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| View full size In this March 10, 2010 photo an irrigation canal stands dry on the Klamath Reclamation Project near Klamath Falls, Ore. The Senate on Thursday approved $10 million to compensate farmers damaged by the water shortage. |
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WASHINGTON -- The Senate on Thursday approved $10 million to help farmers in the drought-stricken Klamath Basin, an unlikely burst of good news to a struggling region that has endured a shortage of water and hope for months.
The effort was
orchestrated primarily by
Sen. Jeff Merkley,
D-Ore.,
who found a way to add the money to
a must-pass spending bill that
finances President Barack Obama's
troop surge in Afghanistan. It
also includes $5 billion to
replenish disaster aid accounts as
well as money for Haitian earthquake
relief and aid to U.S. allies in the
fight against terror.
The almost $60
billion measure passed by a
bipartisan 67-28 tally. (Merkley
voted for the bill while
Sen. Ron Wyden
voted against it.) More than
half of the funding would go to
the Pentagon, mostly to support
Obama's influx of 30,000 troops
to Afghanistan.
While the Klamath
Basin funding was a mere spec in
the overall bill, it survived
several near-death experiences
and required last-minute
lobbying from Republican
Rep. Greg Walden.
Walden convinced at least one
Republican senator to remove his
objections that would have
doomed the proposal.
The money will be
used to pay farmers to idle
roughly 50,000 acres of crop
land that cannot be used because
of severe reductions in water.
The payments will allow farmers
to weather the season and,
hopefully, recover next year,
said Greg Addington, executive
director of the Klamath Water
Users Association.
``It's a big
deal,'' Addington said. ``The
situation here is that we're
getting one-third the amount of
surface water (as usual) ... and
we have people just trying to
hold on.''
By paying farmers
to take land out of production
water demand will be reduced
enough to allow those who remain
to cultivate a crop. In all,
about 70,000 acres will be idled
as a result of the $10 million
approved Thursday and $8 million
delivered earlier by the federal
government.
``I am very
pleased and very tired,''
Merkley said after the deal was
finalized. Getting there wasn't
easy. Under Senate rules, the
money could be added to the bill
only if every senator agreed. At
first, three Republican senators
objected. Those concerns were
resolved only to trigger other
objections.
The Senate bill
must still be reconciled with a
different version of the same
bill passed by the House. Oregon
officials are confident,
however, that the Klamath money
will remain. Moreover, once the
bill becomes law, the money will
start flowing quickly because
the apparatus for disbursing it
is already in place.
Merkley enlisted
the help of Majority Leader
Harry Reid and his deputy Sen.
Dick Durbin. Republican Sen.
Lamar Alexander helped smooth
Republican concerns. Strangest
of all, Walden came to the
Senate from the House to lobby
Republicans.
The biggest
barrier was finding money from
another place in the federal
budget to pay for the Klamath
initiative that would not prompt
an objection. After several
dead ends, Sen.Patty Murray,
D-Wash., told Merkley about a
federal program to reward local
police for enforcing seatbelt
laws that had a $120 million
surplus.
That was the
break he needed. Ten million
dollars of the seatbelt money
will now be used to pay farmers
in Oregon.
``This is very,
very important,'' Walden said.
``I spent the better part of an
hour in the (Senate) cloak room
and we made our case.''
Earlier this
month, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture declared the
Klamath Basin a federal
disaster area. The Upper
Klamath Lake, which provides
most of the water to
irrigators in the region,
had only one-third of normal
water levels this year –
leaving over 1,400 farmers
and ranchers without the
needed resources to irrigate
their crops.
The land
idling program alleviates
the worst effects of water
shortages and extreme
drought conditions. Through
a competitive bidding
process, Klamath farmers and
ranchers entered into
agreements to irrigate only
some or none of their land
for the 2010 season in
exchange for drought aid.
These additional funds will
support those farmers who
would otherwise face
financial demise because
they were required to plant
crops, only to see them fail
due to a lack of water.
Thursday's vote was just
the latest chapter in
the Klamath Basin's
tumultuous recent
history. When drought
and the Endangered
Species Act shut off
irrigation on the
Klamath Reclamation
Project in 2001, farmers
demonstrated and broke
open headgates to let
water into irrigation
ditches, setting up a
confrontation with
federal agents.
Their
defiance won the
sympathy of President
Bush and Karl Rove, and
they came to believe
that they could change
the law so that people
would take precedence
over fish when it came
to water. Even if the
fish were on the verge
of extinction.
But the
Endangered Species Act
survived, despite the
best efforts of the Bush
administration and some
conservatives in
Congress.
Those
tensions remain and
Merkley and Walden both
agreed that the
emergency money will
have little to no affect
on addressing the larger
forces governing the
allocation of precious
water in the region.
Still,
for the time being,
thousands of farmers who
faced potential
financial ruin will now
have some help.
“This additional funding won’t make the drought disappear, but it will help farmers in the Klamath Basin meet their equipment payments and pay their bills,” Wyden said.