One of the persistent problems in the
Klamath River Basin
is the yawning divide between the “Upper” and the
“Lower” Basin. There are historical reasons for that
divide which we explore below. But first we will address
one of the most important aspects of the divide - the
fact that Lower Basin media
news outlets rarely report on what is going on in the Upper Basin and vice versa. Furthermore, while in
the Upper Basin the web site
Klamath Basin Crisis
does a good job collecting and publishing press clips
from throughout the Basin and beyond, no
Lower Basin organization performs this service for Lower Basin residents. This is a need that one of
the Lower
Basin’s environmental
organizations could address. But so far none of these
organizations has stepped forward to provide a
Basin-wide news clip service.
Late Fall brought many examples of
important information on Klamath water issues which were
reported in the Upper Basin but not reported in the
Lower Basin. A few of those stories are summarized below
along with links to the original news reports and
comments on the significance of events reported.
Unfortunately, many of these reports come from Klamath Falls based
Herald and News.
Unlike most news outlets, the H&N charges for access to
its archives; articles are only available without charge
for 14 days. Therefore no links are provided for those
reports.The Pioneer Press is a weekly published out of
Fort Jones. It does not have a web site.
Late Fall 2008 in the Klamath River Basin
-
On November 19th the
Herald & News reported on the breeching of levees
above Upper Klamath Lake
which will create 2200 acres of restored wetlands.
The project was lead by The Nature Conservancy which
owns the Williamson River Delta Preserve established on what was
previously Tulane Farms. TNC paid $7.5 million for
the properties with funding from federal, state and
private sources. The current project is part of an
ongoing effort by TNC, the Bureau of Land Management
and others to restore previously diked and drained
wetlands around Upper Klamath
Lake to improve water quality and to
provide habitat for endangered Kuptu and Tshuam
(sucker species). You can learn more about
restoration efforts around Upper
Klamath Lake on TNC’s web site. (http://www.nature.org/success/klamath.html)
Commentary:
One of the “selling points” often cited
by proponents of the proposed
Klamath Water Deal
(AKA the Klamath
River Basin Restoration Agreement) is that it
will establish a restoration program. However, a lot of
the restoration work which is included in the
Deal is already
going on (see example above) and appear to have no
problem securing funding. In fact, by legislating how
restoration funds would be used the
Water Deal (if
it ever is enacted into law) will tie the hands of
restorationists, preventing allocation of restoration
funding based on “most benefit for the buck.” Instead
restoration projects favored by those interests which
have dominated Klamath negotiations (the
Klamath Water Users
Association,
Klamath Tribes and
Yurok Tribe)
would be mandated while other projects which would
provide more benefit to salmon – including projects in
the Shasta and Scott and to address Keno Reservoir water
quality – would have a difficult time finding funding.
-
Siskiyou
County Supervisor Marcia Armstrong writes
the column “Ridin’ Point” for the Pioneer Press
published in Scott Valley. In her 11/19 column, Armstrong
revealed for the first time one of the reasons Siskiyou County does not support the Water Deal.
According to Armstrong the Deal’s governance
structure “includes no representation for
agriculture in the Scott and Shasta Valleys, timber and mining.”
Commentary:
The proposed
Water Deal not
only does not provide “representation” for Shasta and
Scott Ag interests it all but ignores these Basin’s
altogether. This is one of the main weaknesses of the
Deal and reveals
its explicitly political and anti-scientific approach.
The Water Deal’s
disdain for science includes ignoring the
recommendations of the two independent Klamath science
evaluations completed by the
National Research
Council. The
first NRC Report
pointed out that the Shasta and Scott provide the best
opportunities to help Coho salmon and are key to
recovery of Coho in the
Klamath
River Basin. The
second NRC report
singled out the Klamath
River Flow Assessment conducted by Dr. Thomas
Hardy under contract to the
Interior Department
for its harshest criticism. The NRC pointed out
that the Flow Assessment treated the Klamath River Basin
as if it were “the Upper Basin and a gutter to the sea.” Instead the
NRC strongly recommended that a basin-wide flow
assessment be conducted in order to properly determine
flows from the Upper Basin, Trinity, Shasta, Scott and other
tributaries which are needed to provide for restoration
of the River and recovery of Klamath Salmon.
The
Water Deal’s most controversial provision – the
water allocations and river flow regime it seeks to lock
in via federal legislation – is based on the flow
assessments which the NRC identified as the wrong
approach. How will this abandonment of good science be
viewed by the incoming Obama Administration? Obama has
emphasized that decisions in his Administration will be
based on solid science as opposed to the Bush
Administration where politics routinely trumped science.
