More federal funds may be
needed for water agreement
More of the nearly $1
billion needed to implement the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement may have to be allocated by Congress than previously
estimated.
Stakeholders have said the
cost of implementation hasn’t changed, but that less money is
available from current budgets of federal and state agencies
than expected.
Funding of the landmark
agreement was among several topics of the first meeting Friday
of the Klamath Basin Coordinating Council in Eureka, Calif.
Stakeholders said the
meeting was more relaxed than negotiations that formed the
agreements. They are looking forward to implementing the goals
of the documents.
“It’s good in that you’re
not gnashing your teeth but I don’t want to be talking about
protocols, I want to be talking about secure water supplies for
the Basin,” said Greg Addington, executive director of the
Klamath Water Users Association.
Stakeholders, along with the
governors of California and Oregon and U.S. Secretary of the
Interior Ken Salazar, signed the restoration agreement in late
February.
The document attempts to
resolve disputes over water.
If the KBRA is funded,
the coordinating council will advise federal authorities about
implementation of the agreement and its related Klamath River
dam removal agreement, Addington said.
That requires stakeholders —
ranging from irrigators and fishermen, tribes and
conservationists and county, state and federal representatives —
to form the group, obtain a federal charter and determine how
they will function and who will do what.
Funding was not discussed in
depth, Addington and Matt Walter, an irrigator with the Upper
Klamath Water Users Association, said, but agencies are now
looking more closely at their budgets and estimate that less of
their funds can go toward implementation.
Stakeholders also talked
about the federal legislation needed for implementation —
something they don’t expect to be discussed until after November
mid-term elections and an informational Congressional hearing.
Walter and Addington said no
changes were made to the implementation timeline and that
stakeholders are accomplishing what they can now, including
formation of the Klamath Basin Power Alliance, a non-profit that
irrigators from on and off the Klamath Reclamation Project could
join to take advantage of power benefits through the KBRA.
“Despite
everything not being in place, we’re moving forward,” Walter
said.
It
would cost roughly $1.5 billion to implement all aspects of the
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement and its related dam removal
agreement. Among its key provisions:
• Removing four
hydroelectric dams, owned by PacifiCorp, pending studies that
will determine the feasibility of removal, to improve passage
for endangered fish species.
• Establishing
sustainable water supplies and affordable power rates for
irrigators.
• Helping the Klamath
Tribes acquire a 92,000-acre parcel of private timberland called
the Mazama Tree Farm.
• Funding for habitat
restoration and economic development throughout the region.
Low inflows to
Upper Klamath Lake have made 2010 one of the driest years on
record, federal officials said Friday during a meeting of
stakeholders of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement.
Greg Adding ton,
executive director of the Klamath Water Users Association, said
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation officials said river flows into the
lake were so low that it is the fifth driest year since record
keeping began in 1961.
The water
shortage this year left Basin irrigators with less than half of
their typical allocation of irrigation water from the lake,
requiring many to farm elsewhere, idle their fields or change
crops.
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