Mount Shasta, Calif. - While much of the news
surrounding the Klamath River appears to be mired in
controversy, Amy Campbell of the Shasta Valley Resource
Conservation District (RCD) has a much different story
to tell.
“What I really want people to understand is that,
despite all of the controversy, there are good things
happening (along the Klamath and its tributaries),” she
said, referring specifically to the recently completed
Shasta River Water Association dam removal project,
which has replaced an aging flashboard diversion dam and
its accompanying pump system with an upgraded fish
friendly alternative.
It is a “win-win” situation, explained Campbell, noting
that the new boulder weir system allows the river to
flow unobstructed, yet it still pushes enough water into
the pumps to allow for irrigation. (Prior to the
installation of the new systems, a dam was necessary to
keep the pumps supplied with water.)
Second major dam
project on the Shasta
This is the second project of its kind in the Shasta
River, the first being the removal of the Aruja dam,
which lies just below the Shasta River Water Association
dam. Together, the two projects have ushered in an era
of enhanced management practices that allow Shasta
Valley irrigators access to their adjudicated water
right while also improving fish habitat, fish passage
and overall water quality.
Collaborative effort
Though the Shasta Valley RCD has served as the
coordinating agency for both of the dam removal
projects, they are certainly not alone in their
efforts. In fact, both projects have been fully funded
from grants received by a variety of agencies, including
the Natural Resource Conservation Service, the US Fish
and Wildlife Service and the California Department of
Fish and Game, among others.
Campbell noted that much of the funding for the recently
completed project came from Prop 50 funds and was
managed by the State Water Board, NOA, the US Fish and
Wildlife Service and Fish and Game.
“It truly has been a collaborative effort on every
level,” said Campbell, noting that the upgrades have
come at no cost to the irrigators and put them a step
closer to complying with water quality standards
established for the Shasta River, as well as meeting the
needs of threatened salmon and other aquatic species.
Rich salmon history
The Shasta River once supported record high salmon
populations, with its coho (silver) salmon populations
standing as one of the largest in the state. This is
due, in part, to the many cold water springs that line
the river’s upper reaches, providing the cooler water
temperatures that salmon need for survival.
As is the case with salmon throughout the state, the
numbers have dwindled dramatically.. “The public really
needs to know about how dire the Shasta River coho run
is becoming,” said Campbell. Last year, 31 coho salmon
returned to the Shasta to spawn.
It is Campbell’s hope that by removing the aging
flashboard dams and replacing them with the upgraded
irrigation systems that this downward trend can be
thwarted.
Navigating the funding
stream
Though grant funding had been secured for the entire
five million dollar project, Campbell noted that there
was a six month period in which the promised grant
payments were not being distributed.
Campbell reported that funding was reestablished in July
and the RCD was able to meet its financial obligations
to the project contractors. ”We were in debt $850,000 as
of the end of June,” she said, emphasizing the
difficulty that the situation presented.
She said that Timber Works Construction of Mt. Shasta
went without payment on a substantial contract for its
irrigation pipe installation efforts but that everything
is back on track. She applauded their patience and
willingness to continue their work, despite the lengthy
lapse in funding. She also applauded the efforts of the
Siskiyou County Supervisors, who lobbied to restore the
funding flow and ensure that all contracts were
honored.
Despite the setbacks, construction continued and the
project was completed in time for the beginning of the
April irrigation season.
Upgrades part of Shasta
River irrigation history
The Shasta River Water Association Dam was the second
dam on the river, built in 1912, and the irrigation
district was created by Dr. Dwinnell (whose name
accompanies Lake Shastina’s Dwinnell Dam). Dwinnell was
instrumental in the overall development Shasta Valley
irrigation development.
The orignal dam was a “flashboard dam” that allowed
boards to be place in the main channel that would divert
water to adjacent ditches.
Incorporated into the Shasta River system was a pump
system that, noted Hanson, despite its age had weathered
quite well.
However, the new system is able to pull the necessary
water into the pump bays without having to block the
river in any way. It does this through two boulder
weirs (also known as “Newberry Riffles”) which, through
the careful placement of stream bottom boulders, create
the hydrology necessary to direct water towards the
irrigation pumps.
The two riffles, coupled with the configuration of the
river and the placement of the pumping bays, maintain
the pumping capacity without having to block river. The
system is designed with specially designed fish screens
that keep fish and other aquatic out of the pumps.
Campbell credited Shasta Valley dairy man Albert Sandahl
as the “original visionary” for the project, noting
that he was the first to get funding from the Natural
Resources Conservation District for the project.
As with any new system, there are typically setbacks,
noted Campbell. Other than the unexpected funding
hiatus, there was the issue of getting the system
installed and functional by the start of the irrigation
season. A setback that jeopardized access to irrigation
water would have been disasterous, explained Campbell.
“We’ve had some growing pains,” she said, speaking of
the task of breaking in the new irrigation system. “But
we’re getting things dialed in.”
The system as a whole has the potential to deliver 45
cu/ft per second of water and has an upgraded variable
frequency pumps.
The bigger picture
Campbell said that the monitoring efforts, which have
been in place since before the project began, have
shown that since the dam’s removal, the temperature
spikes (periods where the water temperature increases
dramatically) have diminished. This, she explained, is
a good sign, as variations in water temperature are
attributed to poor fish habitat.
Campbell reiterated her hope that her organization’s dam
replacement efforts will have the desired effect of
improving fish passage and water quality while still
meeting the irrigator’s needs. It is, however, an
incremental process, Campbell stated, noting that there
are numberous variables contributing to fish population
declines.
“This project is a step in a series of steps,” she
reiterated.
Apples and Oranges
Campbell emphasized that comparing the dam removal of
small irrigation dams on the Shasta River to the larger
hydro-electric dams on the main stem of the Klamath is
like comparing apples to oranges. They are different on
so many levels, she said, that she was hesitant to make
any direct comparisons.
Campbell, instead, returned to the fact the Shasta River
Water Association project is a small (but significant)
bit of good news for a river system plagued by
controversy and divisiveness.