
Support
for further negotiations
Klamath
Water Users Association president signs letter with off-Project demands
By
TY BEAVER
H&N
Staff Writer
February 9, 2008
The
president of the Klamath Water Users Association, a group that supports
the proposed Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, was among those who
signed a letter calling for further negotiations.
Luther
Horsely said he signed the document, which outlines specific demands,
because he wants to work with the group and address their concerns. The
letter, submitted to
Klamath
County
commissioners Monday, was
signed by nine other on- and off-Project irrigators. Horsely’s
signature was on a more recent copy of the letter.
He
said Friday that he still believes the proposed settlement is the best
way for the region to move forward.
“I
think the settlement is a better opportunity for us to stay whole,” he
said.
Stakeholders
released the agreement Jan. 15 after two-and a-half years of
negotiations among representatives of 26 groups. If approved, it would
allocate water in the
Klamath River
watershed between
irrigators, tribes, fishermen and conservationists. It also calls for
the removal of four hydroelectric dams operated by PacifiCorp.
PacifiCorp officials and stakeholders are still negotiating.
Ten
irrigators — Horsely, Bill Kennedy, Glenn Barrett, Tracey Liskey, Don
Rajnus, Karl Scronce, John Wells, Roger Nicholson, Andrea Rabe and Linda
Long Bourdet — with land on and off the Klamath Project signed the
document calling for reopened negotiations and listing issues that would
need to be included in the agreement before they would sign on.
The
demands
Those
demands include removing financial assistance to purchase the Mazama
Tree Farm for the Klamath Tribes, and instead providing $21 million for
tribal economic development, further assurances for water and guaranteed
power rates for off-Project water users.
Wells,
an irrigator with on- and off-Project land holdings near Bonanza, said
the coalition is not opposed to any group prospering from the agreement.
“We
see a need to be a little more unified and that everyone’s interests
be covered,” he said.
‘Best
available option’
Horsely
said he still views the settlement as the best available option. Many of
the demands, such as protecting groundwater users and access to power
rates, stipulated in the letter have already been addressed in the
agreement.
Removing
financial assistance for the Tribes to purchase the tree farm and
instead providing money for economic development would not prevent the
Tribes from purchasing property. It was introduced as a way to broaden
use, he said.
Horsely said he hoped to work through the
coalition’s concerns so they will support the current agreement.
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