www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2014/11/its_time_to_help_the_klamath_b.html
Can Congress help the Klamath Basin restore
itself? It must
Oregonian editorial 11/22/14
In
this file photo from 2013, rancher Ken Willard works at his
Eagle Butte Ranch in Sprague River. At that time, he told The
Oregonian: "If they shut the water off, it's the life blood of
all the ranchers. I hope to God we can keep it going." (Beth
Nakamura/The Oregonian) Print By The Oregonian Editorial Board
Email the author | Follow on Twitter on November 22, 2014 at
3:00 PM, updated November 22, 2014 at 3:10 PM
No place in the American West has experienced the desperate, at
times acrimonious, competition for water as it has played out in
the Klamath Basin in southern Oregon. A diverse landscape the
size of Maryland with portions reaching into northern
California, the arid Klamath is a place of distinct beauty and
rich heritage from its native tribes and expansive farms – all
connected by the seasonal supply of water running through it and
celebrated for the thousands of migratory birds that depend on
it.
But a federal shutoff to Klamath irrigators in a
drought-stricken 2001 was intended to save fish protected by the
Endangered Species Act and saddled farmers and ranchers with
losses exceeding $40 million. A compensatory move by the White
House in 2002 to ensure water flows to farmers helped trigger
one of the largest die-offs of adult salmon in western history,
enraging tribes that would assert their rights to healthy fish –
a right that was fully ensured, in 2013, when an Oregon judge
found the Klamath Tribes to be the most senior water-rights
holders in the Upper Klamath Basin. In-between, tribe-hating
flared in Klamath Falls, ravaging drought returned, regulators
decided four dams in the Klamath system needed expensive
retrofits to aid fish passage, and Congress avoided action on a
bill that would have authorized locally developed water-sharing
agreements.
Hope, however, like water, springs eternal – or at least
seasonally. The lame duck Congress now has before it the Klamath
Basin Water Recovery and Economic Restoration Act, which won
bipartisan approval in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
Committee earlier this month and is sponsored by Democratic Sen.
Ron Wyden and co-sponsored by Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley. The
act's provisions would authorize three agreements hammered out
in the Klamath by dozens of stakeholder groups in the basin. The
provisions should be made into law -- if a brave member of the
House could please stand up and help make it so.
The Klamath struggle has gone on long enough. Just two weeks
remain in the capitol for the Klamath agreements to win
congressional authorization. The agreements provide more
certainty for those farming and ranching; pay certain irrigators
to use less or no water; honor the tribes' right to healthy fish
runs; and improve the water-holding capacity of the land by,
among other things, repairing marshes. Significantly, however,
one of the three agreements calls for the removal of four dams
in the Klamath system, and this has been a rallying cry for
disaffected Klamath and Siskyou county commissioners and some
farmers who find support from Oregon Republican congressman Greg
Walden. Walden, in a recent essay in the Klamath Herald and
News, referred to dam removal as a "non-starter" without saying
why and that the Klamath agreements should be broken apart and
passed only as each wins across-the-board support. It is worth
noting that the dams are privately owned by a utility company
that wants them removed, lest federally required relicensing of
the dams saddle ratepayers with far higher costs than their
removal.
{Oregonian editorials Editorials reflect the collective
opinion of The Oregonian editorial board, which operates
independently of the newsroom. Members of the editorial
board are N. Christian Anderson III, Mark Hester, Helen Jung,
Erik Lukens and Len Reed. To respond to this editorial: Post
your comment below, submit a commentary piece, or write
a letter to the editor. If you have questions about the opinion
section, contact Erik Lukens, editorial and commentary
editor, at elukens@oregonian.com or 503-221-8142.}
The Klamath struggle has gone on long enough. The basin's
full-on agricultural development owes to the U.S. government's
creation, in 1905, of the Klamath Project but finds subsequent
complication by the U.S. government's passage, in 1973, of the
Federal Endangered Species Act and then the government's
long-overdue restoration, in 1986, of the Klamath Tribes.
Throughout, farmers grew food, fish migrated, birds flew, tribes
re-engaged – and wildly variable snowpack and drought tested
them all. Now it's time to fix it by funding policies that
stipulate the sharing of the basin's painfully finite resource:
water. The price to the federal government for implementation
has been trimmed to about $30 million a year over 15 years – a
comparatively small amount to help ensure vitality to a regional
economy worth more than $700 million annually. It's only right
that the federal government would nose into its own creation to
help set things right. Just two weeks remain in the nation's
capitol for the Klamath agreements to win congressional
authorization. As of late last week, Merkley was scrambling to
explain the dam-removal piece to colleagues as benign – and that
their removal, desired by their private owner, would send no
signals that other dams, such as federally owned behemoths on
the Snake River, could be next. He and Wyden, aware Congress
would likely do only so much in such a short time, also sought
to attach their Klamath authorizations within mega-bills
addressing tax extensions, defense authorization and
appropriations to keep the government open.
At this hour, it doesn't really matter how the authorization
takes shape so long as it does. The culture and economy of the
Klamath Basin depend upon it.
