Area manager Pablo Arroyave
came to the Klamath Basin in 2006 from the
Carson City, Nev., office, an area with a
water situation similar to the Klamath
Basin. In July, BOR announced that Arroyave
would move to Sacramento as assistant
regional director for technical services.
Arroyave’s last day in Klamath Falls will be
Thursday.
Greg Addington, executive
director of the Klamath Water User’s
Association, said whoever steps in for
Arroyave will be the third area manager he’s
dealt with in as many years, but he doesn’t
expect
the rapid changes to cause much stir.
“It’s hard. You like to
have continuity,” he said. “But the
transition went well last time, and I have
no doubt that it’ll go well this time.”
For those Addington
represents, and many other groups dealing
with water issues, the Klamath Basin Water
Agreement is one of the more important
issues the new area manager will need to
jump right into.
“A lot of things people are
doing here are tied in one way or another to
an outcome there,” Addington said, adding
that by the time a new manager is named, the
agreement may or may not be a relevant
issue.
“But as we sit here today,
that would be a high one on the list,” he
said of the water agreement, which
represents the interests of more than
two-dozen stakeholders and groups.
Reclamation deputy area
manager Christine Karas, who will be filling
Arroyave’s position on an interim basis,
said it may
take the Bureau up to six months to make a
permanent hire. Karas, who is second in
command at the Klamath Falls office, said
she would apply for Arroyave’s position.
Arroyave said his position
in the regional office would have him
working on Klamath Basin issues,
particularly the continued progress of the
water agreement and endangered species
consultation.
The Klamath Project
received a new biological opinion on the
amount of endangered suckers in Upper
Klamath Lake. The opinion is the first
nonjeopardy opinion the agency received from
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service since the
1980s.
While the ruling was a
small triumph for Reclamation and
irrigators, they must wait until a second
opinion from the National Marine Fisheries
Service is released on the coho salmon and
flow levels at Iron Gate Dam.
“The NMFS biological
opinion is going to be critical to how we
operate here for the next decade,” Addington
said. “So being able to effectively manage
the process of opinions and working with
regulatory agencies is going to be very
important (for a new manager).”
Beyond politics and
environmental regulations, the Klamath
Project’s main
goal is still delivering water to users,
Addington said, adding that a fundamental
knowledge of project operations and
maintenance are requisite.
“We don’t want to lose
sight of delivering the water,” he said.
Karas, who has worked at
the Klamath Project for five years, said the
age of the system presents challenges.
Construction began in 1906 and continued for
several decades.
“It’s an old project and
we’ve been chipping away at modernizing and
ensuring that everything is in top-notch
physical condition,” she said.
Karas also said the limited
carryover storage capacity from one year to
the next makes water management planning
tricky on a yearly basis. BOR will continue
looking into developing Long Lake for more
storage, Karas said.
Arroyave agreed that
storage and continued operation and
maintenance of a 100-plus-year-old system
were two of the most challenging elements of
the Project.
Tulelake district
Jerry Pyle, assistant
manager of the Tulelake
Irrigation District, said the management
change at the Bureau of Reclamation would
likely be insignificant to the district’s
operations.
“Those people just come and
go,” he said. “You get up in Pablo’s
position and it’s all politics. Unless you
get someone in here who really wants to help
irrigators, they can’t really do much for
us.”
TID delivers water to
62,000 acres in the Klamath Project, which
totals 240,000 acres of farmland in
California and Oregon.
Pyle said finding a
favorable power rate for irrigators is a top
priority.
A 50-year contract kept
irrigation rates at tenths of a penny per
kilowatt-hour. Since that contract expired
in 2006, Pacific Power has been
incrementally raising rates to meet standard
irrigation tariff, with the phase-in period
different on each side of the border.
In California, rates are
now 6.2 cents per kilowatthour, Pyle said.
Wildlife refuges
Klamath Basin National
Wildlife Refuges also depend on water
delivered to the almost 200,000 acres of
protected federal lands. In priority of
delivery though, the refuges are last on the
list, said Ron Cole, project
leader for the refuges.
Priorities for BOR Klamath
Project water delivery are meeting
regulations set forth by Environmental
Species Act, tribal interests, agriculture
and then refuges, Cole said.
From the refuge
perspective, continued collaboration between
all parties and agencies involved is vital
to operations, Cole said.
“It’s
important to continue the working
collaboration with farmers, landowners and
other agencies,” Cole said. “BOR is an
important cog in that wheel, and we hope to
continue working with them.”