Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
KBC News
Little to No water for Klamath Project Farms in 2021
From Klamath Water Users Association
April 8 , 2021
Dear
Editor, and Dear Neighbors:
Klamath Project irrigators find themselves in a situation
that is eerily similar to 2001.
Unfortunately, there will be extremely minimal to no water
from Upper Klamath Lake for irrigation this year. This will
not change for the 2021 crop season, regardless of current
efforts in various venues to make things work for
irrigators. Upper Klamath Lake has been breaking records for
low inflows every day for the past month and the forecast
shows no meaningful precipitation. There are other problems
that we all understand and on which we will be heard. Here
we are simply being the messengers for extremely bad news.
Farmers and ranchers do not receive salaries. They pay
mortgages, property taxes, irrigation districts assessments,
and try to provide for their families. They provide good
jobs for good people. They share this place with abundant
wildlife. If the farms and our community survive, it will
take upwards of eight good irrigation years to financially
recover, not to mention the legacy effect on the future of
our farming families.
With
the efforts and cooperation of districts, irrigators, and
our community, the Project has made the most of many poor
situations in the past. This year, the tools to make this
work simply are not sufficient to align supply with demand.
Unfortunately, our only hope as a community is to seek
federal funding to get the most out of any water that can be
had, prevent foreclosures, and to keep a core workforce
employed. We thank Senators Wyden, Merkley, and Feinstein,
who are working hard to help in that effort. And we are
grateful for the ongoing support from Representatives Bentz
and LaMalfa.
We are
well aware of the impact to the business communi
ty that is reliant on agricultural production in the basin, and we are very sorry for the pain they will experience. We will continue pursuing strategies to correct fundamental problems in the basin, advocate common sense, and begin work with responsible parties so that we are not in this impossible and unnatural situation again in the future.
There
will be much more to say, but our message today is that we
must assume that our farms will receive no meaningful amount
of water from Upper Klamath Lake this year, and plan
accordingly.
We ask
our communities to do what we can to get through this year,
and fervently hope that we can weather the storm together.
We must not support or tolerate action that is
counterproductive or unlawful, which only tarnishes the
image of this remarkable community. Take care of your
families. Take care of your neighbors.
We are
united in our commitment to preserve this community, provide
for our posterity, and feed the world.
Sincerely,1 /s/ Ben DuVal Ben DuVal, President KLAMATH WATER
USERS ASSOCIATION
/s/ Ty
Kliewer Ty Kliewer, President KLAMATH IRRIGATION DISTRICT
/s/
John Crawford John Crawford, President TULELAKE IRRIGATION
DISTRICT
/s/
Jason Flowers Jason Flowers, President KLAMATH DRAINAGE
DISTRICT
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