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kukui8 hours ago
Yes, there is poetry in a river.
A favorite essay of mine on the shelf is Living Water, by Ernest
Braun & David Cavagnaro. A wonderful idyll of a river from its
origins to its fusion with the sea.
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merwinwfinzork11 hours ago
It was always Fascinating to watch -- every.single.time the feds
had to take a decision on how to deal with the water in the
Klamath Basin, for years they decided to err in favor of onion
and alfalfa irrigation, at the expense of the lake, the fish,
the tribes and every other non-agriculture use. The farmers were
always happy with that -- they got water that just wasn't
theirs. The tribes had the senior water right, but it got
ignored. In essence, the farmers simply Took it without
compensation. It took years for that problem to be remediated,
but at long last some courts were courageous enough actually to
enforce The Law on the matter. The water was the tribes' - not
the farmers. Now one can P&M about that to their heart's
content, but that's the Legal side of things. There's something
about a River that's actually a River -- and not a string of
tepid lakes. It has fish in it, it flows naturally to the
ocean, and does the sorts of things that Rivers actually do, and
benefits those whose lives and well-being depend on it. Taking
the river away and just Giving it to a bunch of farmers so they
can grow things in a desert is merely to substitute one set of
commercial values for another. There is a value called Justice.
It trumps money -- or it should. Any congresscritter who would
work against Justice in favor of Money ought to have his values
seriously questioned.
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VoxDundee9 hours ago
@merwinwfinzork Right - a Great Injustice - Reparations, etc.
are in order. But...in your heart of hearts, you know full well
when push comes to shove...questions will be raised & hands
wrung vs. as to how many spuds, onions, etc. are being exported.
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merwinwfinzork4 hours ago
@VoxDundee @merwinwfinzork No -- not reparations. But
restoration, certainly. The water should go to those with the
senior water right, for whatever They choose to do with it. That
would be the tribes.
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hilaryclinto1 day ago
The Klamath water rape is NOT in the Klamath River from Oregon.
The Klamath is but one river, born of the Wood, Williamson,
Sprague Rivers, and they are combined in Klamath Lake, a
shallow lake, the largest natural one in Oregon. It leaves the
lake warmed to lethal, and collects from other streams before
the dams. And after the last dam, it enters California, to be
fed by the Shasta River (125% irrigation subscribed), the Scott
River (de-watered by irrigation with some ranch well water
Federally purchased to keep some fish alive in pools) and others
down stream, now mostly coming from watersheds destroyed by
fire in the last two decades, until if meets the Trinty River,
which is equal in flow historically. The Trinity arises from
snow fields high in the Trinity Alps. It is cold water, and
the North Fork fills Trinity Reservoir, the third largest in
California, and releases make hydro power and are caught by a
second dam, and diverted to a canal and tunnels, going through
sets of penstocks and reservoirs making more hydropower on its
way to the Sacramento River, which will convey that water to
the giant pumps in the Sacramento Delta where the water is
conveyed uphill all the way to the Westlands Irrigation
District, the largest in CA at over 600,000 acres with a right
to 3 million acre feet of the Trinity river. Before reforms the
last year of the Clinton Presidency, the WID was getting over
95% of the annual flow of the NorthFork Trinity River, the
coldest water in the Klamath Watershed. Interior Sec Babbitt
reduced that flow to the contracted 65% of annual flow.
So when the salmon died in 2002, it was because the WID would
not let a drop of THEIR water down stream for salmon. In the
interim, things have changed. Twice WID has sued to stop US Bur
Rec from releasing small amounts of water to cool the river and
keep salmon alive. Twice WID has lost. This year, 2014, was
a significant drought year, and the Klamath has had above
normal salmon returns in both 2013 and 2014. No significant
fish losses due to the naturally warm Klamath River waters. As
the sun goes south in August and Sept., the river gets shaded.
Diurnal temp ranges increase and frosts come to the highlands.
The river begins to cool as it always has. The salmon that
return early to the Federal hatchery are protected by cold water
releases from Trinity Reservoir. The First People's fishery is
successful at reducing the oxygen demand of too many salmon for
too little, too warm water. So the Indian net fisheries and
Bur Rec cold water releases have kept the river from having a
repeat of the 2002 fiasco.
However, CA Ag interests and constant litigation to gain more
water (with politicians ridiculing the ESA, from both sides of
the aisle) at the expense of ESA listed Delta smelt, various
threatened salmon runs, will not end soon. For now, the dam
issue is not the panacea suggested, but more of a political
trophy really, really desired by the soon to be minority Oregon
delegation. Too bad they didn't have the horsepower to get CA
Democrats on their side before the election. Now the issue is
to maintain the cold water releases from Trinity Reservoir.
Those are what save salmon. The last 12 years of mostly
drought have proven that tactic to be invaluable. And, with the
dams intact, no need to build new gas fired turbines to replace
the lost hydro power.
