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January
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President appoints
chairwoman for river compact
Tam Moore
Capital Press Staff Writer
November 17, 2006
The
Klamath River Compact Commission has a new leader, Deb Crisp,
executive director of the Tulelake Growers Association.
President George W. Bush issued the letter of appointment Oct. 16, but
neither the White House nor the Department of Interior, which sponsors
the federal side of the two-state compact, took official note of
Crisp's selection.
Crisp, who handled public relations for Klamath Water Users
Association before taking the Grower's Association job in 1997, has
been lobbying for the compact appointment for two years. She has the
backing of Rep. Wally Herger, R-Calif., and Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore.,
who represent the upper Klamath Basin in Congress.
In a telephone interview this week, Crisp said she's working with the
Oregon commission member, Water Resources director Phil Ward, to
schedule a meeting in early January. The California seat, which had
been held by Dwight Russell of California Department of Water
Resources, is apparently vacant with Russell's retirement earlier this
year.
The Bush administration ignored the 1957 compact for six years,
leaving Alice Kilham, a Clinton administration appointee, to serve
through the 2001 Klamath Project irrigation cutoff and years of
attempts to coordinate federal efforts in the 10 million-acre basin.
Crisp said she won't make any policy statements on behalf of the
commission until it meets. But she does bring a top personal priority
to the job - creation of additional deep storage in the upper basin
that could send cold water into the river during summer months when
fish fight for survival.
This week, Crisp was taking over the designated commission office
space at the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's Klamath Falls area
headquarters and was looking for how the compact will fit into the
governor's Klamath summit scheduled the week of Dec. 11.
The compact was formed in 1957 by act of the California and Oregon
legislatures with ratification by Congress. At the time, the issue was
fighting possible export of Klamath River water to Southern
California. The upper basin became hands off, but Reclamation, through
reservoirs on the Klamath's largest tributary, began exporting Trinity
River water to its Central Valley Project within a decade after the
pact was made.
"There's a place for the compact," Crisp said this week.
- Tam Moore
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