Current goal of filling
lake the proper focus
Klamath Falls Herald and News
River flows are a
controversial subject in the Klamath Basin. That reflects
the complexity of managing the Klamath River, which involves
federal agencies, irrigators, land owners, Indian tribes,
state agencies, a power producer and complex legal
agreements.
To help settle an issue
that developed when PacifiCorp complained it didn’t get
adequate notice of reduced river flows — which affects power
generated from the power company’s four dams — a variable
flow approach was adopted after consultation between the
power company and the other parties.
Under terms of the
agreement announced Wednesday, the Bureau of Reclamation
sent a six-hour pulse of higher water to wash
salmon-endangering parasites downriver from below Iron Gate
Dam, the dam farthest downriver from Klamath Falls.
Decisions on the river
attract keen interest. Ours is in seeing plenty of water in
Upper Klamath Lake, the principle irrigation reservoir for
the Klamath Reclamation Project.
The status of the river
and Upper Klamath Lake is always a concern to people in the
upper Klamath Basin because of the importance of
agriculture, which depends on irrigation. Downriver, and
among tribes all along the river, there is an intense
concern for fish.
Debate often goes on
over how much water should go downriver during the winter to
help salmon and how much should be retained in Upper Klamath
Lake for later use, both for irrigation and to benefit
suckers, another fish under the special protection of the
Endangered Species Act.
There is still debate
over the flows last winter and the eventual impact on the
water available for irrigation during the summer, when
irrigators got less than half the normal amount.
Wednesday’s increase
from 1,600 cubic feet per second to 5,000 was carried out
without significant criticism.
Greg Addington,
executive director for the Klamath Basin Water Users
Association, which represents water users on the five
irrigation districts on the 240,000-acre federal project,
said the lake’s “in good shape now.
“That’s a lot of water
(going downriver), but I don’t feel like the lake is in
jeopardy of not filling because of it.”
A similar feeling was
expressed by Jason Phillips, area manager for the Bureau of
Reclamation’s Klamath Basin office.
That’s reassuring, but
it’s hard not to notice the lack of snow in the hills. After
a fast start in December, snowfall tailed off significantly.
Rain came instead, which washed away much of the snow.
The federal agencies
know that, of course, and monitor the snowpack and water
supplies and are still optimistic.
We hope it continues to
look good and water management continues to focus on having
a full Upper Klamath Lake on April 1. The water supply on
that date largely determines how much water is sent
downriver and how much can be used for irrigation. The more
water in the lake, the easier the decision making will be.