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River of Renewal tours
Northcoast (and) A major architect of the Water Deal
speaks out!
Felice Pace
February 11, 2009
A film about the Klamath River made
the tour of the Northcoast recently. We caught up
with River of
Renewal in Crescent City where Steve Most’s
award winning documentary was sponsored by
Friends of Del Norte.
Steve Most’s film is a sensitive and inspirational
look at the long struggle of Lower Klamath River
Indigenous Peoples to continue the core of their
cultural, economic and spiritual connection to the
River and the salmon. And while Most has a tendency
to romanticize his subjects, his film captures quite
a bit of the spirit and personal dimensions of the
long struggle. The film also does a fair job
presenting the history of Klamath salmon and water
conflicts. Understanding this history will no doubt
help a new generation of Native and Non-Native
leaders better understand the true nature and subtle
dimensions of that struggle. This is a valuable
service in a society in which historical perspective
is rare indeed.
You can read a synopsis of the film, contact the
film makers and check on future showings at the
Terrapin Films web site.
The film is also available on DVD for
purchase.
At the Del Norte showing, those attending were also
treated to a short film by Northcoast photographer
and filmmaker Thomas Dunklin.
Cedar Creek Fish
Passage Restoration is the clearest and most
visually pleasing presentation of an actual
restoration project that we can remember seeing.
Dunklin is a prolific photographer of the Klamath,
other western rivers and salmon. You can check out
his photographs and contact Thomas via
his web site.
After the film showings, Troy Fletcher was invited
by producer Most to make a short presentation on
contemporary Klamath River issues. A fisheries
biologist and former tribal executive, Fletcher
represents the Yurok
Tribe in Dam
and Water Deal negotiations and is widely
recognized as one of the main architects of the
scheme to have popular dam removal carry a
controversial Water
Deal full of special interest subsidies and
other controversial provisions. Fletcher’s comments
reveal quite a bit about the
Dam and Water Deals
and about the thinking and strategies of those who
are promoting linking them together.
Troy Fletcher was well aware that the Crescent City
showing’s sponsor – the
Friends of Del Norte
– has serious concerns about the
Dam and Water Deals.
Perhaps this explains why he began his presentation
by telling the 80 or so folks assembled what the
Deals are
not.
According to Fletcher the
Dam and Water Deals
are “not a silver bullet” which will fix the
Klamath’s problems but rather a big step in an
ongoing process of restoration. He then acknowledged
that the Deals “are not a basin-wide approach.” This
is a significant admission. For over a decade a
coalition of environmental groups, fishing
organizations and tribes have had as a core
objective advancing “one basin management” for the
Klamath River Basin. This goal has been deemed
necessary in order to end treating the Klamath as if
it were not one but two basins – an Upper Basin
where most of the river’s summer and fall flow is
diverted to serve irrigated agriculture and a lower
basin which must make due with river flows which are
insufficient to provide for the needs of salmon and
aquatic species and are of such poor quality that
much of each year’s young salmon perish in
water-quality related disease epidemics before
reaching the ocean. The
Water Deal’s
critics claim that it is a step back toward managing
the Klamath as if it were not one but two basins.
Mr. Fletcher then engaged in a critique of the
federal Endangered
Species Act which Klamath watchers would have
found familiar. In fact, in 2004 Fletcher criticized
the ESA at a congressional hearing in Klamath Falls.
Because it was designed by the Republican House
Majority to trash the ESA, Democratic members of
Congress and environmentalists boycotted those
hearings. The
Northcoast Journal
reported on them, including on Fletcher’s
testimony. Many environmentalists felt at the time
that Mr. Fletcher was spectacularly unappreciative
of the ESA which is the only way (so far) that more
water has been wrested from the hands of irrigators
and returned to the Klamath River for fish. Contrary
to what many folks believe, it was environmentalists
and fishermen who brought that lawsuit and who
deserve the credit for securing more water for
salmon. The Yurok and several other tribes
intervened in the lawsuit but they did not shoulder
the expense and work needed to bring the issue to
federal court. The much-maligned environmentalists
are also responsible for securing protection for key
Klamath salmon watersheds – those Klamath streams
whose high quality waters play a crucial role in
keeping our salmon from going extinct.
