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Klamath reaches uneasy peace
Farmers, other
groups try to work toward water compromises
Mateusz Perkowski
Capital Press
October 23, 2008
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| Rancher
Bill Kennedy explains that the Klamath Project is
beneficial for wildlife, which rely on canals for
drinking water, as well as extremely effective for
agricultural production. Kennedy was one of the
speakers during a recent tour of the basin launched
by the Klamath Water Users Association. |
Back when the U.S. Department of the Interior
was still a fledgling agency, decades before the Klamath
Project even existed, the Klamath Basin already had water
problems.
In 1857, members of an Army expedition to the region noted
in their journals that the water quality in Upper Klamath
Lake was so poor that their horses refused to drink from it.
Naturally occurring phosphates in the basin's rich volcanic
soils had rendered the water undrinkable that year due to
turbidity and other factors totally unrelated to farming,
said Steve Kandra, a farmer and board member of the Klamath
Water Users Association.
"These people didn't have any political axes to grind. They
were just writing down what they saw," he said.
These days, however, the knee-jerk reaction is to blame
water quality problems on irrigation in the Klamath Project,
which was authorized in 1905, he said.
"We're starting with a natural system that doesn't meet
anybody's water quality standards," said Kandra. "You can
eliminate agriculture in the Klamath Project, and it won't
make a lick of difference in the Upper Klamath Lake."
Clearing up such misconceptions was among the top priorities
of the agricultural tour that the Klamath Water Users
Association recently held for members of the public, he
said.
People not involved in agriculture may drive by important
components of the irrigation project on a daily basis with
no concept of their significance, said Greg Addington,
executive director of the KWUA.
The organization launched its fall harvest tour this year to
help local business people and government workers grasp the
purpose of those canals, dams, pumping plants and other
features, he said.
"We really need these people to understand this stuff," he
said.
The tour will likely become an annual event, although the
KWUA may stagger the seasonal schedule so participants can
witness different crop harvests and other practices,
Addington said.
"There's no one time of year when you can see it all," he
said.
A lot has changed in the Klamath basin since the federal
government shut off irrigation water in 2001 to protect
endangered fish species, which angered farmers, and then
allowed irrigation the next year, which environmentalists
blamed for a fish die-off.
Tempers have cooled on the agricultural and conservationist
fronts, and many people who were sworn enemies are now open
to cooperation, said Addington.
"The communication is better than it ever has been," he
said.
Even so, there is turbulence beneath the surface.
The spirit of teamwork between farmers, tribes and
conservationists is ultimately very delicate: A major
disaster, like a drought, could shatter the alliance, said
Addington.
The January settlement agreement that was intended to
resolve water disputes between growers, fishermen,
conservationists, tribes and the federal government has
proven divisive within stakeholder groups, he said.
"It's not without controversy," he said.
The agreement hinges on the removal of several dams along
the Klamath river, but PacifiCorp, which owns the
structures, is in no hurry to do that.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is consulting with
PacifiCorp regarding the fate of the dams, and the
California State Water Resources Control Board begun
reviewing the structures' impact on water quality on Oct.
21.
Meanwhile, the settlement calls for $985 million in
government money for restoration projects, which could be a
tall order during tough economic times.
Restoration projects themselves can be the subject of
contention. A year ago, the Nature Conservancy blew up
levees along the Upper Klamath Lake, reverting 2,500 acres
of farmland back into marsh.
Some growers see the project as a worthwhile compromise,
while others believe it unnecessarily takes land out of
production without any concrete assurances for producers.
In other cases, though, conservation and agriculture go
hand-in-hand.
During the tour, participants were shown "walking wetlands"
along Tulelake in the California portion of the Klamath
Project.
By voluntarily flooding farmland for several years to create
wetlands, growers essentially rotate crop production with
waterfowl habitat, said Ron Cole, manager of the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service's Tulelake National Wildlife Refuge.
These young wetlands are actually more beneficial for birds
than older, established ones, because they improve access
and enhance invertebrate activity, he said.
After the land is returned to agriculture after several
years, it's more productive because flooding suppresses
weeds and diseases and ends up aerating the soil.
"Agriculture can be part of the solution for wildlife
conservation," said Cole.
Staff writer Mateusz Perkowski is based in Salem, Ore.
E-mail: mperkowski@capitalpress.com.
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