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Fields of conflict in the Klamath
Activists say farmers are poised to solidify their presence in the
basin's federal wildlife refuges.
Three
bald eagles roost on an old power pole in the Lower Klamath National
Wildlife Refuge. The
Klamath
Basin
remains
home to the largest population of the protected birds in the lower 48
states. (Robert
Durell / LAT)
By Eric
Bailey
Times Staff Writer
May 7, 2007
TULE LAKE
,
CALIF.
Under the rolling
cloud-scape of the
Klamath
Basin
, a curious rite of spring
is underway.
Migratory birds are flocking to the basin's necklace of federal wildlife
refuges straddling
Oregon
and
California
one of the most
important stops on the Pacific Flyway. As usual, the geese, mallards and
terns are sharing the sanctuaries with tractors.
Fowl
take flight near the Lower Klamath Lake National Wildlife Refuge.
Scientists say the annual bird migration to the
Klamath
Basin
has
decreased by two-thirds in the last 50 years.
(Robert
Durell / LAT)
Agriculture fields have elbowed onto what once were marshes and shallow
inland seas, shrinking the basin's wetlands by nearly 80%.
Environmentalists have long fought to stop that farming, saying the
refuges belong to the birds.
But now, activists say, farmers in the
Klamath
Basin
appear poised to cement
their presence on the refuges, the basin's most productive farmland.
Farmers are gaining an edge in closed-door settlement talks over the
fate of four dams on the
Klamath River
, which meanders across two
states before pouring into the
Pacific Ocean
north of
Eureka
,
Calif.
Environmentalists universally support dam removal, which would let
endangered salmon reach upriver spawning grounds blocked for nearly a
century.
Activists with a pair of Oregon-based groups, however, fear that a
looming compromise backed by the Bush administration will come at an
unacceptable cost: an agreement to forever allow farming in the refuges.
The 23-page settlement proposes up to $250 million to ease soaring
electricity costs for irrigation pumps and possibly finance a renewable
energy plant.
Farmers and other big landowners could also be shielded from
endangered-species restrictions invoked to revive imperiled fish
species: the salmon, two types of suckerfish in Upper Klamath Lake and
the bull trout, which is found in upstream tributaries.
Steve
Pedery is a member of Oregon Wild, a
Portland
nonprofit
that objects to what it says have been concessions to farmers in the
wildlife-rich
Klamath
Basin
. At right,
an old sign near
Tule
Lake
reflects
the farmers position. Its irresponsible to treat these refuges
like trading stock, Pedery says. (Robert
Durell / LAT)
"The Bush administration has hijacked these talks about dam removal
to advance unrelated policy goals bad for the environment and bad in the
long term for the
Klamath
Basin
," said Steve Pedery of
Oregon Wild, a
Portland
nonprofit.
At this point, that resolute stand is a lonely one.
Other participants in the talks, including several national
environmental groups, say it's too early to go to the mat over a deal
that's anything but done.
"If folks are talking about one thing or another being sold out, we
think that's very premature," said Amy Kober of American Rivers.
"There's still plenty to be worked out."
The administration's top negotiator declined to discuss details but
rejected any notion of pressure from
Washington
.
"I've had a free rein to do whatever I felt was right," said
Steve Thompson, California-Nevada manager for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. "I haven't felt any pressures, other than that Klamath is
controversial from all sides."
Forging a consensus on the Klamath has proved extraordinarily
complicated. Compromises, experts say, will be inevitable for the
proposal to get federal and state support.
"It's a huge stretch to imagine that commercial agriculture is
benefiting wildlife populations in the long run," said Nancy
Langston, a
University
of
Wisconsin
environmental studies
professor who has studied the Klamath crisis. "But getting buy-in
from as many people in the basin as possible is critical in the long
run."
After more than two years of discussions, 26 of the 28 groups U.S.
water and wildlife agencies, the states of California and Oregon,
fishermen, four tribes and an array of environmental groups have
agreed to push forward to settle details in the agreement.
Meanwhile, Oregon Wild and WaterWatch of Oregon, the two groups vocally
objecting to what they describe as concessions to farmers, have
"essentially been voted off the island," said John DeVoe,
WaterWatch's executive director.
In addition to pushing for reduced water demand in the basin and higher
river flows, the two groups ran aground in their quest to protect the
refuges and lighten the footprint of agriculture.