Acknowledging that they were controversial, Fletcher
predicted that there will be litigation over the
Water and Dam Deals.
He suggested that litigation along with time to
complete needed studies are why we will have to wait
until 2020 at the earliest for dam removal to begin.
Actually, however, the 2020 date is necessitated not
by the need to do “studies” (these could be
completed by 2014) or to resolve litigation (an
unknown) but rather by the controversial plan for
dam removal financing which is now before the Oregon
Legislature. You can read the latest on that bill at
Oregon Live.
Concerning the studies and engineering needed before
dam removal can begin; the
California Coastal Conservancy
has already conducted or has in process no less than
24 separate studies or assessments related to
Klamath dam removal.
Mr. Fletcher also said that projections which have
been done for drought years indicate that water to
meet the Klamath River flows which the
Water Deal
prescribes for fish would have to be purchased on an
annual basis from
Upper Basin Irrigation Interests. He was
asked whether this was sustainable since it would
require federal taxpayers to foot the bill. Fletcher
responded that this sort of thing was already
happening in other river basins as well as in the
Klamath. Here he was referring to Klamath and other
so-called “water banks” which the
Bush Administration
used to reduce irrigation demand in order to meet
requirements of the ESA. These schemes were not true
“water banks” (which are water marketing
arrangements) and – in the case of the Klamath – the
BOR was not buying water for fish but rather
reducing irrigation demand so that it could meet a
range of other obligations. Fletcher did not address
the sustainability question.
The proposal to give irrigators the first call on
Klamath Water via legislation (THE ONLY WAY
IRRIGATORS WHO GET WATER VIA A FEDERAL PROJECT CAN
GET WATER AHEAD OF ESA LISTED FISH) is one of the
most controversial provisions in the proposed
Water Deal.
Deal critics – including
KlamBlog –
believe that such legislation would set a dangerous
precedent, undermine the
Public Trust
Doctrine and that the approach is not
sustainable. Think about it this way: how much would
taxpayers need to pony up on a regular basis to buy
water for fish in the Columbia, Klamath, Sacramento,
San Joaquin and Colorado Rivers? And what if we add
in tributaries like the Shasta, Scott, John Day and
Deschutes Rivers?
The flows which the Klamath River would receive
under the proposed
Water Deal have also been widely criticized.
According to respected fisheries biologist Bill
Trush the scheme does not provide enough in the way
of “good” flow years, that is, years in which flows
are sufficiently robust in quantity and quality to
result in high salmon production and high survival
of young salmon on their journey to the sea. The
Hoopa Tribe
has also been critical and has pointed out that
Klamath River flows under the proposed
Water Deal
would be lower in some months than the flows which
are currently mandated to comply with the
Endangered Species
Act. If the Hoopa are correct (and KlamBlog
has seen documentation indicating that they are)
then Troy Fletcher’s complaints that the ESA does
not provide enough water for salmon ring hollow.
Water Deal
flows have also been criticized (including by
KlamBlog) because they ignore good science.
Specifically, the
National Research Council – one of the
nation’s most prestigious scientific bodies – has
criticized the flow assessments on which the
Water Deal’s
allocation of water is based. Independent NRC
scientists who reviewed Klamath flow assessments
indicated that salmon needs and river flows could
not be properly assessed and prescribed using
studies which they compared to treating the River as
if it were “the Upper Basin and a gutter to the
sea.” NRC scientists called for a basin-wide flow
needs assessment before in-stream flow requirements
and water allocations are finalized. No such study
is called for or contemplated by the proposed
Water Deal.
Troy Fletcher deserves high marks for his candor and
for being willing to engage with members of the
Friends of Del Norte
and others who are concerned about the
Dam and Water Deals.
For filmmaker and author Steve Most that is what it
is all about – dialogue. In conversation with
KlamBlog Most emphasized that his hope is that
River of Renewal
will create opportunities for discussion and
contribute to creating a public space where Klamath
River Basin residents can come together, recognize
their mutual interests, gain mutual respect and
achieve a lasting accommodation.
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