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by Dan Bacher
November 15, 2008
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger never misses an
opportunity to push his environmentally
destructive and enormously costly $ 9.3 billion
water bond proposal to build two new reservoirs
and "improved conveyance" - the peripheral
canal.
True to his role as the "Fish Terminator," the
Governor used a press conference that he
appeared at with Interior Secretary Dirk
Kempthorne and Mike Chrisman, California
Secretary of Resources, in Los Angeles Friday to
promote building new dams in California the day
after an agreement in principle was reached
between Oregon, California, PacifiCorp and the
Bush administration over Klamath Dam removal.
"We are here today to celebrate something really
big, which is a great victory for the
environment of California," Schwarzenegger
gushed. "With the Klamath River Agreement we are
making actual history, because this will be the
biggest dam removal project ever in the history
and the biggest one in the United States. So
this is great for California and this is really
great also for Oregon."
He then touted the tentative pact as a
consensus-style, win-win situation for the
Klamath Basin. "And I'm very proud that everyone
here worked together, because something like
this cannot be done if not everyone is
cooperating and working together, if it is
environmentalists, if it is the farmers, the
Native American tribes, salmon fishermen, the
state and the federal agencies, the PacifiCorp,
everyone, and I want to thank them all for their
great cooperation. Everyone cares so much about
the magnificent river and also the water quality
and the fish population, and that is why this
came about," Schwarzenegger gushed.
After making that statement, of course,
Schwarzenegger just had to promote building new
dams and sub-surface water storage, although he
didn't specifically mention "improved
conveyance" - the peripheral canal. In numerous
press conferences and photo opportunities over
the past two years, Schwarzenegger and Senator
Dianne Feinstein have campaigned for a water
bond measure that would two new unneeded
reservoirs, Temperance Flats on the San Joaquin
River and Sites on the west side of the
Sacramento Valley, in spite of the fact that
water in both watersheds is dramatically
over-appropriated already and the chances are
that these dams would never fill anyway.
"Now, let me just say that we all know that we
have a very serious water problem in California
and, of course, we want to make sure that we
build more water storage, above-the-ground and
below-the-ground water storage, but they have to
be strategically located," stated
Schwarzenegger, changing from his role as the
"Green Governor" to "Arnold the Dam Builder."
"So this is why it is important that we continue
building those, even though we want to take four
down," Scharzenegger claimed. "I've been
worried, of course, about our declining salmon
population, and with this agreement here we are
setting the stage for the return of the historic
salmon runs on the Klamath River."
Missed in most media reports of the agreement is
Schwarzenegger's expectation that this agreement
could become a "quid pro quo" to sacrifice the
California Delta fish and Central Valley chinook
salmon species, now in an unpredented state of
collapse, for removing dams on the Klamath.
A coalition of recreational anglers, commercial
fishermen, Indian Tribes, conservationists and
Delta farmers is strongly opposing
Schwarzenegger's campaign to put a water bond
including a peripheral canal and more dams on
the ballot this coming year. Although massive
opposition to dams and the canal prevented the
Governor and allies from putting the proposal on
the November ballot, dam and canal opponents
fear that he and his corporate agribusiness
backers will try to get the water bond on the
June ballot.
Supporters of fish restoration in the Central
Valley and the Delta fear that the water bond
will result in building the infrastructure to
increase water exports out of the Delta to
Southern California and drainage-impaired land
on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley.
Central Valley chinook salmon, Delta smelt,
longfin smelt, threadfin shad, striped bass and
other fish populations have crashed in recent
years, due to record increases in water exports,
declining water quality and other factors. More
dams and a peripheral canal would only
exacerbate the deplorable condition of Delta
fish and Central Valley chinook salmon, fish
advocates point out.
After Schwarzenegger spoke, Kempthorne and
Chrisman lauded the Klamath agreement also and
praised Schwarzenegger for his environmental
"leadership."
"If the data collected during the next four
years shows that removal is environmentally
prudent, the target for removing all four of the
dams is the year 2020," said Kempthorne. "I
appreciate the great leadership of Governor
Schwarzenegger not only for staying at the table
for these negotiations, but also for providing a
platform by which Californians and Oregonians
will have a future in the Klamath Basin through
the restoration agreement."
I love it - here we have Kempthorne, the
Secretary of the Interior for the worst-ever
administration for fish and the environment in
U.S. history, praising Schwarzenegger, the
worst-ever Governor for fish and the environment
in California history, for the Governor's "great
leadership" on the environment!
The Yurok, Karuk and Klamath Tribes, California
Trout, Trout Unlimited, the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen's Associations, American
Rivers, two farming organizations and other
conservation groups are touting the pact, after
several long years of negotiations in the
parallel Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement
process, as being an important first step toward
dam removal and the restoration of the declining
salmon runs of the Klamath River.
The Hoopa Valley Tribe, North Coast
Environmental Center and Oregon Wild are
opposing the agreement for a variety of reasons,
most notably because the agreement is
non-binding and unenforceable and could become a
bailout for Klamath Basin agriculture.
Friends of the River Questions Pact
Friends of the River, a statewide conservation
organization based in Sacramento, is critical of
the agreement for a multitude of reasons,
including the timing of the agreement's release
as well as its controversial content, including
the linking of Klamath Restoration to
Schwarzenegger's water bond proposal.
