December
17, 2008
The
Yurok Tribe,
Karuk Tribe,
Trout Unlimited
and the
Pacific Coast Federation
of Fishermens
Associations (PCFFA)
are among those who have
most loudly insisted
that if there is no deal
to remove four
PacifiCorp Klamath River
dams the proposed
Water Deal also
known as the
Klamath River Basin
Restoration Agreement
will not be
completed. Do they mean
what they say? If the
press asks the right
questions, we may soon
know.
At
this point the answer to
the question is unclear.
All four of these
organizations joined the
Bush Administration,
Governor Kulongoski
and
Governor Schwarzenegger
in a joint press
release praising the
Agreement in Principle
on the dams. But does
that
Agreement
constitute a commitment
to remove the four dams?
Not if you believe
PacifiCorp.
On
December 12th the
Siskiyou Daily News
reported on a
presentation by Dean
Brockbank,
PacifiCorp’s vice
president and general
counsel, to the
Siskiyou County Board of
Supervisors. The Siskiyou
County Supervisors – who
govern the county where
three of PacifiCorp’s
five dams are located -
have been among the
loudest opponents of
both dam removal and the
Water Deal that
irrigators who get water
from the federal
Klamath Project,
three federal tribes as
well as some
environmental and
fishing groups have
promoted. Mr. Brockbank
was unequivocal: “The
AIP is not a dam removal
agreement," Brockbank
asserted. "There are
many conditions that
have to be met before we
can arrive at a Final
Agreement."
While some press
releases have muddied
the water, the language
of the
Agreement In Principle
(AIP) is quite
clear: it says that a
decision whether or not
to remove the dams will
be made by the federal
Interior Department
in 2012. The AIP also
says that decision will
be based not on the
dams’ environmental
performance but rather
on a “Cost Benefit
Analysis” or CBA.
CBA
has been used by the
Bush Administration
to avoid actions to
protect and restore the
environment. In a CBA
the future benefits of
salmon restoration will
be deeply discounted and
may not equal the power
benefits which the dams
produce in the present.
CBA is notoriously
subject to political
manipulation. For
example, the Bush
Administration recently
lowered the dollar value
of a human life in order
to produce CBAs that
favor industrial
interests like coal
fired power plants which
produce pollution that
kills people.
Will the promoters of
the
Water Deal be
willing to wait until
2012? Or will they
interpret the
Agreement in Principle
as sufficient and move
to finalize the
Water Deal, draft
federal legislation to
implement it and get
Congress to appropriate
the billion dollars in
subsidies and other
payouts which would be
necessary to implement
the
Deal?
We
should soon know the
answer. If the priority
is dam removal,
organizations will not
endorse the Agreement
In Principle
because it not only is
not an agreement to
remove the dams but
actually makes dam
removal less likely. If
the priority, however,
is the
Water Deal
organizations will call
the AIP “a sufficient
step forward” and will
move to finalize the
Water Deal and
draft federal
legislation.
Where will the members
of the
Klamath Settlement Group
come down? Is dam
removal only a flagship
for the
Water Deal or is
dam removal their top
priority? We should soon
know although it may be
necessary to debunk the
spin that will be woven
around the decisions
these groups make.
KlamBlog will attempt to
do just that.
Meanwhile an
Ag Alert issued
by the
California Farm Bureau
in late November
revealed one likely
reason the Siskiyou
County Supervisors
oppose the
Water Deal.
Siskiyou County Farm
Bureau
Past-President Mike Luiz
was quoted in the Alert:
"Siskiyou County Farm
Bureau is concerned that
in dry years, such as
this year and last year,
the Klamath will dry up
in spots and the
government will be
looking to the Scott and
Shasta rivers to make up
those flows."
This aspect of the
Water Deal debate
has not been covered by
the press in spite of
the fact that KlamBlog
identified the issue
when the proposed
Water Deal was
first announced last
January. The Deal would
give first priority for
water to irrigators
within the federal
Klamath Project
solidifying their
standing as the Basin’s
Irrigation Elite.
It would also set
Klamath River flows. The
Deal is silent on
flows from other rivers
and streams including
the Shasta, Scott and Trinity Rivers which are also heavily used by
agriculture. Instead it
relies on a flow needs
assessment which
independent scientists
with the
National Research
Council have
identified as deeply
flawed because it treats
the Klamath “like the
Upper Basin and a gutter to the sea.”
The
independent scientists
called for a basin-wide
flow assessment to
determine flows needed
from tributaries –
including the Shasta and
Scott – as well as from
the Upper Klamath. In
the absence of such an
assessment, the Shasta
and Scott will be the
first place regulators,
tribes and fishermen
look for more water in
drought years. Pressure
on the Shasta and Scott
will be particularly
strong if federal funds
are not available to
lease water for fish
from the
Irrigation Elite
whose massive
taxpayer-financed pumps
mine water from the
California portion of
the Lost River Basin.
That groundwater has
been utilized by the
Bureau of Reclamation’s
Klamath Water Bank
to meet ESA mandated
flows and lake levels
while maintaining full
irrigation deliveries.
The
US Geological Service
has called the
pumping and the water
bank “unsustainable”.