2 options: Settlement or legal
process
Adjudication for water claims helped motivate
Klamath negotiations
Irrigators off the Klamath
Reclamation Project face the following options: Rely on a
government-run adjudication process established 100 years ago to
define who gets how much water, or work with other claimants,
primarily the Klamath Tribes, to reach a settlement.
Some off-Project irrigators
and a state lawmaker
say adjudication provides what is needed to resolve the region’s
water conflicts. But other off-Project irrigators and the
Klamath Tribes say they don’t want to leave such a decision to
an administrative law judge.
With either strategy, the
availability of water for irrigators to water crops and pastures
and for the Tribes to sustain their native fisheries hangs in
the balance. So does the value of hundreds of thousands of acres
of farmland and the Klamath Basin’s economy.
State officials and those
participating in the water adjudication, conducted by Oregon’s
water resources department, have worked since 1979 to define how
much water claimants receive based on their water rights.
Irrigation districts, individual irrigators and the Tribes have
spent millions of dollars since then to contest opposing claims
and defend their own.
Adjudication was one of the
motivating factors behind the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement.
Pro: Settlement
provides more flexibility
Some
irrigators, on and off the Project, and the Klamath Tribes say
the Klamath Restoration Agreement would guarantee everyone’s
survival.
The agreement would allocate
water among irrigators, fisheries, tribes and conservationists,
among other things.
On-Project irrigators and
the Klamath Tribes have already reached a settlement regarding
Upper Klamath Lake, reducing how much water the Project
typically receives, but establishing a guaranteed amount
depending on the water year.
Greg Corbin, a Portland
attorney representing the Upper Klamath Water Users Association,
said while it’s not known yet how much water the Tribes could
get, they have first priority. Even if the adjudication grants
them only a quarter of what they claim, he said, the settlement
could
significantly limit how much
water is available to irrigation off the Project.
As a result, settlement
provides more flexibility than the adjudication process.
“The folks I’m working with
think they have a greater chance to maintain their lifestyle to
settle with the Tribes rather than leave it to a judge,” Corbin
said.
Jeff Mitchell, Klamath
Tribes council member, said the Tribes have always looked to
settlements with irrigators and other water users rather than
relying on adjudication and its uncertain outcome.
“I don’t know how they’d
have to change their operation, but in other parts of the state
they’ve had to do so,” he said of impacts in other water
adjudications. “It’s difficult.”
At the same
time, the Tribes are prepared to go to court to defend their
claims, Mitchell said.
Con: Agreement would disrupt Oregon water law
State Sen.
Doug Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, said the proposed Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement and the settlement between the Tribes and
on-Project irrigators would disrupt the adjudication process.
Whitsett, who
irrigates 1,800 acres outside the Project, said the adjudication
process already provides ample opportunity for people to settle
disputes and claims.
“It’s always
worked,” he said.
Rather,
bypassing adjudication to resolve water conflicts through the
restoration agreement could invite disaster, Whitsett said. He
claimed the agreement violates private property rights of
individual water rights holders and breaches federal law, which
calls for the states
to define claims.
The state’s
involvement in the restoration agreement also creates problems,
Whitsett said. Because the state’s water resources department is
a signatory to the document, the state must uphold the document,
which includes the Tribes’ water claims, he added.
“It seems to me
they’ve painted themselves into a corner,” Whitsett said.
Tom Mallams, an
off-Project irrigator, agreed with Whitsett. He said he’s not
opposed to settlements, but he believes the restoration
agreement would disrupt Oregon water law in its current form.
“It’s going to
open up lawsuits all over the state,” he said.
But state
officials and Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s office have repeatedly said
the state’s involvement in the restoration agreement is
appropriate and necessary. They also said there is a line
between those working on the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement
and adjudication, and the adjudicator is not involved or briefed
on what the restoration agreement lays out.
About the adjudication process
The Oregon
Legislature established the water adjudication process about 100
years ago to acknowledge vested water rights, or water rights
that existed before state water laws were established.
Adjudication impacts anyone
who uses surface water. In the Klamath Basin, that primarily
includes irrigators who use surface water for ranching and
farming, the Klamath Tribes who want to preserve
traditional fisheries and
federal officials who need water to sustain wetlands and other
lands.
The process consists of two
phases: administrative and judicial.
The administrative phase
involves the state’s water resources department , which collects
documentation pertaining to water right claims, as well as any
contests or challenges to those claims.
Through the state’s
adjudicator, claims and challenges are settled and defined
before an order is issued. The order determines how the water
law is followed until the courts issue a final decree.
Nearly all the claims and
challenges (were) are settled administratively. Those remaining
— 56 claims and 201 challenges — involve the Klamath Tribes. An
order is expected in 2012.
Once there is an order, it
is turned over to the local circuit court for any legal
challenges.
The regular appeals process
applies, and the issue can potentially appear before the U.S.
Supreme Court. An adjudication order can be sent back through
any administrative portion if the courts deem that necessary.
It is not
unheard of for water adjudication legal proceedings to continue
for half a century or more.