By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI
Capital Press
September 3, 2009
Water controversies in the
Klamath Basin are pitting farmer against farmer, with new litigation
challenging an agreement intended to resolve disputes between irrigators
and Indian tribes.
Growers within the Klamath
Irrigation Project negotiated a conditional deal with Klamath tribes in
2008 which would settle contested claims over water rights between the
groups.
However, irrigators from outside
the project -- the upper basin contestants -- claim the agreement
undermines their ability to defend their own water rights, and have
asked an administrative judge to set aside the settlement.
The upper basin contestants
oppose provisions in the agreement which acknowledge the tribe's claims
to all water in the Upper Klamath Lake, the Klamath River and its
tributaries, said Roger Nicholson, president of the Resource
Conservancy, which represents the contestants.
The upper basin contestants also
oppose provisions in the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement which call
for 30,000 acre-feet of water to be bought from upstream irrigators
without actually providing them with assurances of water allocation in
dry years, he said.
"It obviously prejudices our
case," said Nicholson. "We can't equitably litigate now because there's
already an outcome predetermined that potentially the Klamath tribe
could own all the water and that has already been accepted as a legally
sufficient solution."
A previous legal order in the
water adjudication between irrigators and tribes requires the Klamath
tribes to prove they own the water rights in court, he said.
If the settlement parties are
allowed to circumvent that order, it essentially allows them to make
decisions about the upper basin contestants' water without including
them in negotiations, Nicholson said.
"Two parties can't, without a
decision by a judge, arbitrarily write something into existence," he
said. "They need to go back and try the case."
Groups involved in the settlement
dispute that rationale.
Jeff Mitchell, council member and
negotiator for the Klamath Tribes, denied that the agreement infringes
on the upper basin contestants' rights.
"They still have their
opportunity if they want their day in court," he said. "There hasn't
been made a determination of whose the water is."
Mitchell said the contestants
stayed out of the settlement negotiations of their own volition, and
characterized the group's motion to vacate the agreement as an
unnecessary complication.
"I think they're trying to
destroy a lot of good work that was done by other parties," he said. "I
think they're unfortunately trying to take us backwards and keep us all
in litigation."
Bill Kennedy, a rancher from
Klamath Falls who is part of a group representing irrigators in the
adjudication, said the settlement is primarily oriented toward the
removal of four dams on the Klamath River.
The agreement is separate from
the legal proceedings over water rights, he said. Kennedy said he could
not comment on the upper contestants' motion to vacate the settlement.
"Our legal staff is still
reviewing what they filed," he said. "We don't have an official response
to that."
The Klamath Water Users
Association, one of the parties to the settlement, issued a statement
describing the motion as a "random act of litigation."
By entering into a settlement,
on-project irrigators simply removed themselves from the litigation with
the Klamath tribes, which does not take away the upper basin
contestants' right to due process, the statement said.
Staff writer
Mateusz Perkowski is based in
Salem, Ore. E-mail:
mperkowski@capitalpress.com.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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