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This Website is Dedicated to
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January
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Bureau of
Reclamation commissioner: Agreement offers more
tools
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H&N photo by Ty
Beaver Michael Connor,
commissioner of the U.S. Bureau
of Reclamation, says the Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement
gives water managers more tools. |
By TY
BEAVER
H&N Staff Writer
The commissioner of the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation called the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement a great opportunity to
change the dynamic in the Basin and create a
better path to the future.
Michael Connor was in the Basin Tuesday to meet
with regional Bureau officials and others and
view parts of the Klamath Reclamation Project’s
infrastructure.
Following are his responses to questions about
the restoration agreement and its impact on the
Project:
Q: What would be the impact to the
Project’s water supplies in the interim before
the restoration agreement is fully implemented?
What about in the long term?
A: Connor said the restoration
agreement provides a number of tools to help
manage water until the document is fully
implemented, including committing more resources
to the region and working with irrigators to
develop a water management plan.
“We’ll have more at our discretion,” he said.
The long-term approach would involve
stakeholders and other experts using scientific
data to determine how much water is needed for
fisheries, the lake and irrigation, and
irrigators would have to be part of that
process. That process will create more certainty
for the water supply, he said.
Q: How does this restoration
agreement compare to others concluded throughout
the West?
A: Connor said the document is complicated and
is uniquely designed to work for the Klamath
Basin.
“It’s complex, but a lot of others have been
complex,” he said.
He noted that water settlements in Arizona and
other places have involved issues such as
affordable power and even the need to turn more
control of water resources to local agencies, as
the restoration agreement calls for.
Q: This agreement will require a lot
of funding. What is the likelihood that
appropriations in the required amounts will
actually occur?
A:Connor said securing funding for efforts such
as this are always tough, but he said his office
has already had conversations with President
Barack Obama’s administration and is eager to
start speaking to Congress about it.
Congress found creative ways to fund legislation
in the past, and he is confident a similar
arrangement can be found for the restoration
agreement.
He noted that none of the other water
settlements the Bureau was involved with failed
because of lack of funding. Instead, failure
came because something else fell through during
implementation.
Q: The restoration agreement is a
50-year contract. Do you see it being renewed 50
years down the road? Why or why not?
A: “Fifty years is a long time and speculation
on my part to say what will happen,” Connor
said.
But aspects of the agreement will last beyond
that 50-year time frame, he added, and if the
agreement works like it should, those involved
will view it as valuable tool and want to see it
continue.
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