

KDRV Staff
November 10, 2009
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. - Dozens voiced concerns about the
controversial Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement at public
forums held by Klamath County legislators Tuesday.
The KBRA, which includes the removal of four dams on the
Klamath River, outlines water allocations in the Klamath
Basin for irrigators, tribes, conservationists and
fisheries.
Several who spoke at the two forums said they are
stakeholders in the project and were denied the ability to
be involved in the process.
Some of the groups involved in draft agreement negotiations
include American Indian tribes, California and Oregon state
agencies, federal agencies, irrigators and some conservative
groups.
The Sprague River Water Resource Foundation say they are
among those who say they asked to be part of the KBRA
process and were denied.
"We've asked on numerous occasions through the power group
to become a positive part of the negotiation process and
been denied to this point in time," said Garrett Roseberry
with the SRWRF.
State Senator Doug Whitsett (R- Klamath Falls Dist. 28), who
is against dam removal, says agreement negotiations are not
transparent.
"We don't know what is going on in those meetings all we see
is from time to time the drafts agreements," said Whitsett
(R- Klamath Falls Dist. 28).
Some farmers and ranchers told the panel the KBRA, which
would change water rights in areas of the Upper Klamath
Basin, would hurt business.
"The way the KBRA is written right now, predominately, most
of the stakeholders have some type of assurances after they
go through the process. Right now the upper basin does not,"
Roseberry said.
According to a member of the drafting committee, the KBRA
could be signed by the beginning of 2010.
Whitsett said the Klamath Water Users Association and the
tribes collectively decided not to express their views at
today's meeting.
Last month, PacifiCorp, the utility that owns the four
hydroelectric dams, agreed to terms of the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement draft, or KHSA, for the
removal of the four hydroelectric dams.
PacifiCorp was among 28 groups, including the states of
California and Oregon, American Indian tribes, federal
agencies, irrigators and conservation groups that released
the KHSA. The KHSA is dependent on the larger KBRA, which
promises increased flows and water for irrigators while
restoring critical salmon habitat.
Pressure has been building for years on the Portland-based
utility to remove the dams, as salmon runs have declined,
farmers have faced water shutoffs, and water quality in the
river has declined.
As written, the KSHA gives the U.S. Secretary of the
Interior until 2012 to determine if dam removal is in the
public interest and if it will restore vital salmon runs on
the Klamath River. If approved, it would lead to the largest
dam removal project in U.S. history, expected to start
sometime after 2020. J.C. Boyle, Copco No. 1 and 2 and the
Iron Gate dams would all be removed.
PacifiCorp, a unit of Omaha, Neb.-based Berkshire Hathaway
Inc., is expected to sign the KHSA draft agreement by the
end of the year.
The agreement sets a cap of $450 million for dam removal.
Oregon has agreed to a surcharge of $180 million on Oregon
customers of PacifiCorp. California must still approve bonds
to cover the rest. Meanwhile, PacifiCorp has agreed to spend
$500,000 a year for the next 10 years on restoration of coho
salmon habitat in California tributaries of the Klamath
River.
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Source:
http://kdrv.com/news/local/148544