February 10, 2006
By STEVE KADEL
H&N Staff Writer
The Klamath Reclamation Project water bank has been a success for irrigators,
a Bureau of Reclamation official said Thursday.
“It's accomplished what it set out to do,” Dave
Sabo said. “The Project hasn't shut down since 2002.”
He and Dave Solom of the Klamath Water Users Association updated the Natural
Resource Advisory Council board of directors on aspects of the water bank
during a Thursday night meeting. The board, which is new, advises the Klamath
County commissioners.
The bank must store 100,000 acre-feet of water annually as long as biological
opinions from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries
Service remain in effect.
That's accomplished by idling some land and contracting with irrigators for
groundwater pumping when needed. Applications for the 2006 water bank are due
at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Bureau of Reclamation's Klamath Basin area office.
“Every irrigator's perspective on the water bank is different,” Solom
said.
He emphasized that those in the program need fair market value for their
contribution, but added, “That's a tough thing to put a price on.”
Solom noted that irrigators participated voluntarily in the beginning, but water bank payments have become a vital and lucrative part of some farmers' operations.
Sabo addressed the profusion of wells on the
California side of the state line and how they affect the water table for
Oregonians.
“We've shut down pumping where we've seen third-party impacts,” he said.
“I'm looking at a much smaller requirement for groundwater pumping” this
year.
Solom said there's been significant development of wells since 1991. That
reduces the amount of water needed from Upper Klamath Lake, he said.
“A lot of wells now aren't drought wells, they're
secondary wells that may be involved in the water bank,” Solom said. “But
it does affect the aquifer in Oregon. There's no doubt about that.”
Both he and Sabo agreed a long-term solution to water storage should include
surface storage. Studies are under way to see if the geology is suitable for
large-scale surface water storage at Long Lake.
“We need carry-over storage,” Sabo said, adding
that the Long Lake study is a lengthy process. “I see this as a way of
solving a problem.”
Klamath County Commissioner Bill Brown said putting land out of production to
boost the water bank has a negative effect on the local economy.
Bob Flowers, a resource advisory council member, said
the water bank's practice of idling land “is a nail in the coffin of young
farmers trying to come into the Basin.” That's because it reduces the amount
of land open to cultivation, he said.
Meanwhile, Sabo had some good news for irrigators. “There's no question
we're not going to have a drought year this year,” he said.
Still, Sabo said Bureau of Reclamation plans to contract for groundwater pumping with farmers on both sides of the state line just to be safe.
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2006/02/10/news/local_news/local3.txt