
Governor
stresses need to store water
Tribes,
farmers, fish - Ideas include a possible dam and a water bank in eastern
Oregon
November
09, 2007
HARRY
ESTEVE
The
Oregonian
WARM
SPRINGS -- At a meeting with
Oregon
tribal
leaders Thursday, Gov. Ted Kulongoski said he wants to look at building
massive water storage areas in eastern
Oregon
to help
farmers, protect fish and guard against a future of lower snowpacks
because of global warming.
Kulongoski
plans to ask lawmakers at February's special legislative session to
approve spending money on staff to look at the feasibility of storing
water both above and below ground in the
Umatilla
Basin
, which
feeds into the
Columbia
River
.
He also
wants money from the Legislature to pay for a "water bank"
that would allow an exchange of water rights to reallocate how much
water is taken from the river systems.
"The
need for water in the
Umatilla
Basin
is real
and must be met," Kulongoski said, "but not on the backs of
fish."
Kulongoski
revealed his proposal at the Oregon Tribal Summit, which is being held
at the Kah-Nee-Ta resort, run by the Confederated Tribes of the Warm
Springs. The annual summit brings leaders of
Oregon
's nine
tribes together for a "government-to-government" meeting with
Kulongoski and other state officials.
In a
series of speeches, tribal council members said they have had largely
good relations with the governor's office, although some said they would
like better communication and more access to state officials. Several
said they want the state to develop a tribal education curriculum for
Oregon
students
to learn about Native peoples.
Anton
Minthorn, tribal council chairman of the Confederated Tribes of the
Umatilla Indian Reservation, said the state should pay for a full-time
Native American education specialist to develop and distribute such a
lesson plan.
"The
nine tribes have asked for this position for years," Minthorn said.
"Governor, make this position a priority."
Kulongoski
wouldn't say how much money he'll request for the water storage study
because he's still working out details. He also didn't discuss where the
money would come from to build the surface and subsurface reservoirs,
which could cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
But he
said
Oregon
soon will
have to face up to dwindling water supplies.
"If
climate change is real, and I believe it is, there's going to be less
snowpack" to feed the state's major river systems in spring and
summer, Kulongoski said. Instead, the water will come in the form of
rain, "and we have to be able to capture it and store it."
Last
year, Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire signed into law a
Columbia
River
management
plan that seeks to make more water available for eastern
Washington
farmers by
increasing storage in new reservoirs.
Oregon
lawmakers earlier this year discussed a proposal
-- known as the Oasis Project -- to allow farmers and ranchers to draw
more water out of the
Columbia
.
Kulongoski said he opposed the plan because it didn't offer enough
protection for salmon runs in the river system.
Under
his plan, at least one-third of any water stored would be used to
benefit fish runs.
Lobbyist
John DiLorenzo, who worked for the Oasis Project last session, said he's
seen proposals by the governor's staff that would include a possible dam
near Boardman on a river that feeds into the
Columbia
, although
he didn't know what river. He said he supports water storage for
drought-stricken eastern
Oregon
but his
group has submitted an alternative that would pump water into
underground aquifers for storage rather than build a dam.
John
Barkley, general council chairman for the Umatilla tribe, said his
members generally support the governor's ideas for greater water
storage. But it will be an expensive undertaking, he said.
"We
think this is a sound approach," Barkley said. "But then the
question is, who benefits, and who pays?"
Harry
Esteve: 503-221-8226; harryesteve@news.oregonian.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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