"The actual agreement did not become available
to all Klamath settlement stakeholders until the
afternoon of November 12 when members of the
Klamath Settlement Group received a briefing
from state and federal officials and
PacifiCorp," said Steven Evans and Kelly Catlett
of Friends of the River (FOR) in a statement
Friday. "The agreement has not been approved by
numerous other stakeholders, including Friends
of the River, that have been involved in the
federal relicensing of the Klamath River hydro
dams for several years. It remains purely a
product produced and endorsed by a sub-set of
parties."
The organization is also wary of the many
conditions that need to be met for dam removal
to take place. These conditions include:
• Full protection for PacifiCorp from all
liability.
• Placing a $200 million cap on dam removal
costs to be recovered from Oregon and California
ratepayers.
• A commitment from the State of California to
provide $250 million in dam removal costs
through a water bond to be approved by state
voters.
• A commitment to attempt federal legislation to
authorize and fund the controversial $1 billion
Klamath Basin Settlement deal, which would
provide water and power guarantees to Klamath
Basin farmers.
• Agreement by the states to forego exercising
their 401 permitting authority under the Clean
Water Act to reduce polluted discharge from the
dams.
• State legislation bypassing the authority of
the respective state utility commissions
concerning ratepayer cost recovery.
• Putting the FERC relicensing process on hold
until a federal study is completed by 2012 that
will determine whether the benefits of dam
removal justify the cost.
"Although Friends of the River believes that a
concession in writing from PacifiCorp to remove
the dams is a step in the right direction, we
have significant concerns about the workability
of the agreement in principle," Evans and
Catlett said. "Foremost, the agreement has so
many prerequisites that MUST occur before dam
removal can happen that it would likely never
result in the removal of any dams."
Echoing my concerns that Schwarzenegger is
trying to link Klamath Dam removal to the
building of new dams in the Central Valley,
Evans and Catlett noted that California will
likely rely on a proposed water bond to be
approved by the voters in 2009 to provide the
$250 million for river restoration outlined in
the agreement.
"Conservationists will oppose this water bond if
it also includes billions of dollars to build
new or enlarge existing dams in California,"
they stated. "Coupled with the fact that voters
may be leery of approving a multi-billion bond
as the state economy continues to melt down, the
prospect of the state to meet its obligation
under the agreement seems dubious."
They also said the agreement in principle does
not spell out who will be responsible for dam
removal costs above and beyond the $450 million
that would supposedly be covered by ratepayers
and the State of California.
"The assumption that the federal government will
produce the legislation and authorizations
needed to implement the Klamath Basin Settlement
is also questionable," they contended.
"Opposition has delayed by more than two years
the congressional approval of similar
legislation to implement the San Joaquin River
Restoration Settlement. With a price tag that is
four times larger than the San Joaquin
Settlement and given the declining state of the
economy, it seems likely that any Klamath Basin
Settlement legislation would be subject to
similar attacks, particularly since many groups
in Oregon and California oppose the Basin
Settlement."
The federal and state agencies hope to come to a
final agreement with PacifiCorp in June 2009.
The process will include other stakeholders
moving forward, but in what capacity is still
undetermined at this time, according to Evans
and Catlett.
They are also concerned that interim measures
adopted until dam removal takes place will be
not sufficient to protect salmon and steelhead
populations hammered by low, warm water
conditions nor protect people, fish, animals
from the toxic algae blooms created by
PacifiCorp's Iron Gate and Copco reservoirs on
the Klamath. While recreational and commercial
salmon fishing this year was closed in ocean
waters off California and Oregon, due to the
collapse of Central Valley fall run chinook
salmon, in 2006 commercial salmon fishing was
severely restricted because of the Klamath River
salmon decline spurred by the Bush
administration-engineered fish kills of 2002.
"It is unclear whether interim operations
measures adopted after the final agreement is
signed in June 2009 will be sufficient to reduce
pollution in the Klamath River and adequately
protect salmon and steelhead," they concluded.
"But these are the measures that will be in
place until the dams are actually removed."
I have worked closely on both the Klamath and
California Delta restoration battles with
recreational anglers, commercial fishermen,
California Indian Tribes, farmers and
environmentalists -and I greatly respect and
support all of the stakeholders for the enormous
time, money and effort that they have put into
the battle to bring down Warren Buffett's
Klamath River dams.
I agree with FOR that the unprecedented
concession in writing from PacifiCorp to remove
the dams on Thursday is a step in the right
direction. I also agree with Evans and Catlett
in their critical assessment of the Klamath
agreement, particularly in regard to the
apparent trade off between Klamath dam removal
and the construction of new dams that
Schwarzenegger and the Bush administration are
pushing.
The final agreement is set to be signed by the
states, federal government and PacifiCorp in
June 2009. This gives us time to put intense and
unrelenting political pressure on the incoming
Obama administration to remove any connection to
a canal/dam water bond in this agreement, as
well strike out other troubling provisions of
the tentative agreement.
This is a non binding agreement only and
hopefully a more fish-friendly and
environmentally-proactive administration in
Washington willl craft an improved final
agreement that doesn't trade dam removal for new
dams and a peripheral canal - that doesn't
restore the Klamath River at the expense of the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, the largest
and most significant estuary on the West Coast.
We must restore both the Delta and Klamath River
at the same time - and must emphasize to the
incoming Obama administration the urgent need to
restore the declining salmon and other fish
populations in both watersheds!
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