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Final Klamath Basin agreement
released
January 08, 2010,
9:42 AM
The final version of a massive agreement to share
water and other resources in the fractious
Klamath Basin was
released this morning.
The roughly 300-page
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement
doesn't differ substantially in many ways from a draft agreement
released to much fanfare two years ago, according to those
involved.
But it does reflect the work of negotiators representing
environmental groups, tribes, farmers, local governments, state
and federal agencies to refine the document so it could garner
wider approval and survive any legal challenges.
Klamath history
Read previous coverage of the Klamath Basin
here.
At its heart, the deal would provide water to
farms and ranches in and near a 200,000-acre federal irrigation
project that straddles to the Oregon and Californian border
while ensuring flows for protected fish.
The federal government curtailed water to project farmers in
2001 to protect the endangered sucker in Klamath Lake, leading
to protests and civil disobedience that gained national
attention. Water was restored the following year, but that led
in part to a huge die-off of salmon in the river downstream.
In the years since, groups and individuals long at odds - like
farmers and fishers - have been working to find common ground
for an agreement to avert future water wars.
“We are proposing a plan that will balance water use in the
basin such that all of the Klamath’s diverse rural communities
can prosper. This means restoring fisheries in a manner that
allows stability for agricultural economies,” said Greg
Addington of the Klamath Water Users Association, which
represents farmers on the Klamath Reclamation Project.
The deal also includes an agreement to remove four private
power-producing dams on the Klamath River to help recover runs
of salmon there, and it reflects the Obama administration's
entrance into the long-running talks.
Critics of the deal say
it doesn't do enough to protect federal bird refuges on the
basin, large parts of which are still leased for farming, and it
doesn't guarantee enough water will be left in the river during
drought years to protect fish.
The negotiators will now take the document back to their
constituents and ask them to sign off on it.
But before any of the plan can go forward, Congress has to agree
to spend roughly half a billion dollars to fund the various
aspects of the deal.
“In many ways, completing the negotiation marks a beginning, not
an end," said Petey Brucker, of the Salmon River Restoration
Council. "We still have to pass legislation and complete
environmental reviews before dam removal and other elements of
the agreements can be implemented. Still, we are closer than we
have ever been to solving the Klamath crisis."
The Oregonian will update this post throughout the day
with reactions from proponents and opponents of the deal.
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