Judge accelerates Klamath River plan
March 29, 2006
By STEVE KADEL
H&N Staff Writer
Klamath Reclamation Project irrigators huddled Tuesday
to decide their next step after a federal judge required accelerated
implementation of a Klamath River management plan.
U.S. District Court Judge Saundra Armstrong's decision Monday put the river's
water allocation plan into effect immediately rather than over the next five
years. If flows drop to levels that threaten coho salmon, water could be
withheld from irrigators.
Most local irrigators agree that's not likely to happen this summer because of
the significant snowpack in the mountains. As of Monday, the Klamath Basin's
snowpack was 163 percent of average - compared with one-third of average a
year ago.
Oregon has the West's best overall snowpack with 136 percent of average.
Bureau of Reclamation spokeswoman Rae Olsen underscored that positive aspect.
“There will be no changes in the 2006 pilot water bank,” she said Tuesday.
“The Bureau of Reclamation expects to provide full irrigation deliveries.”
At the same time, she said, the bureau will meet terms of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's biological opinion for Upper Klamath Lake as well as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries' biological opinion for the Klamath River.
Despite that, the president of Klamath Water Users
Association expressed frustration with the scope of Armstrong's ruling.
Steve Kandra said the Klamath Project is only a small part of the Klamath
River system, but was hit with accelerated phases of river management because
that's all the judge could legally affect.
“We're very concerned that we've taken a step backward in that one entity
will bear the brunt of dealing with supply issues,” Kandra said. “The
solution needs to come from a watershed-wide approach.
“We need to have the legal system recognize that
just focusing on little pieces of the watershed won't solve the problem.
Everybody has a responsibility.”
Kandra noted that more non-project irrigators use Klamath River water than do
members of the project, although Armstrong had no jurisdiction over private
water allocations.
He did not point fingers at commercial fishers on the
southern Oregon and northern California coasts.
“Closing the fisheries is not a good thing,” he said. “We want fishermen
to catch fish.”
Irrigators plan to keep talking with other groups to
emphasize the need for cooperation - and contributions - across the watershed,
Kandra said.
“We certainly want to engage people so if we deal with the recovery of
anadromous fish, they know just dealing with the project won't accomplish
that,” he said.