts through the
restoration agreement could invite disaster, Whitsett said. He
claimed the agreement violates private property rights of
individual water rights holders and breaches federal law, which
calls for the states
The state’s
involvement in the restoration agreement also creates problems,
Whitsett said. Because the state’s water resources department
“It seems to me
they’ve painted themselves into a corner,” Whitsett said.
Tom Mallams, an
off-Project irrigator, agreed with Whitsett. He said he’s not
opposed to settlements, but he believes the restoration
agreement would disrupt Oregon water law in its current form.
“It’s going to
open up lawsuits all over the state,” he said.
But state
officials and Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s office have repeatedly said
the state’s involvement in the restoration agreement is
appropriate and necessary. They also said there is a line
between those working on the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement
and adjudication, and the adjudicator is not involved or briefed
on what the restoration agreement lays out.
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Page Updated: Friday January 15, 2010 02:12 AM Pacific
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