GovTrack.us is an independent tool to help the public research and track the activities in the U.S. Congress, promoting government transparency and civic education through novel uses of technology.
|
|
|
|
|
Hollie Cannon, executive director of Klamath Water and Power Agency, answers questions during a meeting in Chiloquin Tuesday. |
Tom Mallams, president of the Klamath Off-Project Water Users Association, wants to know how any settlement agreement can be enforced against the Klamath Tribes, given their sovereign status.
Off-Project irrigator Linda Long wants to know if surface water and groundwater will ever be linked and will impact the use of wells.
More than 30 people, many of them irrigators off the Klamath Reclamation Project, attended a public meeting organized by the Upper Klamath Water Association at the Chiloquin Community Center Tuesday.
The meeting was an opportunity for the organization and others working on the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement to update people on the agreement and answer questions.
Karl Scronce, UKWUA board member, said his organization is taking a proactive approach to any settlement on water, power affordability and environmental assurances.
Speakers at the
meeting included James Honey of Sustainable Northwest; Toby
Freeman, regional community manager for PacifiCorp; Hollie
Cannon, executive director of the Klamath Water and Power
Agency, or KWAPA, and Greg Corbin, a Portland attorney working
for Upper Klamath Water Users.
Each speaker detailed his relationship to working with those in off-Project areas. Honey said his organization came to the Basin originally to study the impacts of cattle grazing before returning to those contacts on water issues.
PacifiCorp
Freeman talked about how PacifiCorp came to the decision to sign onto the dam removal agreement after hearing from federal and state officials that was the direction they wanted to go.
Dam removal also
was found to be the lowest cost option to customers, and the
company is forgoing any ability to seek a return on investment
for its stockholders regarding relicensing activities on the
dams.
Cannon detailed how his agency would provide affordable power to both Project and off-Project power users for irrigation. Corbin said litigation can be appropriate in continuing to settle water rights, that doesn’t mean one can’t also be open to and discussing settlement with an opponent.
Attendees asked
a variety of questions, from how much does Sustainable
Northwest
Dam removal and reaching a
settlement with the Tribes were the issues that garnered the most
questions.
Dam removal
Freeman said Pacifi-Corp never would have considered carrying out dam removal on its own because of the risk it entailed and its lack of precedent.
“We don’t do experimental stuff,” he said.
At the same time, Freeman said he was encouraged by conversations with government officials about the level of analysis and study that would go into examining the feasibility of dam removal, and that if it was found to be too expensive, the idea likely would be dropped.
Tribes
Corbin said there has to be the ability to hold all the parties of the KBRA to its terms, including the Tribes. While the Tribes have sovereign status, he and others are meeting with them to ensure they will abide by it and that other parties can hold them to it.
Not all those in attendance took solace in the answers. Mallams said he had little confidence in the scientific studies on dam removal.
Others wondered whether there will be a future adjudication regarding groundwater in the Basin. Corbin said there were a few groundwater adjudications already done in the state, but very few.
“I don’t know what kind of
stomach Oregon Water Resources Department has for another
adjudication,” he said.
Source: http://pioneer.olivesoftware.com/Olive/ODE/HeraldandNews/