The Klamath Water Deal
may be among the first issues where that Obama promises
will be tested.
The conservation groups who have most
strongly promoted the
Water Deal are American Rivers and
Trout Unlimited. Both groups have been critical
of the Bush Administration for basing resource and
environmental decisions on politics rather than science.
Both organizations also claim that they are committed to
basing water and other resource decisions on solid
science. Both are open to criticism for not practicing
what they preach when it comes to the Klamath, i.e. when
they promote a Water
Deal that ignores the best independent scientific
judgment about what is needed to restore the Klamath
River and Klamath Salmon.
Commentary:
You can request a copy of Siskiyou County’s
“Solutions and Alternatives for the
Klamath River” from the county’s natural
resource specialist Ric Costales (rcostales@co.siskiyou.ca.us
).
Commentary:
The
Klamath County Commissioners are in a tough
place. Traditionally they have backed the “On Project
Water Users” (the
Irrigation Elite) who have more money, are better
organized and enjoy much greater political influence as
compared to the “Off Project Water Users”. However, in
this case the elected state senator and assemblyman for
the area both oppose the
Water Deal and
the congressman – Greg Walden – has not endorsed it.
Furthermore, some members of the Commission appear to
have ideological problems with the
Water Deal which
they see as a big government approach. They are also
hesitant to support dam removal. Look to them to
continue to sit on the fence neither endorsing nor
opposing the Water and
Dam Deals.
Commentary:
Where was this county counsel during the
past two years? Over that period, one of Klamath County Commissioners attended numerous
“confidential” meetings of the
Klamath Settlement Group.
Humboldt County
Supervisor Jill Geist also attended many of the
secret meetings as did
Siskiyou County’s
legal counsel.
Why is the issue of the legality (and
appropriateness) of discussing public resources,
government policy and exemptions from state and federal
law in meetings covered by a written and legally binding
“confidentiality agreement” only being raised now? And
why have none of the groups which oppose the secret deal
making not filed suit under the
Federal Advisory
Committee Act (FACA)?
FACA prohibits federal officials from “taking advice”
from private entities in closed door meetings; it was
passed specifically to prevent the sort of process the
Klamath Settlement Group
has followed – making public policy while excluding the
American Public from the process.
By going along with “confidentiality
agreements” that prevent public participation and
oversight, our elected officials have failed to champion
the right of the public to participate in the making of
public policy. It now appears clear that the tribes,
conservation and fishing groups, government agency reps
as well as the local elected officials who participate
in the Klamath
Settlement Group have no interest in upholding
FACA! Secrecy breeds mischief. Perhaps what we need more
than anything else in the Klamath River Basin is a
democracy watch dog group which will look out for the
interests of the all the people!
-
On December 10th the
Pioneer Press reported on dissent within the Karuk
Tribe over the Tribe’s support for dam removal.
Allegedly a group of “angry Karuk and Klamath River
residents fired off an angry letter and petition to
the county (of Siskiyou) against dam removal and the
Karuk Tribal Council.” The petition reads in part:
“All tribal members and community members should be
able to have a voice, not a select few.”
Commentary:
The Karuk
Tribe has for many years had two main political
factions which have competed for control of the tribal
government. While the current tribal council has
championed causes like dam removal and limits on
“recreational” mining, the other faction has opposed
these causes. The current tribal council has often been
in conflict with Siskiyou County which has supported recreational
mining and opposed dam removal.
Commentary:
It appears to
KlamBlog that
“confidentiality agreements” are being used in the Klamath River Basin
to exclude not only the public but also those interests
which do not agree with the dominant (and controlling)
stakeholders. In this case we need to ask why a
“protocol agreement” as well as a “confidentiality
agreement” and why the substance of those two agreements
have not been released to the public?
Given past behavior of the
Bush Administration
and the Klamath
Settlement Group’s dominant players, we suspect
that what is behind this behavior is control and
manipulation. On the Klamath as elsewhere the Bush
Administration is attempting to tie the hands of the new
Obama Administration
by locking in the
Agreement in Principle (AIP) on
PacifiCorp’s
dams. As we have pointed out previously (see December
3rd post), the AIP changes the standard for deciding
whether or not the dams should come out and thereby
makes dam removal less rather than more likely. The AIP
also unnecessarily delays the earliest commencement of
dam removal until 2020. Tribal governments and state
agencies have been given incentives to go along with the
delay: under the AIP they will divide up $500,000 per
year in “mitigation” funds from PacifiCorp for every
year of delay in commencing dam removal.
