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River flows to increase for fish
The decision not
expected to hurt overall lake levels
By SARA HOTTMAN,
Herald and News 2/9/11
Flows will be three
times their current cubic feet per second rate, going
from 1,600 cfs to 5,000 cfs for six hours, and then
decreasing to 1,300 cfs.
The increased flows
are not expected to hurt irrigators, who want Upper
Klamath Lake full at the beginning of April.
“The lake’s in good
shape right now,” said Greg Addington, director of the
Klamath Water Users Association. “That’s a lot of water,
but I don’t feel like the lake is in jeopardy of not
filling because of it.”
Tuesday afternoon
the lake was at 4,141.9 feet. It must be at least
4,141.5 feet at the end of the month. But Jason
Phillips, area manager for
the Bureau of
Reclamation’s Klamath Basin office, said he was
concerned that a biological opinion requiring high flows
from the lake down the Klamath River in the spring could
prematurely lower lake levels.
A complaint by
PacifiCorp, parent company of Pacific Power, filed in
January was the catalyst for the increased flows,
according to Kevin Moore, spokesman for the Bureau of
Reclamation’s Klamath Basin office.
The company said
reduced flows could hurt its hydroelectric dam
operation. PacifiCorp owns four dams on the Klamath
River.
“Once they lodged
the complaint, the parties began to work toward its
resolution,” Moore said. “Through the work of the
(Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement) partners to
resolve the complaint, it made the variable flows
possible.”
Complaint
filed
In mid-January,
PacifiCorp filed the complaint with the federal
government, saying the Bureau didn’t provide adequate
notice about reduced flows in the Klamath River as
required in Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement.
The company ’s four dams produce about 2 percent of
Pacific Power’s hydroelectric
power.
In January, the
Bureau’s Klamath Basin office said flows should remain
low — between 1,100 and 1,300 cfs — through February.
Parties involved in
the KHSA convened their hydrologists and biologists and
worked up variable flows that alleviated PacifiCorp’s
complaint and were within the confines of the National
Marine Fisheries Service biological opinion, Moore said.
“They’re working
together to accomplish the goals contained in the NMFS
biological opinion and the need for PacifiCorp to
provide power in the most efficient manner,”
Moore said.
The biological
opinion protects endangered coho salmon in the Klamath
River. It allows
In this case,
officials say higher flows will flush disease - causing
parasites in the fish population below the Iron Gate
Dam.
The committee
comprises hydrologists and biologists from the National
Marine Fisheries Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv
ice, Bureau of Reclamation, PacifiCorp and tribes.
Moore said the committee is still looking at how long the reduced flows will last.
“They’re still in
discussions,” he said. “It’s a continuing effort by that
team to determine what’s in the best interest of
everyone involved — irrigators, salmon, suckers.”
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Page Updated: Friday February 11, 2011 03:13 AM Pacific
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