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Klamath Project Irrigation Delayed……What If?
Felice Pace
April 11, 2009
First announced in February, it
is now a certainty that the
onset of water
delivery to irrigators
in the federal Klamath Project will be delayed.
Typically the irrigation season begins in the
upper Klamath River Basin on April 1st. This
year, however, the onset of irrigation had to be
delayed in order to meet the Upper Klamath Lake
water level required for endangered
Kuptu
and Tsuam
(sucker species) and Klamath River flows
required for threatened
Coho Salmon
pursuant to the federal Endangered Species Act.
If this were 2001 we would be hearing loud calls
for protests, civil disobedience and “reform” of
the ESA – back then the idea of fish having a
water priority which trumps irrigation was
anathema to the
Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA)
and its supporters.
So why are there no calls for protest now? Where
is Ric Costales – initiator of the
Klamath Bucket
Brigade – when his organizing skills are
apparently again needed to defend people from
the ravages of the ESA?
KlamBlog thinks that KWUA is keeping the lid on
cries, calls and protests because it knows that
would make the possibility of the
Water Deal
it has negotiated with the
Klamath Tribes,
Karuk Tribe,
Yurok Tribe,
Trout Unlimited,
American Rivers
and a few other organizations even less
likely to achieve the federal legislation needed
to make the
Deal - and its massive subsidies for
Klamath Project irrigators - a reality.
As KlamBlog has pointed out previously (see, for
example, our 1/18/08 post), the
Water Deal
– also known as the
Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement or KBRA – favors
those irrigators who receive water via the
federal Klamath Project. Along with other
subsidies, the KBRA would put those farmers
first in line for water. Other farmers, fish
managers and wildlife refuge managers would then
have to buy water during drought years from
these farmers or go without. That is one reason
KlamBlog calls farmers within the Klamath
Project the
Irrigation Elite.
Putting the
Irrigation Elite first in line for
Klamath water can only be achieved via federal
legislation. KWUA has apparently concluded that
making a fuss about the ESA this year would hurt
its chances of achieving that legislation.
KlamBlog agrees. In the final analysis when
principles do not “pencil out” they are quickly
discarded in that circle.
But what would this drought year actually be
like if the
Water Deal were enshrined in legislation?
Would the Fish &
Wildlife Service have to pay the
Irrigation
Elite in order to achieve lake levels
which Kuptu and Tsuam need to survive? Would the
National Marine
Fisheries Service be required to also buy
water from the
Irrigation Elite to meet Klamath River
flows which most biologists tell us are
essential to the survival of Coho Salmon? Would
federal wildlife refuges managers have to go to
the Irrigation
Elite with hat (or money) in hand to
provide for waterfowl and Bald Eagles? And how
much would this cost taxpayers in a mildly
doughty year?
Because it is turning out to be a “dry” – but
not a “very dry” – year in the Klamath River
Basin, this would be a good time to calculate
what would happen during a mild drought if the
Water Deal
were enshrined in federal legislation.
This would also be a good time to model what
would have happened if this had turned out to be
a severe drought year. How much money would the
taxpayers have to pay the
Irrigation
Elite to keep Kuptu, Tsuam and Coho
Salmon from extinction? How much would it cost
the taxpayers to provide the water needed by
waterfowl, Bald Eagles and the other wildlife on
Klamath Basin refuges?
Don’t look for
Water Deal’s promoters to perform this
analysis. KlamBlog believes these boosters do
not want the public and members of Congress to
know the consequences if a select group of
irrigators were legislatively granted the
first-in-line water priority which they know –
and the courts have affirmed - they can not
achieve in any other way.
But perhaps we should not judge
Water Deal
promoters so harshly! Instead let’s call on them
to put real analysis and hard data behind their
public claims.
This then is a call and a challenge to the
leaders of the
Klamath Settlement Group - those who have
dominated and lead negotiations resulting in the
proposed Water
Deal - to put up or shut up. Come now
Trout Unlimited;
it is time to stand up and put analysis behind
your claims! Come on
Yurok Tribe:
are you up to the challenge? How about it
KWUA? Why
not show the public what would happen - and what
it would cost - if the
Deal you
say is so good for fish, farms and refuges were
in place this mildly doughty year?
And to those reporters, editors and media
outlets covering Klamath issues: how about doing
your duty by demanding that such an analysis be
performed?
Deal
makers all: KlamBlog and the public await your
response!
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