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Klamath Forum:
Water Deal would require major expenditures not
previously disclosed
by Felice Pace, from Philadelphia, founder of Klamath Forest
Alliance, owner of Klam Blog.
(KBC NOTE: An environmental activist's take on the KBRA)
The Klamath Justice Coalition is the grassroots, Indigenous-led
group which – with help from Klamath Riverkeeper, the Seventh
Generation Fund and others – has organized and led protests and
direct actions from Portland, to Omaha and Scotland to call on
PacifiCorp and its stockholders to take down the dams. Lately the
Justice Coalition has been holding forums and discussion so that
river residents can find out what is actually in the KBRA and KHSA,
the dam and water deals. Yesterday, the Coalition – along with the
Eureka Times Standard and others sponsors - held a panel
discussion at Humboldt State University. About fifty people –
including council members from the Hoopa Tribe and Yurok Tribe –
attended.
For those who are regular readers of this Blog, not much of what
was discussed at the Forum will be new. But there was one new
piece of information revealed which may prove important as the
focus shifts from negotiations among stakeholders to the US
Congress.
Craig Tucker, who represents the Karuk Tribe, spoke first. He
presented a power point promoting the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement (KBRA) and emphasized that the roughly $1 billion
dollars of federal spending which the KBRA calls for is needed for
restoration activities.
Several other speakers later pointed out that much of the money
Tucker claims is for “restoration” is actually subsidies to the
Irrigation Elite. Study of Appendix B1 and B2 of the proposed (KBRA)
confirms that this is the case. Of a total ten year budget of
$985,202,000 only $322,495,000 – or 32.7% - would go for
restoration projects. Of the remaining 67.3%:
• 34.4% ($338,002,000) would go directly to the Irrigation Elite –
the small group of wealthy irrigators who receive water from the
federal Klamath Project. Public oversight of how that money would
be spent is constrained by the proposed KBRA. Most of this money
is for studies; it is unclear if any of it would be used for
restoration.
8% ($80,000,000) would go directly to tribes. This would likely be
used to support tribal fisheries and water resources departments.
2.4% ($23,200,000) would go directly to counties (most to Siskiyou
County). There’s no telling how this money would be spent but it
is unlikely it would go toward restoration.
4.8% ($47,500,000) would go for “Regulatory Assurances”.
Irrigators have demanded protection from state and federal
endangered species laws. The bulk of this money would go for
development and agency review of Habitat Conservation Plans which
– once approved – would provide a permit to Upper Basin Irrigators
to “take” endangered species including Coho Salmon, Bald Eagles
and Bull Trout. This is the sort of wink-and-nod ESA procedure
which allows proponents of the deals to claim they are not
changing any laws at the same time that they tell irrigators they
won’t have to worry about the ESA.
11.9% ($117,541) would go to pay for “monitoring”. The funds would
actually go to the entities doing the monitoring whether agencies,
tribes or irrigators. We already have lots of monitoring in the
Klamath River Basin but additional monitoring would be needed for
reintroduced salmon and for the sort of active real-time water
management the KBRA envisions.
5.4% ($53,159,000) would go to actively reintroducing salmon into
the Upper Klamath Basin. Many salmon advocates favor passive
restoration, i.e. allowing salmon to reinhabit the Upper Basin on
their own once the dams are removed. Passive restoration would be
much cheaper; only monitoring the salmon’s progress would be
required. ESA-listed salmon which passively find their way to new
habitats automatically receive full ESA protection; salmon which
are actively reintroduced by humans (as proposed in the KBRA) do
not have full ESA protection. Actively reintroduced salmon
populations can be removed at the discretion of federal and state
wildlife agencies.
.4% ($3,307,000) would go for “governance” including managing the
money and supporting the advisory committees and technical teams
the KBRA would establish. There is an old adage which suggests
that one should “follow the money” if one wants to know what is
really going on in politics. Judging from the KBRA’s proposed
budget the proposal is more about subsidies to the Irrigation
Elite than about restoration. Furthermore, as was pointed out at
yesterday’s Forum, much of the restoration work proposed by the
KBRA is for restoration projects which will take place whether or
not the KBRA is turned into federal legislation and passes
Congress. KBRA promoters, however, continue to insist that without
KBRA implementing legislation there will be insufficient funding
for restoration.
