No water for some
Reclamation: Only ‘A’ users will get any irrigation water this year
By TY
BEAVER
Only irrigators in the Klamath
and Tulelake irrigation districts and Van Brimmer Ditch
Co. will receive water from the
Klamath Reclamation Project this year.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s
Klamath Basin area office told irrigation districts and
individual contractors in a
letter Tuesday that Project water would only reach “A” users.
Others such as the Enterprise
Irrigation District, known as Warren Act contractors, will
receive no water from the
Project, leaving its irrigators few, if any, options for irrigating
their lands.
“We’re going to be completely
dry,” said Shane McDonald, Enterprise’s manager.
Reclamation will provide about
150,000 acre-feet of water to the Project, about a third of its
usual excess of 400,000 acre-feet.
Upper Klamath Lake, the
Project’s chief water source, is at historic lows, and inflows to it
and precipitation are below average.
Kevin Moore, spokesman for
Reclamation’s Klamath Basin office, said about 55,000 acres that
receive water from Upper Klamath Lake are “B” contractors. Some of
those “B” contractors are receiving assistance from the Klamath
Water and Power Agency to idle their land or pump groundwater.
“Reclamation is working with the
irrigation districts to examine different options to provide
releases to these contractors and will continue to monitor the
situation closely,” Moore said.
Dave Solem, manager of Klamath
Irrigation District, said his 40,000-acre district already plans to
idle about 10,000 acres to reduce water use. He expects KID to
receive water into its canals at a rate of 375 cubic feet per
second.
“It does not break down to very
much,” he said.
McDonald said Enterprise is
entirely dependent on the Project for water and has no other
sources.
The 2,000-acre district, which
covers the east side of the A Canal from Steen Sports Park to lands
near Klamath Community College, provides irrigation water to
hundreds of farmers and residential users, watering everything from
private orchards and pastures to fields of barley.
McDonald said the sports park
has its own well, but others have no other source. He said he would
look into the possibility of the district digging its own well.
“I’m going to look to do what we
can to be more self-reliant,” he said.
Moore said there are several
programs available to help irrigators, including the Klamath Water
and Power Agency’s land idling program, which is available for
enrollment until June 1.
Livestock owners
can participate in the Emergency Conservation program offered
through Klamath County’s Farm Service Agency. The program provides
assistance in hauling water for livestock and developing livestock
watering facilities.
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