Before the arrival of settlers in the West, the
Klamath
Basin
's wetlands totaled nearly
360,000 acres, a mix of shallow lakes and marshes under skies filled
with migratory birds. Besides harboring wildlife, the marshes naturally
carried clean Cascade runoff that emerged like a volcanic broth on its
way to the
Klamath River
.
Change
came in 1905, when the precursor to the federal Bureau of Reclamation
began to drain marshlands for homesteading farmers.
That same year, a pioneering conservationist named William Finley
visited the basin and came away awed by the abundant bird life and vast
wetlands. His reports helped persuade President Theodore Roosevelt to
establish the first of the basin's refuges in 1908.
In less than a decade, wildlife began to suffer. Completion of a
railroad levee in 1917 cut off the biggest refuge's marshy connection to
the
Klamath River
, and within five years a
vast expanse had dried up.
Early attempts to farm around the refuges mostly flopped as wildfires
burned across parched peat soil.
But the federal Reclamation Service pressed ahead, rerouting whole
rivers and building dams and canals. In the 1940s, it bored a mile-long
tunnel through Sheepy Ridge to help drain
Tule
Lake
.
Homesteaders settled in the basin, most of them veterans of the two
world wars. They built communities and successful agricultural
enterprises in a cold, dry land where the growing season barely lasts
more than three months.
As
Tule
Lake
receded over the decades,
farmers fought to have the fertile lake bottom opened for sale as farms.
In 1964, Congress barred homesteading but allowed leased farmland on the
refuges.
Today, nearly 15% of the 240,000 farm acres in the
Klamath
Basin
is leased land on two
federal wildlife refuges.
Sign
extolling the farmers' position to keep their full allotments of water
sits near
Tule Lake
,
California
.
(Robert
Durell / LAT)
A quarter of the
Lower Klamath
Lake
refuge is farmed. At the
Tule
Lake
wildlife refuge, crops
sprout on nearly half the land, growing in the rich soil of what used to
be lake bottom.
"That's the heartland of the basin," said longtime farmer Sid
Staunton, 50. "To shut us out of the refuge would wipe out
Tule
Lake
."
Staunton
and his brothers, Marshall
and Ed, have farmed the
Klamath
Basin
for decades, just as their
father and grandfather before them. They grow potatoes, onions and
barley, routinely planting upward of 1,000 acres on the refuge.
Like other farmers, the brothers talk of how agriculture's grains
provide feed to migratory birds, about how they've changed their
practices to better accommodate wildlife.
They've gone heavily into organic farming, spreading far less fertilizer
and pesticide, which can end up in wetlands and rivers.
Meanwhile, crop rotation on the refuge now means flooding farm parcels
every couple of years, which allows marshland to sprout anew for a few
seasons before being returned to agricultural production.
Agribusiness enthusiastically supports more water for the refuges, which
have been parched in recent droughts, said Greg Addington, executive
director of the Klamath Water Users Assn., which represents basin
farmers.
Addington said reduced farming on the refuges would be a regional
economic disaster, knocking out not just growers but the infrastructure
that supports them the seed merchants, fertilizer and pesticide
sales, tractor dealerships.
Staunton
said
Oregon
environmentalists don't
want to hear such things they want all the farmers out.
"It's their ultimate goal," he said. "If they can force
the farmers to bail, they can flood it all."
Environmentalists counter that agribusiness has gotten its way too long.
The pendulum seemed to be swinging back in favor of wildlife during the
last years of the
Clinton
administration, which
conducted a formal review that might have curtailed refuge farming. That
possibility faded after President Bush took office.
The basin remains home to the largest population of bald eagles in the
lower 48 states as well as three of the West's last surviving white
pelican breeding colonies. But scientists say the annual migration to
the Klamath, which 50 years ago filled the sky with 7 million ducks and
geese, has decreased by more than two-thirds.
Environmentalists blame myriad problems: farm equipment that can destroy
nests, silt from agricultural runoff, pesticides. But mostly it's a
matter of farm fields replacing wetlands. A federal study found that a
typical farm acre produces about 200 pounds of waste grain that birds
can eat, while a bountiful wetland acre can yield 2,600 pounds of
rootlets and tubers.
Pedery of Oregon Wild said restoration of refuge wetlands could help
Klamath River
salmon rebound, with marsh
plants filtering pollutants to improve water quality.
"It's irresponsible to treat these refuges like trading
stock," he said. "It's land that was set aside for geese and
eagles, not potatoes and onions."
eric.bailey@latimes.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-klamath7may07,1,400173.
story?coll=la-headlines-california&ctrack=1&cset=true
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