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Oregon senator supports Klamath
Basin agreement
By
Matthew Preusch, The Oregonian
February 11, 2010, 3:21PM
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Courtesy of
Sen. Jeff Merkley -
Oregon Senator
Jeff Merkley, left, visits with
Klamath County rancher Tim O'Connor
in the Klamath Basin in May of 2009.
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An
agreement to share water among fish and farms in
the Klamath Basin today won its first explicit
endorsement from Oregon's congressional
delegation
Sen. Jeff Merkley said he supports the
basin-wide restoration agreement
and a companion deal that could lead to the
removal of four dams on the Klamath River.
"These agreements are great news for Oregon, for
the farmers and ranchers in the Basin, and for
the Klamath Tribe and our fishing communities,
and I want to congratulate all of the
stakeholders who have worked tirelessly to
create a vision for a brighter future for the
Klamath Basin," Merkley said in a statement.
The Democratic senator's endorsement comes as
environmental groups, irrigators, tribes and
local governments continue to square off over
the dam and water agreements.
This week the group
Friends of the River
and the
Hoopa Tribe
said they won't endorse the deals; however, the
governors of Oregon and California; the Obama
administration; numerous tribes and governments;
and an array of irrigation and conservation
groups continue to support the plan.
"The development of these agreements provide a
blueprint for how policy should be created,"
Merkley said. "Former foes became active
partners, and their incredible collaboration has
produced better outcomes for each stakeholder
than they could achieve under the status quo.
Washington needs to take a serious look at how
we get things done here in Oregon."
The 369-page water agreement, which was released
last month and is expected to be signed soon,
seeks to strike a balance in the basin between
diversion of water for agriculture and the needs
of protected fish. It would require roughly half
a billion dollars of additional federal funding.
A companion agreement calls for the removal four
dams owned by the Portland-based utility
PacifiCorp beginning in 2020, with removal paid
for by a mix of ratepayer charges and California
water bonds.
Also this month, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service
posted its analysis
of the effects the agreements would have on fish
populations.
"Removal of PacifiCorp Project dams and
subsequent reestablishment of Basin connectivity
and variable stream flows in the Klamath River
are expected to contribute significantly towards
restoration of the physical, chemical, and
biological processes and interactions that are
essential to a functional aquatic ecosystem,"
the report says.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section
107, any copyrighted
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research and educational purposes only. For
more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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