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Domestic well
users hit hard during growing season
Klamath Falls
Herald and News
Dennis Oden’s
log home in Merrill is nestled in the side of a hill. A second-story
porch allows for an expansive view of fields and mountains, framing
Mount Shasta in the distance.
But the
picturesque view comes at a price: Oden relies on a domestic
well for water, availability of which becomes an issue during
the growing season.
Oden is
surrounded by farm and ranch land. When water is in short
supply, farmers with wells use them, especially when the
government reimburses their pumping costs with programs like the
Water User Mitigation Program.
“Farmers are
going to do what they’re allowed to do,” Oden said. “I don’t
blame the farmers for using it. They have to, it’s their
livelihood, but what about us?”
There is not
yet a program to help domestic well owners mitigate the cost
of deepening wells or lowering pumps.
“We’re
working on subsidies,” said Hollie Cannon, Klamath Water
and Power Agency director. “The problem is funding.
We’re desperately searching for ways to fund this
program.
“The way
the WUMP agreement is written, we can’t use federal
funds available for domestic well mitigation,” he said.
“If we could, we would be doing it.”
In the past, Oden spent several
thousand dollars lowering his pump and deepening his well. His pump
is 215 feet down his 240-foot well, about 60 feet into the water.
It costs as much as $30,000 to
drill a domestic well. Oden said he knows at least four people who
have had to drill new wells because groundwater levels dropped below
the reach of their wells, and at least 20 others who had to drop
their pumps.
The subsidy program notes in its
policy, “an unprecedented amount of groundwater will likely be
pumped,” affecting all well users, and, “groundwater pumping at the
anticipated level is not sustainable.”
The program closed to new
applications June 1.
Oden said organizations like
KWAPA need to focus on equitable distribution of water and on
regulating aquifer levels.
“It’s a resource
that’s shared by everyone,” he said. “Just like how they try to
regulate the level of the lake. What goes out must go in.”
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