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Published March 4, 2005
Klamath
Falls Herald and News
By DYLAN DARLING
Federal water managers say
they hope to deliver a full supply of water to irrigators in most of the
Klamath Reclamation Project this year, even though conditions this spring
closely resemble those of four years ago.
"The numbers are kind of paralleling 2001," said Jolyne Lea, a
streamflow forecaster with the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
The federal government
didn't delivery any water to most Project farmers at the start of the 2001
season, and turmoil ensued as irrigators and their supporters staged a protest
for several weeks at the headgates of the A Canal.
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has more flexibility in managing water than it
did four years ago.
Still, while the Bureau will
do everything it can to make full deliveries this year, water users should be
aware that water supplies could be tight, said Dave Sabo, manager of the
Klamath Reclamation Project.
"We are facing some tough times ahead, I'm afraid," Sabo said.
"It's dry out there. It's a real dry year."
He spoke to about 120
Project irrigators Thursday at a meeting of the Klamath Water Users
Association at the Klamath County Fairgrounds. The focus of the meeting was on
power rates and possible changes, but Sabo also took some time to discuss
water supplies.
His presentation didn't surprise many in the room. Since the first streamflow
forecast in January, the predicted water supply numbers have gotten worse with
every biweekly update.
The Natural Resources
Conservation Service, the federal agency tasked with predicting how much
streamflow the snowpacks around the country will produce throughout the
summer, came out with its March 1 prediction earlier this week.
It was more bad news for the Project and its water users.
The forecast calls for
265,000 acre-feet of water, or 52 percent of average, to flow into Upper
Klamath Lake from April to September. The lake is the Project's main
reservoir.
The snowiest months of winter have passed and spring is now 16 days away.
Irrigation season typically starts the first part of April.
Although storms brought some
rainfall to the Basin last week, it was too warm to add any snow to the higher
elevations.
"The warm rain will just melt the snow," Lea said.
The snow level today was at
5,500 feet, according to the National Weather Service. Forecasts for the
weekend call for highs in the mid-50s to lower 60s, although no rain is
expected.
"The weather is wonderful to go out and have fun in, but not it's not
good if you want to have water for the summer," Lea said.
The weather today could add
to a shortage of water this summer.
Although the Bureau has implemented a water bank program to reduce the demand
for irrigation water, the program wasn't designed to soften the blow of a
natural water shortage, Sabo said.
While things look bad for
farmers who rely on Upper Klamath Lake, things look even worse for irrigators
on the east side of the Klamath Project. Low water levels in Clear Lake and
Gerber Reservoir could cut irrigation season in half, even with reduced
deliveries, officials said.
The latest inflow forecast numbers have Gerber getting 5,000 acre-feet, or 28
percent of normal, and Clear Lake getting 19,000 acre-feet, or 40 percent of
normal, from April through September.
The next streamflow forecast
will be out on March 15.
On the Net: www.wcc.nrcs.usda.gov/special/klamath.pl
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/03/04/news/top_stories/top1.txt