Published February 25, 2005
Klamath
Falls Herald and News
By TODD KEPPLE
Ranchers who irrigate out of
streams above Upper Klamath Lake have reached an agreement with leaders of the
Klamath Tribes over how to resolve a longstanding dispute over water rights.
Under the agreement, ranchers and other landowners will drop their opposition to
the Tribes' claim for water rights that would maintain high streamflows in the
Sprague, Williamson and Wood rivers and their tributaries.
In exchange, the tribes have
agreed to not exercise their water right in a way that would harm irrigators
whose claims to water were established before July 1, 1961.
The agreement announced today was described as a modest start to untangling a
complex tangle of claims and protests among hundreds of water users in the
Klamath Basin.
Tribal Chairman Allen Foreman
and Fort Klamath rancher Roger Nicholson announced the agreement this morning at
the Herald and News.
The state of Oregon is in the process of adjudicating several hundred claims for
water rights in the Upper Klamath Basin. The Klamath Tribes were among many
parties who filed claims for water in 1997.
The adjudication process has
been stalled since then by disputes over conflicting claims. An adjudication is
a legal proceeding that quantifies how much water goes with a claim.
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