
California
officials propose California Endangered Species Act Exemption for
Klamath River
by
Felice Pace
Sunday Nov 5th,
2006
California
Fish & Game (CDFG) proposes giving agricultural operations in the
Shasta and
Scott
Sub-basin
of the
Klamath River
a virtual exemption from
the California Endangered Species Act (C-ESA). The irrigators dewater
the Scott and Shasta and, in drought years, Coho salmon, listed as
“threatened” under the C-ESA, are among the fish killed. The
proposed permit will not lead to Coho Recovery; it will allow dewatering
to continue and put irrigators in charge of monitoring their own C-ESA
compliance and reporting violations.
In the Klamath River Basin these days environmental news is dominated by
talk about dam removal and, occasionally, new restrictions on fishing.
But now another issue is poised to compete for the headlines. The
California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) announced late last month
that it plans to give a hundred or so farmers and alfalfa ranchers in
Siskiyou County just south of the Oregon border an exemption from the
California Endangered Species Act. Released without fanfare, the
announcement caused barely a ripple in the regional media. But below the
surface a virtual tsunami may be forming.
The Scott and
Shasta
Rivers
are major Klamath
tributaries. While salmon runs in these rivers have been depressed for
many years, fisheries scientists and restorationists agree that the
broad valleys and forested streams of the Scott and Shasta have the
greatest potential among all Klamath tributaries to produce salmon.
Furthermore, the
Scott
River
in particular could be the
key to recovery of
Klamath River
Coho salmon. While all
Klamath
Basin
salmon stocks are “at risk of extinction” according to
the American Fisheries Society, only Coho are listed as “threatened
with extinction” under provision of the California Endangered Species
Act (CESA).
Ever since Klamath River Coho were listed as “threatened”, Fish and
Game officials have been meeting behind closed doors with Scott and
Shasta
River
irrigation interests. The
irrigators are concerned because their dams, diversions and irrigation
pumps have regularly killed thousands of salmon and steelhead. They want
to be protected from prosecution for killing Coho while continuing
irrigation practices which virtually dry up Scott and Shasta rivers and
streams in drought years. An example is 2001, a year in which the
San Francisco
Chronicle quoted the local
CDFG warden: “ ‘Everything has died,’ said Fish and Game Captain
Chuck Konvalin of the
Scott
River
. ‘The system has been
dried up’.”
Klamath River Basin Tribes, conservation and fishing groups have been
nervous about the closed door meetings. As downstream interests, they
asked to be included in the talks only to be rebuffed by CDFG and the
irrigators. Now the reasons for the secret meetings are beginning to
come to light. While the actual Endangered Species Act exemption –
technical known as an “Take Permit” - has not been released pending
review by irrigator and state lawyers, preliminary environmental
documents indicate that, while ranchers and growers will exclude fish
from irrigation ditches, they will be allowed to continue dewatering the
Scott and Shasta Rivers. If fish need water, the environmental documents
indicate, the irrigators will consider renting water to CDFG on an
annual basis. In return the CDFG will continue to have access to river
sections that pass through private ranches and alfalfa fields –
something that some ranchers have denied to CDFG since the Coho were
listed as threatened.
There is every indication that the Take Permit CDFG has negotiated with
the irrigators will not adequately address the critical issue of river
flows. Flows in the
Scott
River
have become so low that
many salmon can not reach prime spawning grounds in dry years. According
to the California Department of Water Resources 54% or irrigation in the
Scott
River
Valley
is now done with water
pumped from groundwater. The pumping – which began in earnest in the
1970s and has grown ever since - is unregulated. The proposed Endangered
Species Act exemption will do nothing to bring irrigation pumping under
control. Under these circumstances, experts expect the dewatering of
these rivers to continue.
