Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Stakeholders, administration officials meet
Balance sought in water needs for
rural, municipal, ecological uses
By SARA
HOTTMAN, Herald and News Sept 24, 2010
A group of stakeholders in the nation’s water supply —
farmers, businesses, municipalities, environmental agencies,
tribes — met with Obama administration officials last week
in Washington, D.C., to discuss recommendations on how to
balance municipal, rural and ecological water needs.
The
recommendations came from the Johnson Foundation Freshwater
Summit in June, where a group of 175 experts compiled a set
of problems and solutions with water management across the
country into a report called “Charting New Waters: A call to
action to address U.S. freshwater challenges.”
“It was an
example of really diverse interests coming together,” said
Dan Keppen, executive director of the Family Farm Alliance,
an advocacy group for Western farmers. “There are entities
in this report we have traditionally been adversaries with,
but we came together and found common ground . . . to find
ways to streamline the regulatory process when it comes to
management in water issues.”
Keppen, of Klamath
Falls, was among stakeholders invited to the meeting. One of
the main topics at the forum, he said, was the
need to better
coordinate water management between federal agencies.
Keppen used the Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement as “a specific example of where
innovative things were happening,”
coordinating water management among many stakeholders, in
particular the Klamath Reclamation Project management plan
it establishes.
Different
requirements
Without the plan, one
agency required water for coho salmon in the Klamath River,
another required water for the sucker in Clear Lake
Reservoir, and “by the time that got done, there’s not
enough water to take care of irrigation needs,” Keppen said.
“That’s happening across the board.”
Farmers in California’s Central Valley for years have
suffered water shortages because of environmental protection
rulings. Three years ago, a severe drought left Southern
states fighting over water, and urban areas in the West are
increasingly worried about keeping a sufficient water supply
for economic and population growth.
Side Bar
Report’s proposed water allocation solutions
The report offers
solutions on how to address water allocation issues:
• Improve
coordination of management across scales and sectors.
Management systems are currently overgrown, and need to be
pared down to emphasize state and local cooperation and
management.
• Enhance effectiveness of existing regulatory tools. Update and enhance current regulatory tools — Clean Water Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Farm Bill — so they address contemporary water issues. • Promote efficient, environmentally wise water management, use and delivery. Launch a dedicated effort to research, develop and implement water technology for energy and treatment to make water use more efficient. • Ensure decision-making is based on sound science and data. Invest in streamlining data gathering and analysis for consistent, accurate conclusions. • Employ a long-range adaptive approach to planning and management. Implement flexible strategies so water stakeholders can adapt to constantly changing conditions. • Account for the full cost of water, and invest in sustainable water infrastructure. Water utilities and other water users should track and report the full cost of their services and consumption to lead to better understanding of the cost to obtain, treat and deliver water. • Educate the public about challenges and solutions. Teach people about the role of water in municipalities, agriculture and the ecosystem so they can understand its importance. • Develop and validate methods for freshwater ecosystem services markets. Quantify the benefits that lakes, rivers and wetlands provide, as well as the cost of their detriment. |
Page Updated: Wednesday September 29, 2010 02:18 AM Pacific
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