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Feds
find Klamath irrigation still hard on fish
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GRANTS PASS,
Ore. (AP) -- The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said Tuesday that
operating the federal irrigation project in the upper Klamath
Basin is likely to continue causing problems for fish protected by
the Endangered Species Act. The
biological assessment of Klamath Reclamation Project operations
from 2008 through 2017 concludes there is still a long way to go
to protect endangered suckers and threatened coho salmon in the The
assessment will be analyzed by NOAA Fisheries, the agency in
charge of restoring salmon, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, the agency in charge of restoring Bureau of
Reclamation said it would meet court-ordered minimum flows down
the The move
would also leave more water in The Klamath
Project irrigates about 1,400 farms covering 180,000 acres
straddling the Oregon-California border in the high desert east of
the Farmers
fighting to avoid a repeat of the 2001 irrigation shutoff said
they hoped that $500 million in federal money spent on
improvements to habitat and the irrigation system since the 2001
water shutoff would translate into more flexibility for irrigation
operations, instead of the hard numbers of minimum lake levels and
river flows imposed by court orders. Greg
Addington of the Klamath Water Users Association said they came
within less than an inch of seeing irrigation water shut off for a
couple weeks last summer to maintain a minimum level in The lake is
the primary habitat for endangered suckers, as well as the primary
reservoir for the irrigation project and the source of the Jim McCarthy
of Oregon Wild, a conservation group, said the idea of reducing
fall flows to increase spring flows was too risky for fish. "What
we are looking for is reducing risk for endangered species and
increasing the chance of a recovery," said McCarthy.
"This plan unfortunately looks like it shifts more risk onto
the fish." |
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