
By Ron Brown & KDRV Staff
August 31, 2010
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. - Voters in Klamath County will get a chance
to have their voices heard on whether four Klamath River dams
should be removed.
At a packed meeting Tuesday, the Klamath County Board of
Commissioners unanimously agreed to put an advisory measure on
the November ballot asking whether the county should discontinue
participation in the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement water
allocation process.
Siskiyou County has a similar advisory measure on its November
ballot.
The measure comes after long-running battles over sharing scarce
water between salmon and farms in the Klamath Basin led to two
landmark agreements earlier this year, the KBRA and the Klamath
Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement.
The KHSA lays out plans for removing four hydroelectric dams on
the upper Klamath that block salmon. The KBRA covers sharing
water between fish and farms and restoring ecological balance to
the basin.
The advisory measure comes after a proposed initiative to bar
Klamath County from supporting removal of the dams failed to
qualify for the county ballot last week. Klamath County Clerk
Linda Smith said it did not meet state constitutional
requirements to stick to one subject, or a court ruling barring
initiatives from addressing administrative actions.
The KBRA and KHSA were signed by more than 30 groups in
February, including Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski and
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. If approved, it would
be the largest dam removal in U.S. History.
In total, both agreements amount to $1.5 billion, including
$200-million funded by Oregon and $250-million by California.
With the agreements signed, the fate of dam removal lies in the
hands of Congress and U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken
Salazar, who has until 2012 to determine if dam removal is
economically and environmentally safe.
Actual removal of the dams would not start until 2020. In
addition to the signing the KBRA and KHSA, the removal of the
dams is contingent on a water bond that is before California
voters.
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