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Len Reed | lreed@oregonian.com1 day ago
@hilaryclinto Thank you for the full take on the region's
complex hydrology. As for California democrats, please note that
Sen. Ron Wyden, in announcing his and Sen. Merkley's bill to
authorize the Klamath agreements, cited key support of
California Democrats Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.
Feinstein was quoted as saying:
“California is in the midst of a historic drought, and this
bill—in particular the authorization of the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement and the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement
Agreement—will help Northern California.The three agreements
authorized by the bill will improve water supply reliability,
environmental recovery and economic growth for a wide range of
California stakeholders. These agreements also demonstrate the
benefits of different groups coming together in a spirit of
compromise and acting on behalf of the greater good.”
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chiselbit22 hours ago
@hilaryclinto There is also Klamath water diverted to the Rogue
Valley via Fourmile, Howard Prairie, and Hyatt .reservoirs..
This water used to be for orchards but most are gone replaced by
houses and golf courses. FlagShare
2LikeReply
Oyvez ismir1 day ago
Sometimes the only way to take a step forward is to take a step
backward. We overly developed western water systems, and need to
undo some of that development if we are going to preserve native
fish and wildlife. Congress needs to step up and implement the
plan agreed to by all the stakeholders. Otherwise we are in for
years of struggle with no one coming out ahead.
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VoxDundee8 hours ago
@Oyvez ismir Am I to presume this would also apply to the
Central Arizona Project (336 miles of canals, plus one million
acres of irrigated farm land, and some municipalities such as
Tucson and Phoenix, etc.)? Lot of cotton and stuff north of
Tucson.
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roos1 day ago
Sorry, but there is no solution that will turn back the clock to
the glory days of the 1950's through 1970's. They have cut down
most all of the old growth timber and, unlike the Coast Range,
the replanted forests aren't growing that well in a desertified
ecosystem. They have drained, diked, and ditched the former
Basin wetlands and extended the farmland into areas that require
pumping water uphill or drilling wells that require more pumping
from a shrinking aquifer. What the dreamers and, now, the
Oregonian Editorial Board propose will only succeed if Congress
appropriates a ton of money to subsidize the economics back into
an overwrought ecosystem. This would simply up the ante on a
classic case of welfare farming. This is great farmland, but
there needs to be a limit on the number of irrigated acres as
well as the level of government subsidy. FlagShare
4LikeReply
Len Reed | lreed@oregonian.com1 day ago
@roos Your term "overwrought ecosystem" may well apply. But the
2010 agreements awaiting congressional authorization now do
limit irrigation. There seems ample recognition the basin is
oversubscribed for its limited water.
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choctaw19521 day ago
The government has done enough damage here. Go away. FlagShare
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Len Reed | lreed@oregonian.com1 day ago
@choctaw1952 Going away -- the government? farms already there?
tribes? -- is not an option. Recognizing that the basin cannot
support all activities in place is the first step in devising a
rational plan forward. The agreements in need of congressional
action provide that first step.
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bifocal1 day ago
That agreement was hard to come by and should by respected by
act of congress. Walden's intransigence won't make more water
for the ranchers. Nobody benefits from those particular dams
anymore. FlagShare LikeReply
Len Reed | lreed@oregonian.com1 day ago
@bifocal The dams are assets held by a private utility wishing
for their removal. Their generating output is modest, perhaps
half that of a modest wind farm. Their condition is old -- one
of them is earthen -- and they U.S. government makes relicensing
of them contingent upon fish passage and efficiency upgrades
that would cost ratepayers far more than the costs of removal.
But the dams symbolize something powerful to many, and their
removal is feared as a precedent-setting threat to federal dams,
hardly the case and faulty in the logic. Rep. Walden's
opposition to dam removal, we are told by his office, is rooted
in local opposition to their removal.
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Oyvez ismir22 hours ago
@Len Reed | lreed@oregonian.com @bifocal Well said Mr Red. Dams
as symbols rather than value. Some are just not worth the
upkeep.
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thesaurusrex1 day ago
This is the kind of mess we get ourselves in when Washington
D.C. interferes with local things beyond its Constitutional
jurisdiction. Perhaps it is reasonable to ask D.C. to fix the
mess it created, but let's learn the larger lesson as well.
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EaglesPDX1 day ago
Sure...buyout all the farmers that the US setup to farm in the
high desert in misguided WPA Depression era jobs project. US
has spent and continues to spend millions subsidizing growing
crops in a desert.
Take down all the dams and levies. The fish, game and land
restoration will provide many more jobs and income via hunting,
fishing, recreation, hotel, restaurant industries both directly
and indirectly than we get from farming a dry, arid area that
was never meant to be farmland and can only be farmed by
destroying the once very productive fish and game populations.
There will be thousands of short term (1-5 year) construction
jobs in doing all the work, fair payments to existing farmers
for land and new jobs and industry after land and watershed are
restored.
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boomslang22 hours ago
@EaglesPDX If you take out all the dams, salmon will die,
rafters will be pissed and Farmers in So Oregon and Norcal will
cease to exist. Property values will drop and both states will
have less revenue. Your plan is perfect! (read sarcasm).
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