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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
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’Tis the
season to remember the reason for water storage
February
12, 2009
Klamath Falls Herald and News Editorial
By Pat Bushey
This winter’s snowpack is light enough
to worry those who will be depending on
water for crops this summer. A serious
shortage hurts not just agriculture, but the
whole economy along with fish and wildlife.
Water shortages also bring up the
subject of Long Lake and its possible use
for water storage. It’s been studied for
years by the Bureau of Reclamation and the
studies go on. And on.
OK, so the length of time it takes is
necessary and lots of big questions have to
get answered. But as time slides by and one
antsy water year follows another, the need
for storage becomes more apparent even if
the best site for the storage and a way to
finance it hasn’t been decided.
Long Lake, a dry lake bed
east of Upper Klamath Lake, is the
front-runner as a site. The Bureau has yet
to determine whether it will actually hold
water. Assuming it will, then come questions
about cost and how to pay for it.
Water levels in the lakes used as
reservoirs for the 240,000-acre Klamath
Basin Reclamation Project were at about 65
percent of average as of Jan. 1, and the
snow of the past few days hasn’t done much
to alleviate that. There is still time to
recover, however.
In the long view the need to push for
water storage has to be hard-wired into the
Bureau to make sure the studies keep moving
as fast they can. Beyond that, though, local
water users and public officials also need
to make sure that elected federal officials
understand the issue.
U.S. Rep. Greg Walden gets it. We’re
sure of that. We’re less sure of Oregon’s
two U.S. senators, Ron Wyden and Jeff
Merkley. Both of them are from Portland and
Merkley is brand new.
That doesn’t automatically mean they
don’t know much about the Klamath Basin —
Wyden has been good about visiting the area
— but it does put an extra burden on people
in the Basin to give water issues a high
visibility in Washington, D.C. The truth is
the Basin needs support from the two
senators more than they need the Basin’s
political support. If you doubt that, just
look at the election returns.
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