
‘Fish
and chips’
North Coast Journal
January 17, 2008
After two years of
sometimes tense discussion, the 26 disparate stakeholders participating
in the
Klamath
Basin
settlement talks released a
proposed agreement Tuesday that they say provides for the diverse needs
of irrigators, fishermen and Indian tribes.
Craig Tucker of the Karuk
Tribe is calling the Proposed Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement a
“fish and chips settlement.” That’s because the agreement ensures
that sustainable agriculture will continue in the
Upper
Basin
by providing for reliable
allocations of water to the region’s farmers. At the same time, it
lays out a comprehensive program to restore fish populations in the
Klamath River
to levels the settlement
group says will be sufficient for tribal, recreational and commercial
fisheries.
The agreement also
includes a program to stabilize energy costs for farmers, ranchers and
the two national wildlife refuges in the Upper Basin if and when the
river’s four lower dams are removed. But that will depend on the
outcome of ongoing negotiations between the settlement group and
PacifiCorp, the Portland-based utility that owns and operates the dams.
Although that process, known as the Hydropower Agreement, is separate
from the Proposed Agreement, the settlement group believes that a
basin-wide solution must include both in order to succeed.
“This agreement only
works with removal of four dams,” said Troy Fletcher of the Yurok
Tribe in a Tuesday afternoon press conference call.
While a majority of the
stakeholders seem to be in concert now, one long-time participant —
the Hoopa Valley Tribe — was noticeably absent from Tuesday’s
conference call. But the tribe did lob a news release explaining its
rejection of the draft agreement.
In it, Hoopa Valley Tribe
Chairman Clifford Lyle Marshall called the agreement “an old West
irrigation deal” with “guarantees for irrigators, empty promises for
the Indians.” He said it “makes the right to divert water for
irrigation the top priority, trumping salmon water needs and the best
available science on the river.”
Specifically, the tribe
is concerned that while the agreement specifies goals for water
diversions to irrigators, it does not set specific water flows for fish.
It says the agreement “altogether ignores” two independent studies
on river flows and salmon needs, as well as a Congress-backed report
from the Natural Resources Council in November that recommended
increased flows. Instead, the agreement allows for adaptive management
and the development, over 10 years, of three plans: for restoration of
the river system, reintroduction of salmon above Iron Gate Dam and
establishment of a monitoring program.
Tom Schlosser, an
attorney for the Hoopa Valley Tribe reached by telephone Tuesday
afternoon, reiterated the tribe’s concern about there being no set
standards for fish restoration. For example, he said, in 1984 the
Trinity Restoration Act set the goal that the fishery would be restored
to conditions that existed before the Lewsiton and Trinity dams were
built. In the Klamath agreement, however, he said, “all the guarantees
are for the right to divert water [for irrigation], and the fish get
whatever trickles down.”
Despite its concerns, the
tribe is not leaving the table, Schlosser said. It’s good the draft is
finally out for the public to see, he argued. Now comes the time for
corrections.
But Chuck Bonham of Trout
Unlimited said during the conference call that the agreement’s method
of determining flows for fish makes sense. “Think about the logic of
the flow part,” he said. “In drier years, when there’s less water,
there’ll be less diversion of water. In wet years, there’ll be more
diversion.” Another stakeholder noted that the agreement, by tying in
with the parallel agreement (still in the works) to remove four dams,
will put more water in the river — therefore, there’ll be a bigger
pie to divide than exists now.
Craig Tucker said
specific restoration targets will be arrived at through the
yet-to-be-developed monitoring plan and will incorporate new information
emerging from the removal of the four dams. And, he said, “It is our
view that the best available science is the science produced on the
river” by the tribal biologists. “We don’t need the NRC.”
— Heidi Walters and
Japhet Weeks
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Source:
http://www.northcoastjournal.com/011708/shortstories0117.html
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