Because it is one of the prime tools Fish and Game officials have to
protect fish, one would think that Fish and Game Code 5937 would be a
central feature of the Take Permit proposed for Scott and Shasta
irrigators. Code 5937 states that irrigators and other dam owners must
allow enough water to pass their dams and diversions to maintain fish
habitat below “in good condition.” But those who know these valleys
also know that this law has never been enforced in the Shasta and
Scott
Valleys
. The non-enforcement of
Fish & Game Code 5937 was made public by San Francisco Chronicle
veteran reports Glen Martin and Tom Stienstra during the drought in
2001. They quoted local CDFG warden Renie Cleland: “ ‘This has gone
all the way to
Sacramento
,’ said Cleland. ‘It's
extremely politically sensitive. I was told to take no enforcement
action on it. These fish are dying. We've got five or six thousand
steelhead trout dead on the Scott, and (dead juvenile steelhead)
everywhere on the Shasta’.”
What warden Cleland didn’t say is that Coho salmon were among the fish
that died when irrigators dried up the river that year and that the
practice of looking the other way was not new but had been the rule for
as long as anyone could remember.
The failure of state and local officials to enforce basic California
laws designed to protect fish in the Shasta and Scott River Basins is
but one of the secrets which one can discover below the surface of
Klamath Basin water politics. But this one is likely to attract more
attention than the California Department of Fish and Game would like.
That’s because not only have these state officials negotiated in
secret with private parties, they also propose turning over their
responsibility to oversee enforcement of the California Endangered
Species Act to a local non-elected board made up of the very ranchers
and farmers who would be the beneficiaries of the California ESA
exemption. Under the terms of the proposed Take Permit, the Siskiyou
Resource Conservation District would be in charge not only of
“monitoring irrigator compliance” with provisions of the Take Permit
but also with reporting non-compliance to Fish and Game officials. In
effect, the very people who are the beneficiaries of the permit would be
in charge of monitoring their own compliance and of reporting
violations.
Turing over California Endangered Species Act compliance to a
locally-appointed board made up of farmers and ranchers would set an
important precedent and one with great potential to negatively impact
California
’s rarest and most at risk
species. That is why the proposed Take Permit is likely to attract
opposition from conservation, wildlife and fishing groups that until now
have not been involved in the
Klamath
River Basin
.
Involvement of new players is what it may take to stop the dangerous
CESA precedent in its tracks. It is rumored that state officials have
approached other Basin interests suggesting that the proposed Scott and
Shasta California Endangered Species Act exemption be part of a broader
Klamath River
deal that includes dam
removal. The usual defenders of
Klamath River
salmon want CDFG’s
support for Klamath dam removal and may be willing to look the other way
on the Take Permit in order to solidify support for dam removal.
Meanwhile Coho salmon remain at risk. As I write this article, Coho are
holed-up in the
Scott
River
canyon waiting for rain to
restore flows in the dewatered
Scott
River
so that they can reach
their spawning grounds. Coho in the Scott and Shasta remain at high
risk; in two years out of three the spawning populations are well below
the 200-300 spawners scientists tell us are the minimum numbers needed
to maintain a salmon run over time. And year by year – as unrestrained
and unregulated groundwater pumping continues to expand - flows in these
rivers are less and less for a given amount of rainfall.
No one knows how long these conditions can continue before Coho go
extinct in the Scott and Shasta – the Klamath tributaries where they
once were most abundant. One thing, however, is certain: If the hundred
or so ranchers and alfalfa growers and their political supporters get
the Take Permit they seek, the demise of Scott and Shasta River Coho
salmon will be one giant step closer to becoming reality.
The author has resided in the
Klamath
River Basin
since 1975 and has been
involved in salmon restoration and salmon politics since 1986.
Photo of dewatered Etna
Creek, Scott tributary
by Felice Pace
Sunday Nov 5th, 2006
1:56 PM

640_etnacreekdewatered.jpg
original
image ( 806x546)
Scott
River
,
September 2003
by Felice Pace
Sunday Nov 5th, 2006
1:56 PM

scottr9-05-03.jpg
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Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/11/05/18326681.php
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