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Dam deal still stokes
controversy
Critics from all
sides assail new deal on
Klamath Basin water
Mateusz Perkowski
Capital Press
November 20, 2008
The
planned removal of four
hydroelectric dams along
the Klamath River is a
bitter pill to swallow
for the basin's
agricultural industry.
Some farmers regard the
plan as an unpleasant
but ultimately necessary
remedy that will help
heal divisions over the
competing water needs of
farmers and fish.
Others say dam removal
will only inflame the
Klamath Basin's ills
over the long term.
"Common sense says,
'What are they
thinking?'" said Tom
Mallams, a hay farmer
and president of the
Klamath Off-Project
Water Users, who opposes
dam removal. "It's an
absolute disaster, the
way they're trying to do
this."
Though disassembling
power infrastructure is
not something farmers in
the region like to see,
dam removal is a crucial
step in resolving the
long-standing dispute
between farmers, tribes
and conservationists,
said Steve Kandra, a
farmer and board member
of the Klamath Water
Users Association.
"It's a milepost in the
process, and we've still
got a way to go," he
said. "We keep
developing and
fine-tuning the system."
Earlier this year, the
Klamath Water Users
Association negotiated a
settlement with tribes
and conservationists,
known as the Klamath
Basin Restoration
Agreement, to end legal
battles over water
rights in the region.
Removing dams was the
key component of the
agreement, but that
decision ultimately lies
in the hands of
PacifiCorp, the utility
that owns them.
Throughout the year,
PacifiCorp negotiated
with the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission
about re-licensing the
dams. At the same time,
the company discussed
removing the structures
with the Department of
the Interior.
On Nov. 13, PacifiCorp
announced it had
brokered a deal with the
Interior Department, as
well as the states of
Oregon and California,
to dismantle the dams
and re-open the Klamath
River to fish passage by
2020.
Removal will be paid for
with $200 million in
surcharges on PacifiCorp
customers in Oregon and
California, as well as
$250 million in general
obligation bonds from
the state of California.
Art Sasse, spokesman for
PacifiCorp, stressed
that the deal is not yet
final. Dam removal is
contingent on several
conditions, he said,
including an independent
environmental review of
the consequences.
The 12-year horizon will
also be needed to find
other ways of generating
electricity, he said.
The dams provide enough
electricity to serve
70,000 homes, he said.
"This allows us enough
time to plan for the
replacement power,"
Sasse said.
The Klamath Off-Project
Water Users believe the
agreement is
"ridiculous" because
PacifiCorp would rather
tear down a dependable
source of renewable
energy than build fish
ladders, Mallams said.
"There are other options
besides dam removal, but
they don't even want to
talk about that," he
said, referring to
removal proponents.
He also said the
settlement agreement is
unfair to farmers
outside the Klamath
Project irrigation
system.
The agreement calls for
the retirement of 30,000
acre feet of off-project
water rights, but
doesn't provide
off-project growers with
reasonable assurances
regarding water rights
and electricity costs,
Mallams said.
"We are not opposed to a
settlement, but it's got
to be equitable," he
said. "They've basically
abandoned us."
Kandra said PacifiCorp's
decision to remove the
dams was fundamentally a
business decision. The
company determined that
dam removal was the most
feasible alternative, he
said.
As for the overall
settlement agreement,
maintaining the status
quo was not an option,
and compromise is
unavoidable, Kandra
said.
For Klamath Off-project
Water Users to gain
traction in the
settlement agreement,
they need to become part
of the process instead
of throwing rocks at it,
Kandra said.
"If people have things
that need to be polished
up and updated, they
need to make a decision
to be in the program,"
he said.
Mallams said that his
group wanted a seat at
the table but its ideas
were consistently
overruled by the other
groups.
Discontent with the
agreement isn't limited
to off-project farmers,
he said. Many KWUA
members also believe the
deal concedes too much
to the tribes without
gaining adequate
protections for farmers,
Mallams said.
"There is no widespread
support in the Klamath
Basin," he said.
There are defectors on
the off-project side as
well.
The Upper Klamath Water
Users' Association
represents off-project
irrigators who support
the deal, said Becky
Hyde, a rancher and
member of the group.
The settlement agreement
simply offers the most
stability for
agriculture, so it
doesn't make sense to
stand in its way, she
said.
"The train has left the
station," Hyde said.
"There's really only two
options: settle or
litigate. Litigation, to
me, is a pretty big
gamble."
Craig Tucker, spokesman
for the Karuk tribe,
said that tribes have
faced opposition to the
agreement as well -
albeit for the opposite
reasons. The Hoopa
Valley tribe, for
example, opposes the
deal because it believes
farmers are given
water-use priority.
The deal has adversaries
in the environmental
camp as well. Groups
like Klamath Riverkeeper,
Trout Unlimited and
American Rivers
applauded PacifiCorp's
announcement, but Oregon
Wild wasn't impressed.
"It's a pretty bow on a
package that's intended
to pass the Bush
administration's
priorities into the next
administration," said
Steve Pedery,
conservation director
for the group.
In effect, the
settlement agreement
weakens protections for
fish in return for dam
removal, he said.
Despite such
contentiousness within
stakeholder groups,
Tucker believes the
coalition of farmers,
tribes and
conservationists is
strong enough not to be
pulled apart by
detractors.
"I think we've staked
out a sizable portion of
the middle ground," he
said.
Staff writer Mateusz
Perkowski is based in
Salem, Ore. E-mail:
mperkowski@capitalpress.com.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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