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California
Trout and Trout Unlimited:
Klamath Agreement Sets Stage for Dam Removal
by Dan
Bacher
Tuesday Jan 15th, 2008
2:50 PM
Severn
Williams of California Trout, Chuck Bonham from Trout Unlimited, Steve
Rothert of
American
Rivers
and Brian Barr from the
National
Center
for Conservation Science
& Policy issued a press release this afternoon supporting the
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement. "The agreement marks a major
stride forward in bringing peace to the
Klamath River
," said Brian Stranko,
CEO of California Trout.
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 15, 2008
COMPREHENSIVE
AGREEMENT
FOR
KLAMATH
BASIN
RESTORATION
PROPOSED, SETS STAGE FOR HYDROPOWER AGREEMENT AND DAM REMOVAL
CONTACT:
Severn Williams
California Trout
510-336-9566, C 415-336-9623
Chuck Bonham, Trout Unlimited
510-528-4164, C 510-917-8572
Steve Rothert, American Rivers
530-478-5672, C 530-277-0448
Brian Barr, National Center for
Conservation Science & Policy
541-482-4459 x 304
Klamath Basin
,
California
/Oregon Border - The details
of a proposed Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement were released today by
the Klamath Settlement Group. The Group includes representatives from
diverse
Klamath
Basin
communities and officers
from tribal, federal, state, and county governments that all have a
stake in water and power management in the area. The Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement is the result of more than two years of
negotiation among interest groups as varied as farmers who rely on
irrigation water from the Klamath watershed system to conservation
groups dedicated to improving habitat for fish and other wildlife.
Key provisions of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement include a
program to rebuild fish populations sufficient for sustainable tribal,
recreational, and commercial fisheries; reliable water allocation to
sustain the needs of the agricultural community and national wildlife
refuges in the basin; a program to stabilize power costs in the area;
and a compensation program for counties that may be impacted by the
removal of the identified hydroelectric facilities. Implementing the
agreement as it is currently outlined is expected to cost approximately
$400 million in new funding over 10 years.
"The
Klamath River
was once the third greatest
Pacific salmon producing stream in the lower 48 states," said Brian
Barr of the
National
Center
for Conservation Science
and Policy. "Decades of degrading habitat and blocking fish from
300 miles of stream have caused wild salmon populations to drop by 90%.
We need to build a robust future for the
Klamath River
and the communities that
depend on it."
The Klamath Settlement Group was first formed in 2004 after PacifiCorp
applied to the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for
relicensing of five mainstem dams it currently runs on the
Klamath River
. The lower three dams block
passage for salmon, steelhead and lamprey to over 300 of miles of
spawning and rearing habitat. Under the federal relicensing process,
parties can submit to FERC a preferred negotiated outcome. Negotiations
with PacifiCorp on an agreement are still proceeding.
The groups still face one significant hurdle before the proposed
agreement can be adopted and implemented and that is an agreement to
remove PacifiCorp's lower four Klamath dams.
"The Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement marks a major stride
forward in bringing peace to the
Klamath River
," said Brian Stranko, Chief Executive Officer of fishing and
water quality advocacy group California Trout, one of the conservation
groups that participated in the Proposed Agreement. "This is,
however, only half of the pie. We also need success in negotiations with
PacifiCorp to remove four mainstem dams before this Basin Restoration
Agreement can be signed and implemented-the two separate agreements make
a non-severable package."
"It hasn't been easy; it was a tough several years putting this
proposal together, but I've got new found respect for all the
communities involved from Tribal to environmental and farming,"
said Chuck Bonham of Trout Unlimited. "I am also hopeful we can
develop a good business deal that works for PacifiCorp and for the river
too. We can and should do both."
The Proposed Agreement developed a series of priorities for water
management that take into account the competing needs of farmers, fish,
power users, and protected natural habitat in the area.
"Removing these dams makes sense," said Steve Rothert of
American Rivers. "By releasing the proposed Basin Restoration
Agreement today, we're saying that there is a better way, and that
ongoing environmental degradation is no longer an option. It's time to
bring disparate groups together and work out realistic solutions that
will pave the way for a better, more responsible future."
The Klamath Settlement Group is working on two agreements: the Basin
Restoration Agreement and the Hydropower Agreement. The Klamath
Settlement Group will approve both concurrently after public review and
completion of the Basin Restoration Agreement, and negotiations for the
Hydropower Agreement are concluded. As a package, these agreements will
create effective and durable solutions that will restore and sustain
natural production of fish species throughout the
Klamath
Basin
, establish reliable water
and power supplies to sustain agricultural uses and National Wildlife
Refuges, and contribute to the public welfare through responsible
management practices.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/01/15/18472674.php
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