Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Irrigators state case for opposition
By SARA
HOTTMAN Herald and News 10/22/10
In a three-week series,
the Herald and News sought to elucidate the many points of
contention surrounding the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement.
But proponents and
opponents disagree over how the agreement was portrayed.
“By and large the staff
did a good job trying to tackle the issues that opponents or
proponents bring up a lot,” said Greg Addington, director of
the Klamath Water Users Association. “I didn’t agree with
everything, and I’m
sure the opponents had
their issues, but I believe both sides were fairly
represented.”
Opponents said the
series read in support of the agreement.
“It seems to still have
more from (supporters) than it does from our bunch,” said
Kenny Schell, an on-Project irrigator. “It seems like there
are two little paragraphs for us versus a full (column) for
them.”
Schell said he sees a
bias in the newspaper that leads the general public to
believe the majority of irrigators support the KBRA, but his
camp believes that irrigators who oppose the KBRA
outnumber supporters. “We need more from the opposing side,”
he said.
Earlier this month, a
group of irrigators from the Klamath Reclamation Project sat
down with the Herald and News to discuss why they don’t
support the KBRA.
“The cost and
concessions are not worth the non-guarantee,” Schell said.
“Why would you sign onto something just because it’s the
only thing going?”
Objections
Their objections to the
agreement include:
• The Endangered
Species Act: “The ESA regulates water now, and it will still
regulate water if KBRA goes through,” Schell said.
The federal Endangered
Species Act protects animals threatened by extinction,
including coho salmon, bull trout and Lost River and
shortnose suckers in the Klamath Basin. On-Project farmers
felt the full force of the act in 2001 when the Bureau
didn’t release surface water in order to maintain water
levels for endangered fish during a drought.
Grant Knoll, a rancher,
said the biological opinions that led to the fishes’
endangered status were flawed.
“The biological opinions
from 2001 to 2009 have not brought the sucker fish back. The
higher lake levels have not brought it back. They already
had their chance and it hasn’t worked,” he said.
“(Retaining) 5 to 10 percent more water in the lake for fish
breaks our backs, but what does it do for the fish?”
KBRA proponents say the
federal agencies that signed onto the agreement will help
leverage a clause in the act that allows environmental
agencies to approve habitat conservation plans that
essentially modify restrictions to make water available for
both fish and irrigators.
“They’re willing to
lower standards if we sign the KBRA,” Schell said.
“Apparently the fish can do with less water if we sign this
document.”
“It’s not OK to say the
ESA is here so we shouldn’t do anything with the agreement,”
Addington said.
“There are a bunch of other advantages. … To throw your
hands up in the air and say, ‘it’s all or nothing’ doesn’t
seem realistic.”
• Support: “I
believe the majority of irrigators are against the KBRA,”
Schell said.
“This was the most
important decision ever for the irrigation districts,” and
organizers didn’t get irrigators’ approval before pushing
the agreement through, Schell said.
“Irrigation districts
elect (board members) to work on these water things,”
Addington said. “If he’s right, (Schell’s camp) should take
over these boards.”
• Guarantees: “The
only ones guaranteed in KBRA are whoever wants the dams out
and the (tribes),” Schell said.
The Klamath Tribes get
the tree farm, the fish get restored habitats, the power
company gets its dams out, but farmers, Schell said, are
guaranteed nothing but less water.
The KBRA calls for
irrigators to voluntarily surrender 30,000 acre-feet of
irrigation water from Upper Klamath Lake each year. With
less water, farmers would voluntarily idle some land, and
like this year, could receive government subsidies for it.
“When (farmers) idle
land (they) get money for nothing, and that’s costing other
taxpayers money,” Knoll said.
“ They ’re making
welfare farmers out of us,” Schell added. “KBRA is
downsizing us. It’s not improving anything, it’s making it
worse.”
Addington said this
irrigation year was bad, but “the reason it wasn’t 2001 was
because of the relationships we developed with the KBRA.
“The day the agreement was signed the tribes agreed not to
do anything to interfere with the Project water supply,” he
said. “That’s more meaningful than most people will probably
ever realize.”
|
Page Updated: Saturday October 23, 2010 02:42 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2010, All Rights Reserved