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| Horsley |
“People
talk about 50 years, I’m just trying to
figure out how to get through the next five
years,” said Luther Horsley, president of
Klamath Water Users Association.
Horsley
was among Basin residents, tribal members
and leaders who attended the signing
ceremony in Salem for the restoration
document and related Klamath River dam
removal agreement.
The
water agreement aims to resolve the Basin’s
disputes over water for agriculture,
endangered fish species and the
environment.
It would spend $1.5 billion to remove four dams, conduct habitat restoration and enact other provisions. The document still needs legislation and funding from Congress, and studies on dam removal are only beginning.
Right now, though, the approaching water year — with its increasingly dire conditions — is weighing on irrigators, fishermen and others in the region.
Tough conditions
Stakeholders, including U.S. Interior
Secretary Ken Salazar, pointed out during
Thursday’s signing ceremony that the coming
water year looks tough.
The region has had a lower than average snow pack and precipitation this winter, which were about 72 percent of normal as of Thursday.
Stakeholders said it’s crucial they continue working together until the restoration agreement is fully implemented. Even with the possibility of tough water years, they say the relationships they’ve cultivated will help get the Basin through them.
“If anything, it would cement the relationship, not break it up,” said Glen Spain, northwest regional director for Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.
The restoration agreement will not have an immediate impact on the Basin, and likely won’t for several years.
Lake levels low
Snow pack and precipitation are only part of the problem this year.
According to weekly figures from the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation, the surfaces of Upper
Klamath Lake and Clear Lake are nearly a
foot below where they were at this time last
year. Gerber Reservoir is even worse off —
its water level is more than six feet below
levels from a year ago.
Spain and Greg Addington, executive director of Klamath Water Users Association, said the lakes are low primarily because a court order specified high river flows for endangered fish. Those high f lows, combined with below average precipitation, hurt the region’s water supply.
“Even
with substantial rain and snowfall this
spring, predicted water supplies will be
limited,” said Sue Fry, area manager for the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Klamath Falls
office.
Side Bar
Understanding the water year
The water that flows throughout the Klamath River Basin depends on each winter’s snowfall.
Winter
storms build the snow pack in the region’s
mountains. The melt water generated from
that snow feeds the Basin’s streams
throughout the year, which in turn ends up
in the lakes and
By measuring the amount of snow throughout the region, as well as its water content, officials track and predict how much water will be available throughout the rest of the year.