Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Bureau: Only some irrigators get water
Just one-third of
Project likely to have water this year
by
JOEL ASCHBRENNER, Herald and News 3/14/12
As it stands now, enough
water will be available for
only irrigators with “A
contracts,” those in the Klamath and Tulelake irrigation
districts and the Van Brimmer Ditch Co., said Kevin Moore,
spokesman with
the Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Basin area office.
So-called “B users,”
those with younger water contracts in other irrigation
districts, most likely won’t receive surface water.
Significant shortages
likely
“If precipitation does
not increase significantly over the next few months,
significant water shortages are likely during the upcoming
2012 irrigation season,” said Bureau of Reclamation area
manager Jason Phillips in a letter to irrigators.
The Bureau will have a
better idea of how much water will be available in early
April, Moore said. That’s when it plans to release its 2012
operations plan for the Klamath Project.
About 110,000 acres of
the approximately 170,000-acre Klamath Project have “A
contracts” for water, said Hollie Cannon, executive director
of the Klamath Water and Power Agency.
To mitigate the expected
water shortage, the agency has developed groundwater pumping
and land idling programs, which, respectively, pay
irrigators to pump well water or give up their water
allocation for the year. Nearly 150 irrigators applied to
pump well water. The deadline to apply for land idling is
Friday.
“It’s our goal to get
every acre wet that producers
want to irrigate,”
Cannon said.
Irrigators have been
worried for months that 2012 would be a drought year.
Snowpack in the region has not fully rebounded from an
unusually dry stretch, when the Klamath Basin received
virtually no precipitation between Thanksgiving and
Christmas.
Many hope heavy spring
precipitation will improve
the water forecast and
make more water available for irrigation. That’s what
happened in 2010, another drought year when B users were
told they would not receive water. Heavy rains in May and
June of that year increased flows to Upper Klamath Lake and
provided additional water for irrigators, Cannon said.
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