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Water
tour brings stakeholders together
Klamath
River Basin issues span cultures, states, livelihoods
By JACQUI KRIZO
For the Capital Press
September 28, 2007
Farmers, fishermen, ranchers, Indian tribes, miners and loggers share
the Klamath River, and their livelihoods depend on it.
In late September, an alliance of
Oregon
coastal
commercial fishermen,
Klamath
Basin
irrigators, Yurok and Karuk tribes, along with representatives, elected
officials and other guests toured the
Klamath
River Basin
.
"We're solution-based," said fisherman Paul Merz from
Charleston
. "We
want solutions that don't favor one user over another.
Klamath
River
controls
our fishing. Our heritage is going away."
The two-day weekend tour included Iron Gate Dam,
Scott
Valley
conservation projects, a
Klamath
Basin
organic
"walking wetland" and Tulelake Refuge. Some presentations
preceded the tour.
Oregon
State
University
scientist
Sarah Bjork described diseases that are partly responsible for declining
numbers of
Klamath
River
fall
Chinook salmon.
Bjork said the large concentration of salmon near dam reservoirs and
tributaries needs to be thinned out, and fish carcasses should be
removed. She said water surges, trucking, cold-water storage or other
methods should be used to reduce or eliminate the problem.
Yurok Troy Fletcher and Karuk Ron Reed said dam removal would bring back
more fish. Reed said he only caught 200 last year. Fletcher said the
Yuroks caught 6,000, but they use a different type of net and a larger
area.
Craig Tucker, Klamath Campaign coordinator for the Karuk Tribe, said he
asked Klamath Water Users Association executive director Greg Addington:
"We want dams out; what do you want that we can get the dams
out?"
Tucker said he previously worked with the environmental group Friends of
the River, a
California
group
advocating dam removal, wetlands restoration and wilderness
designations. He said dam removal is necessary to restore the fishery.
Addington said that in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
settlement negotiations, the farmers are asking for three things: a
power rate reflecting the value of
Klamath
Basin
water for
power, a reliable supply of irrigation water and safe harbor from
regulations when new endangered species are introduced.
The tour bus first went by
Iron Gate
dam and
communities near the reservoirs.
Gary Black, with the Siskiyou Resource Conservation District, showed the
visitors a fish screen on Patterson Creek in
Scott
Valley
. During
the past 15 years the district installed stock watering systems,
moisture sensors and water delivery systems that increase flows;
completed 17,490 feet of stream channel enhancement projects; fenced 95
percent of private streamside properties; planted 200 acres of trees;
completed surveys and studies; installed 62 fish screens; and replaced
dams with weirs.
Day one ended with the Karuks cooking salmon over a fire for their new
"brothers."
The tour proceeded to
Lower Klamath
where Bob
Flowers' family settled in the 1800s. He showed where
Lower
Klamath
fields are
11 feet lower than the Keno reef, where water flowed from
Klamath
River
into
Lower
Klamath
Lake
before the
reclamation project was built. Water seldom flowed into the river from
the basin - uphill - unless it was an extremely wet season. He said the
flawed biological opinions demand more water from irrigators than ever
was or will be physically possible to attain.
Mike Noonan showed the guests his organic "walking wetland"
project. His field is flooded most of a year, and then farmed for two to
three years. This kills weeds and provides a ton of duck food per acre,
the farm yield increases, and waterfowl droppings fertilize the field.
Tulelake Refuge manager Ron Cole said working with private agricultural
interests helps him meet his refuge conservation goals.
At a lunch stop, salmon fisherman Rick Shepherd from
Crescent
City
said
millions of dollars have been lost in coastal communities because of
Klamath
River
mismanagement. He said there were no season closures from May 1 through
Sept. 30 before 1985. "In 2006 there was zero season, and in 2007
there was a three-day season, 30 fish per day. It was another undeclared
disaster." Last year the season was closed because of a projected
shortage of 2,000 fish.
He said during fall salmon returns, an estimated 300 sea lions linger at
the mouth of the Klamath. If 300 eat one fish per day August through
Oct. 14, that's 22,000 fish, he estimated.
Commercial salmon fisherman Rick Goche from Coquille said coastal
fishing seasons are based on early forecasts of how many fish might come
into the Klamath based in part on adult return counts four years
previous. He said National Marine Fishery Service admits the model it
includes fish counts in is only 50 percent right 50 percent of the time.
"They need to start counting all the fish, not what someone
determines are wild fish and someone determines are hatchery fish."
A new DNA testing program revealed only 5 percent of the limited ocean
catch in 2006 was from the
Klamath River
.
"We need immediate remedies as well as long-term solutions,"
said Goche.
One of the organizers, Dick Carleton, said, "The event was a great
success. We had a chance to visit and learn some of the issues facing
each of the communities."
Freelance writer Jacqui Krizo is based in
Tulelake
,
Calif.
E-mail: krizohr@cot.net.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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.capitalpress.info/main.asp?Search=1&ArticleID=
35619&SectionID=67&SubSectionID=&S=1
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