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Tuesday, July 12, 2005
Klamath
Falls Herald and News
Combined wire, local reports
The effects of a potentially sharp rise in power costs
for Klamath Basin farm irrigators would be mitigated under a House-passed bill
that won Senate approval Monday.
The bill now goes to Democratic Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who is expected to sign
it.
At issue is a plan by Pacific Power to boost rates for
about 1,300 farmers on the Klamath Reclamation Project and neighboring lands
when a 50-year contract expires next April.
The contract is a result of deals dating to the early 1900s that involve
low-cost power agreements and the utility's construction of hydroelectric dams
in the region.
Pacific Power wants to bring the contract farmers' electric rates into line
with those charged to other irrigators, arguing that the outdated contract
rates are far below what's needed to cover costs of generating and delivering
power and maintaining the system.
But analysts estimate that forcing an immediate rate catch-up once the
contract expires would boost prices by an estimated 1,200 percent. Farmers say
absorbing a huge rate increase all at once would drive some of them out of
business.
The bill, Oregon Senate Bill 81, requires that any rate increase, which needs
approval of the state Public Utility Commission, be phased in so the affected
customers would not face annual increases of more than 50 percent for seven
years.
Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, said the phase-in bill provides a
''critical safety net for Klamath irrigators'' who otherwise could face
crippling power costs.
The bill passed by a 22-6 vote, with two members absent. Started in the Senate, the bill was amended in the House before coming back for vote. Originally the rate phase-in would have applied to agricultural increases statewide. In the House, the bill became focused on Klamath, said Chris Huntington, spokesman for Whitsett.
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Irrigators, both on and off Klamath Reclamation
Project, still hope to negotiate a deal with Pacific Power to keep the power
rate down. If the negotiations don't work, then the bill will provide for
protection, said Ed Bartell, member of the Klamath Off-project Water Users.
"We wanted a safety net for all the irrigators to make sure that we
wouldn't have a 1,000 to 2,000 percent increase overnight," he said.
The power rate issue has caused conflicts between farmers who need water in
the drought-plagued region and environmental activists who say a major rate
boost could reduce irrigation and conserve more water to help threatened and
endangered fish.
The irrigation power prices are part of an overall
12.5 percent rate increase request by Pacific Power that's pending before the
PUC. The agency said it expects to decide on the request by early September.
On the Net: Senate Bill 81 http://www.leg.state.or.us/
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/07/12/news/top_stories/atop4.txt