Forum to focus on Klamath fish, water
November 12, 2006
By STEVE KADEL
H&N Staff Writer
Should Klamath River dams be removed to allow fish passage?
Should fish ladders be built at
dams to accomplish the same goal?
Or should fish be captured and trucked upstream to bypass dams?
Local residents can tell officials which plan they support Tuesday
when the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission hosts a public meeting
in Klamath Falls. The session will be from 9 a.m. to noon at the Shilo
Inn.
Testimony will be recorded for FERC officials to consider in writing
an Environmental Impact Statement, due next spring. It's all part of
the relicensing of the Klamath hydroelectric project.
PacifiCorp operates dams on the river under a 50-year license that
expired March 1. FERC must decide what conditions to impose under the
new license, with water quality and restoration of salmon runs two key
issues.
Fisheries agencies recommended fish ladders and screens be installed
at the dams. But PacifiCorp spokesman Dave Kvamme says that's an
approach that will cost an estimated $250 million.
The price is so high because
the ladder at Irongate dam must be six-tenths of a mile long. The one
at Copco No. 1 dam would be a half mile. Those lengths are required
because of the height of the dams.
Instead, PacifiCorp prefers the catch-and-truck
approach. Kvamme said the utility should be allowed to try that method
first to see if it's successful rather than being forced to install
fish ladders. He notes they must pass costs on to ratepayers.
“We would like to see an adaptive management approach where you test
to see what works and what doesn't,” Kvamme said.
PacifiCorp's option calls for capturing adult fish coming upstream and
collecting migrating juvenile fish headed downstream.
Klamath Basin irrigators have
an interest in the process because the Klamath River's coho salmon are
on the federal endangered species list.
Greg Addington, executive director of the Klamath Water Users, said
irrigators are wary of more restrictions being placed on them because
of the coho's status.
He said Klamath Reclamation Project irrigators have
historic relationships with the dams because of the power they
generate. That's one reason irrigators are taking part in settlement
talks with other stakeholders regarding relicensing. If the entities
can find common ground for conditions of relicensing, FERC would
likely implement them.
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