Jay Wright and Scott Greacen represented the Northcoast
Environmental Center (NEC) at the Forum. Wright explained that the
NEC strongly favors dam removal but is concerned because the
proposed Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement (KHSA) does
not commit PacifiCorp, the federal government or the states to dam
removal but only to a process to consider dam removal. He said the
NEC does not think it is a good idea to force dam removal and the
controversial and costly KBRA into the same legislation. The NEC
has joined with Oregon Wild, Water Watch and other conservation
organizations to advocate for clean dam legislation which Wright
claimed would result in the dams coming out much sooner.
The Yurok Tribe and the Hoopa Tribe each presented their
positions. The Hoopa do not favor the tribal waiver of rights
which is in the KBRA and KHSA. They are also seeking assurances
that funding for the Klamath River Basin will not be taken out of
funds required to restore the Trinity River. The Yurok Tribe’s
Troy Fletcher presented the Yurok Tribe’s view that the waiver
only applies to past actions and is in other ways so limited that
it is not important. KlamBlog can not help but wonder why the Bush
Administration insisted that the waivers must be part of the deal
if they are unimportant.
Back and forth between those representing the Hoopa Tribe and
those representing the Yurok Tribe occupied much of the meeting.
These two tribes have a history of conflict going way back. That
conflict seems to be alive and well in spite of the fact that many
members of each tribe have ancestors from both tribes and that
they participate in each others traditional ceremonies.
One of the few new pieces of information presented at the forum
came from long-time Klamath River activist Felice Pace who is also
the primary author on this blog. Pace pointed out that the
proposed KBRA calls for a drought plan. This indicates that under
the flows and irrigation water allocations proposed in the KBRA
there would not be enough water to meet flow targets in very dry
years and during extended droughts.
Pace said he had worked with government and other specialists to
determine how many years there would have been insufficient water
supply to meet KBRA flow targets if those targets and KBRA
proposed irrigation water allocations had been in place over the
past 30 years. What they found was that in 7 out of the past 30
years there would not have been enough water supply to meet both
KBRA flow targets and KBRA priority water allocation to the
Irrigation Elite. Under these circumstances the water fish need
would have to be leased from irrigators.
Pace said that the largest yearly deficit would have been 55,637
acre feet (an acre foot is the amount of water needed to cover 1
acre of land with water 1 foot deep). In 2009 the California State
Water Bank paid $275 per acre foot of water. At this price,
meeting the flows KBRA proponents say fish need would have cost
over $15 million dollars in that one year alone. Pace asserted
that leasing water to meet the needs of salmon is not sustainable
and bad policy to boot.
The cost of the Drought Plan that KBRA flow and irrigation water
allocations would necessitate is a major reason opponents of the
KBRA say the deal is not a good idea. If Congress goes along with
the KBRA and gives the first right to Klamath River water to
irrigators then irrigators must be paid if some of that water is
needed for fish. Under the Public Trust Doctrine as expressed in
California Water and Fish & Game Codes, fish have a right to the
amount of water they need to survive and thrive. Federal
legislation implementing the KBRA would preempt those Public Trust
rights.
Toward the end of the Forum, Kathy McCovey and Georgianna Myers of
the Klamath Justice Coalition made pleas for unity. They expressed
concern that Klamath River tribes and others who had previously
made common cause to get the dams down were now divided and
observed that divide and conquer had long been a federal policy
with respect to tribes. This led to calls for a tribal summit and
to pleas for unity from some of the council members present.
The Klamath Justice Coalition made a video of the Forum. To make a
contribution in support of their Coalition’s work or to request a
copy of the Forum video contact Georgianna Myers: sregonlady@gmail.com.
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