Evidence
that dam removal
is the best
option appears
to be based on
the cost of
removal versus
the cost of
re-licensing the
dams and
addressing water
quality and
other issues, he
said. But that
doesn’t mean
that is what’s
best for the
river.
“I
think that we
really have no
empirical
science that
removal is going
to improve
anything,”
Whitsett said.
The
state senator
also was
concerned that
the agreement
placed much of
the financial
burden for
removal on
PacifiCorp’s
ratepayers. He
listed other
concerns
including lack
of a renewable
energy source to
replace the
dams, and
potential loss
of property
taxes and
property values
in Siskiyou
County.
“That
personally
doesn’t give me
the greatest
confidence that
they know what
they’re doing,”
he said.
Steve
Kandra,
Klamath Reclamation
Project
irrigator and
Klamath Water
Users
Association
board member
Kandra
said the dam
removal
agreement is a
milestone in
achieving the
greater goal of
implementing the
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement. It
also opens
the door to
defining more of
that agreement
for irrigators
in the Basin.
Calling
them “hand and
glove
agreements,” the
on-Project
irrigator said
he now must work
with PacifiCorp
to determine
future
irrigation power
rates.
Also,
if the dams are
removed, the
need for power
could open up
the possibility
for on-Project
irrigators to
pursue power
projects of
their own to
offset costs.
Troy
Fletcher, policy
analyst for
Yurok Tribe
Fletcher
called the
agreement a
significant
milestone.
“The
next steps are
working with
people who are
committed to
resolving Basin
issues,”
Fletcher said.
“We need to work
to make the
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement a
reality — the
two are
linked.”
Glenn
Spain, Pacific Coast
Federation of
Fishermen’s Association
Spain
hailed the
agreement as a
framework for
removing the
dams, but said
considerable
hurdles remain.
“There
is, for the
first time, a
clear
presumptive path
to make it
happen,” he said
of removing the
dams. “There are
a lot of
financial
details that
need to be pored
over.”
Among
those details,
he said, is
getting
Congressional
approval,
passage of a
$250-million
bond in
California,
legislation in
Oregon to create
a dam
decommissioning
fund and
providing
compensation for
land owners and
lost tax
revenues in
Siskiyou County,
where three of
the four dams
are located.
“There’s
going to be some
hard slogging,
but we have a
framework,”
Spain said.
“That’s the
hardest part of
any journey,
knowing where
you’re going to
go.”
Klamath
County Commissioner Bill
Brown
Brown
said he heard
about the
nonbinding dam
removal
agreement during
a trip to
Washington,
D.C., several
weeks ago. He is
glad the
agreement calls
for studies
determining the
feasibility of
dam
removal and said
those studies
could provide
important
information.
Nevertheless,
the commissioner
said he is still
philosophically
opposed to dam
removal.
Jeff Mitchell,
Klamath Tribes
council member
Mitchell
said the biggest
question is how
the dam removal
agreement would
be blended with
the broader
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement.
The
final
arrangement
needs to be
seamless, and
there’s the
potential for
problems
regarding the
required studies
and the need for
state and
federal
legislation.
But
Mitchell said he
is optimistic
about the
future.
“This
agreement has
really what
we’ve been
looking for 90
years,” he said.
Steve
Rothert,
spokesman for
American Rivers,
a conservation
group
Rothert
called the
projected $450
million cost for
removing the
dams misleading,
adding that he
has coordinated
scientific
research on
removal.
Estimates by
the California
Coastal
Commission
ranged from $75
million to $200
million, with
current best
estimate of $125
million. He
believes the
$450 million
includes costs
for worst-case
scenarios.
Rothert also
believes the
proposed
surcharge to
Oregon
PacifiCorp
customers is
misleading.
“The
reality is this
deal saves
PacifiCorp
customers
money,” he
said.
If the
dams are not
removed, Rothert
said PacifiCorp
faces spending
up to $500
million to meet
Federal Energy
Regulatory
Commission and
state
requirements to
build fish
ladders, improve
water quality
and do other
improvements.
Those costs, he
said, would be
passed along to
customers.
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