http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/articles/2006/03/21/news/news1.txt
Citizens voice concerns over water demands
YREKA - About 75 people
attended a four-hour public comment period conducted
by the California Regional Water Quality Control
Board (RWQCB) Wednesday night, all very concerned
about the demands being placed upon irrigators who
take water from the Shasta River. A technical
presentation detailing the scientific justification
for amending a plan to improve water quality
standards in the Shasta River and how RWQCB intends
to implement that plan was given by representatives
of the North Coast Region of the RWQCB.
The Shasta River is one of
the main tributaries to the Klamath River. RWQCB
staff have collected temperature monitoring and
oxygen level data along all 42 miles of the Shasta
River from Dwinnell Dam at Lake Shastina to where it
flows into the Klamath River at Highway 96.
From those readings, RWQCB has determined that high
water temperatures and low dissolved oxygen levels
as measured at those monitoring points are causing a
decline in salmon populations in the Shasta and
Klamath rivers.
The RWQCB says they have been studying water quality
in the Shasta River for more than 10 years and from
those studies, they have come up with a number of
recommendations intended to improve water quality in
the river. Specific recommendations include an
increase in riparian shade, minimizing tail water
return flows from irrigation users, increasing
stream flows from Big Springs Creek by 50 percent,
re-engineering or limiting the way irrigation
districts take water from the river, and obtaining
an engineering study of potential reductions in
nitrogen levels at Dwinnell Dam.
In addition, even though the
city of Yreka's water treatment plant was recently
upgraded, RWQCB staff say the facility has recently
suffered storm damage and its operations must be
reviewed by RWQCB to determine what impact, if any,
that is having on the river.
Many of the people who attended Wednesday's meeting
are long time farmers and ranchers in the Shasta
Valley and dispute the contention by RWQCB that
increasing flows in Big Springs Creek will lower
water temperatures, or that that amount of increase
in flow is even possible.
Rancher Blair Hart and a member of the Shasta Valley
Regional Conservation District and the Shasta River
CRMP said increasing water flows out of Big Springs
Creek by 50 percent “is physically un-doable. The
water just is not there.”
Hart also added, “To try and come up with an
efficient way to use water in this valley that will
keep everybody in business and also put water back
in the river is going to be tough, because of the
rock formations and geology here.” However, RWQCB
engineer, Matt St. John disagreed, saying historic
flows out of Big Springs Creek are within the range
of those identified by RWQCB when they came up with
the 50-percent increase scenario.
Siskiyou County Farm Advisor Dan Drake presented his
own calculations and research figures about the
amount of flow in Big Springs Creek and the impact
that flow has on water temperature, which disagreed
drastically with the data relied upon by RWQCB.
Hart expressed a serious concern that if Shasta
Valley water users cannot meet the criteria that the
board is setting to improve water quality within a
five-year time limit, “that there is a possibility
of re-adjudication (of water rights) and that scares
the thunder out of everyone here,” Hart said. When
it was suggested that the potential for
re-adjudication be eliminated from the language in
the plan document, North Coast Region executive
director Catherine Coleman said, “I don't think we
are going to go quite that far.”
Addressing the suggestion that increasing riparian
shade by planting trees along the banks of the river
could lower temperatures in the river, Tim Louie
said, “My family has been in Big Springs since 1859.
Big Springs and Little Springs never flood and run
between 56 and 58 degrees year round, so you are
already starting with warm water.” Louie said family
photos of trees and vegetation growing along the
river's edge in the early 1900s are virtually the
same as they are today, adding that getting trees to
grow in some areas of the Shasta Valley is almost
impossible.
The Montague Water Conservation District is the
owner of the Dwinnell Dam and is being required by
RWQCB to hire an engineer to study a nitrogen
reduction strategy for Lake Shastina. That study
will have to be completed within five years.
Montague district board member, Stan Sears,
complained that his district did not have the money
to pay for that study and asked Coleman for a cost
estimate to complete such a study. "We'll get back
to you on that," Coleman said, but added that other
communities like Lake Shastina, Edgewood and Weed
who may have an impact on the quality of the water
at Lake Shastina may be required to participate in
the funding of the study.
The Grenada Irrigation District, the Montague Water
Conservation District, Big Springs Irrigation
District and the Shasta Water Users could all be
affected by RWQCB's requirement that the way those
districts take water from the Shasta River will have
to be re-engineered or limited. Potentially those
irrigation districts could be required to move their
dams, or have them re-engineered and reconstructed
to comply with RWQCB specifications. The districts
have two years to complete their studies and advise
RWQCB of the upgrades they intend to make in their
water retrieval systems.
Even though a number of beneficial uses were listed
for the waters of the Shasta River, fish were at the
top of the list during the RWQCB presentation. “We
feel pretty good about the science that we have,”
Coleman said, adding “Anything we can do to ...
leave water in the river for fish, we want to
support.”
Patrick Griffin, Siskiyou County's ag commissioner,
expressed concern that increased flows in the river
will be made at a high cost to Shasta Valley
growers. “It does not matter where you take the
water from, it will affect agriculture,” Griffin
said. “I am the ag commissioner and my mission is to
protect and promote agriculture in the county.
People are going to be very cooperative until you
take their water, and then you will see some
resistance,” Griffin added.
Jack Cowley, a Little Shasta rancher expressed
concern that RWQCB was placing little or no emphasis
on agriculture in its decision making process. “The
amount of beef produced in the Shasta Valley amounts
to $7 million in new money flowing into this area,”
Cowley said. “That same amount of money has been
providing beef for 93,000 people in the U.S., so it
is a significant amount and I want to make certain
that we take into consideration agriculture as a
beneficial use.”
Coleman said it was her hope to continue to work
with landowners and the Shasta Valley Resource
Conservation District to accomplish the goals of the
RWQCB.
After the meeting, Siskiyou County Supervisor for
District 1, Jim Cook, said, “We have been
complaining bitterly about this whole implementation
plan.” Cook said it took several years to develop
the data utilized in the plan, but the
written version was put together in less than four
months and was never shown to anyone affected by it
until its release. According to Cook, the short time
line to get all these things done - in some cases as
little as two years - is setting water users up for
failure so that RWQCB can say, “No, you have not
done anything, so sorry, we're taking your water,”
Cook said.
“Farmers and ranchers in the Shasta Valley have been
studying water quality on their own for more than 15
years and at a time when the people who wrote this
draft plan were still in grade school,” Cook said.
“We are trying desperately to make sure they
re-write the document so that it is understandable
to everyone,” Cook added.
“The farmers and ranchers of the Shasta Valley are
in business and will do what they have to to stay in
business,” Cook said. “We are trying to make sure
they (RWQCB) do not remove agriculture as a
beneficial use at the cost of fish,” Cook said.
The public comment period to address the Shasta
River TMDL Action Plan runs between Feb. 7 and April
3. The last day for written comments was extended
another 10 days to April 3. After public comment
closes, an adoption hearing will be held on May 17
by the RWQCB Board in Fortuna.
To submit written comments, contact the North Coast
Regional Water Quality Control Board at 5550 Skylane
Blvd., Suite A, Santa Rosa, CA 95403, to the
attention of Lauren Clyde.
For details about the proposed plan, you can visit
the RWQCB Web site at http:/www.waterboards.ca.gov/northcoast/programs/tmdl/shasta/shasta.html
or contact the North Coast office in Santa Rosa at
(707) 576-2674.
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