TESTIMONY OF DAN KEPPENSubmitted
to the Subcommittee on Water and Power
House
Resources Committee
The
Honorable Richard Pombo
Chairman
House
Resources Committee
1324
Longworth HOB
The
Honorable Ken Calvert
Chairman
House
Water and Power Subcommittee
1522
Longworth HOB
Chairman Pombo, Chairman Calvert and Members of the Committee:
Thank you for this opportunity to submit testimony on behalf of the Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA). I am Dan Keppen, and I serve as the executive director for KWUA, a non-profit corporation that has represented Klamath Irrigation Project farmers and ranchers since 1953. KWUA members include rural and suburban irrigation districts and other public agencies, as well as private concerns who operate on both sides of the California-Oregon border. We represent 5,000 water users, including 1,400 family farms that encompass over 200,000 acres of irrigated farmland.
In
the last 13 years in the
The resulting impacts to the local community were immediate and far-reaching. Thousands of acres
of valuable farmland were left without water, which, in addition to harming those property owners,
managers, and workers, also imparted an economic “ripple” effect through the broader community.
The wildlife benefits provided by those farms – particularly the food provided for area waterfowl –
were
also lost with the water. The local farming community is still reeling from
the
decision, and severe business losses echoed the hardship endured by farmers
and farm employees.
In
2001, congressional representatives serving the
After
a yearlong barrage of criticism and blame stemming from advocates for higher
1.
The report clearly indicates that recovery of
endangered suckers and threatened coho salmon in the
2.
The committee also reconfirmed its findings from
an earlier report that found no evidence of a causal connection between
3. The NRC committee did not accept arguments that the operation of the Klamath Project caused the 2002 fish die-off or that changes in the operation of the Project at the time would not have prevented it.
Despite the final conclusions, some environmentalists and many in the media continue to maintain the sensational but unsupported position that the Klamath Project was responsible for the 2002 fish mortality that occurred over 200 miles from the Klamath Project.
The
NRC report is consistent with what
The
NRC report clearly shows that the Klamath Project alone cannot solve the
problems of the entire watershed. With that said, water users want to avoid
pointing the finger at other parts of the watershed in an attempt to shift
blame. Rather, we encourage other areas to take action towards solving the
problem, and we believe that farmers and ranchers throughout the watershed
have already clearly demonstrated that actions speak louder than words.
Since
the early 1990s, local water users – both within the Klamath Project and
those who farm in upstream areas north of
· Local efforts to assist National Wildlife Refuges
·
Ecosystem Enhancement and
Sucker Recovery Efforts in the
· Fish Passage Improvement Projects
· Wildlife Enhancement and Wetland Restoration Efforts
· Local Efforts to Improve Water Quality
· Power Resource Development
· Efforts to Improve Klamath Project Water Supply Reliability and Water Use Efficiency
Many of these efforts were driven by an initial desire to implement meaningful restoration actions intended to provide some sort of mitigation “credit” that could be applied towards reducing the burden carried by Klamath Project irrigators to “protect” threatened and endangered fish species. For many years, that credit was not recognized.
For
example, Federal agencies or non-profit conservation groups have acquired over
25,000 acres of farmland in the
In the past year, our irrigators have finally begun to get the recognition –if not the actual regulatory relief - they deserve for their proactive efforts. To wit:
· KWUA was awarded the 2003 “Leadership in Conservation” award by the Oregon Department of Agriculture;
·
KWUA, last month, was
honored on the steps of the
· Tulelake Irrigation District in January received the F. Gordon Johnston award for its innovative canal lining project completed near Newell; and
· U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman and NRCS chief Bruce Knight last month recognized local rancher Mike Byrne for his leadership in conservation.
It is clear that our irrigators have not been idle in the past ten years. Their efforts to improve their environment are all the more impressive when you consider that, all the while, the uncertainty and difficulty associated with keeping their farming operations profitable have not diminished.
Reclamation’s
final 10-year Biological Assessment for Klamath Project 2002-2012 operations
properly incorporates the findings of the interim NRC report, and generally
captures the essence of the “watershed-wide” philosophy endorsed in the
final NRC report. Unfortunately, the fishery agency BOs do not. The USFWS
opinion continues to perpetuate the questionable assumption that lake level
management is the principle mechanism affecting sucker survival in Upper
Klamath Lake (UKL). The NOAA Fisheries jeopardy decision similarly continues
to place high emphasis on downstream flows. The stored water developed for
Klamath Project farmers continues to be reallocated to meet the artificial
demands set by agency biologists.
The
combined – and apparently, unanticipated – impacts placed on our community
from the application of the two opinions are unacceptable. On
In
addition to the continued uncertainty irrigators face, the opinions are
generating new, unanticipated impacts to the community. In the past 40 to 50
years, while the cropping pattern in the Klamath Project has varied from year
to year, the overall planted acreage has remained consistent. On the other
hand, the 2002-2012 biological opinion created by NOAA Fisheries for coho
salmon established the river flow schedule and an “environmental water
bank” – which ratchets up to 100,000 acre-feet in 2005, regardless of
actual hydrologic conditions – that is the primary source of new demand for
water in the
It is not the farmers who have imposed new water demands that, in essence, have made groundwater the default supplemental supply to the Klamath Project. It is the opinions of agency fishery biologists who have fundamentally altered how our century-old water project operates, and who have apparently failed to anticipate the resulting impacts to our community. While Reclamation in 2002 sharply disagreed with the findings of both fishery agency biological opinions, it is not yet clear how consultation will be reinitiated to create a new operations plan.
The
NRC report questions the current regulatory structure that governs Klamath
basin fisheries management. In addition to calling for oversight of current
federal agency management, the NRC report recommends that the management
structure for ecosystem restoration needs to involve local groups and private
landowners in the design of restoration activities and investments. The report
urges federal management agencies to recognize the nature of incentives in the
ESA for private landowners to participate in ecosystem recovery. The report
confirms observations of many landowners in the
“This perception could be changed by cooperative arrangements that promote the welfare of the listed species without threatening landowners.[1]” (emphasis added).
To
solve the problems of the
We
can all thank the Bush Administration for having the courage and commitment to
tackle this very contentious issue. I am puzzled by critics who claim that
this administration discards sound science for politics. What we’ve seen
here in the past three years tells a different story. The Bush Administration
in 2001 was literally handed opinions that shut down our family farms, and in
fact, implemented those opinions. The Secretary of Interior later in the year
asked the premier independent science body in the land to assess what happened
and to provide long-term recommendations. With a final report in hand, the
Administration stepped up, and, in the FY 2005 budget request, asked for $105
million to tackle programs throughout the watershed, consistent with the NRC
Committee findings. So – tell me again
- what’s wrong with this approach? The answer is – nothing. It’s
how you manage business using a watershed-wide approach.
We hope the NRC report can be used as a catalyst to improve the collaboration required to address the basin-wide problems we face. We know we can develop locally derived solutions to address most of the NRC report recommendations. We should do this together, and not wait for the government or outside interests to do it for us. It's the only way we can protect the economic livelihood of our communities.
[1]
National Research Council . 2003. Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the