______________________
The Upper Basin/Lower Basin divide:
Historical Roots and Political Realities
In 1905 when the federal government chose
the
Upper Klamath River Basin
for its second big project under the
Reclamation Act,
the Klamath River Basin
was a backwater, far from the minds of state officials
in
Salem and Sacramento. So it is not surprising that the
Oregon and California state governments went along with the proposal
that the feds take over all water rights between Upper
Klamath Lake and the
Cascade Canyon. Neither state had the funds to
develop Klamath water resources and local interests
which were primarily involved in agriculture favored the
cession of all water rights to the feds.
It seems amazing to us now but the
federal Bureau of
Reclamation was allowed to take rights to the
entire flow of the river. Just as they had dewatered Lower Klamath Lake the feds planned to completely dewater
the Upper Klamath. Allowing any water to flow into the Cascade Canyon
and Lower
Basin was considered waste.
It was only development of hydropower in
the Klamath’s
Cascade
Canyon which persuaded the
Bureau of Reclamation
to allow water to flow in the Klamath during the summer.
This is the origin of the Irrigation Elite’s
claim that they deserve subsidized power from what are
now PacifiCorp’s
Klamath dams. That claim has been rejected by both the Oregon and
California Public Utilities Commissions.
With the exception of water allowed to
flow to PacifiCorp’s
dams, the Upper Basin was
managed as if it was completely separate from the Lower Basin. The separation is revealed in
language: the term “Klamath
Basin” meant the Upper Basin; the
term Klamath River meant the Lower Basin. That portion of the Klamath River
above the
Cascade
Canyon was renamed. No longer
would there be a Klamath River in the Upper Basin. The new name assigned was Lake Ewana. Today school children in Klamath Falls, Malin and Tulelake remain ignorant of the fact
that the Klamath River begins at the outlet of
Upper Klamath Lake. The historical record is
silent on whether there was any protest from the
Lower
River when the Basin was
redefined so that it could comfortably be treated as two
rather than a single river basin.
This changed a bit in the 1960’s when
Iron Gate Dam was built. By that time the
Federal Power Act
had been passed and the
California Department of Fish & Game was able to
file arguments for “mitigation” for the loss of habitat
blocked by the dam and for dam bypass flows sufficient
to support salmon and other fisheries in the Lower River. As for the mitigation, that was and
is the Iron Gate Hatchery. While it is run by California
Department of Fish & Game, the cost is born by
PacifiCorp, the
owner of Iron Gate Dam.
The next change affecting the separation
of Upper and Lower Basins occurred with the listing of
Coho salmon in the 1990s as threatened pursuant to the
federal Endangered
Species Act. As a result, the
Bureau of Reclamation
had to consult with the
National Marine
Fisheries Service on the Klamath Project’s
impacts to Coho salmon in the Klamath
River. When that consultation did not result
in enough water in the
Lower River for salmon, environmental and fishing
groups sued. These groups have subsequently won
consecutive lawsuits and each time that has resulted in
more water being allocated to the Lower Klamath. It is this trend which the
Irrigation Elite
seeks to roll back. More water in the Lower Klamath
means less water in the Upper Basin for diversion to farms, ranches and
golf courses. The Coho listing and the
Endangered Species Act
remain the only way that more water has been
obtained for salmon and the Lower
Klamath River. While there has been much
talk about tribal rights to flows for salmon, the one
tribe that clearly has those rights – the
Yurok Tribe – has
not asserted them on behalf of salmon or the river. On
the Klamath it is the ESA – not tribal rights – which
has done the heavy lifting on behalf of salmon and water
for the Lower Klamath River.
Seen within this historical context, the
proposed Klamath Water
Deal is an attempt to re-separate management of
the Upper and Lower Klamath River Basin. If the amount of water which is
allowed to flow to the Lower Klamath River is locked-in
via federal legislation,
Upper Basin interests can go about managing what is left
without concern for future needs and future demands from
the Lower Basin. This is what Upper Basin water interests refer to as
“certainty”.
Locking in the amount of water which
flows from the
Upper
Basin through legislation
will mean that any future flow needs above that amount
would need to come from other sources or be purchased
from Upper Basin water interests. Since Trinity River flows are also set by legislation that leaves
the Shasta and Scott as the only remaining sources where
a substantial amount of water is consumed by agriculture
and therefore where water can be reallocated for fish
and flows. Let’s say, for example, that Klamath Chinook
salmon are listed at some point in the future and
biologists subsequently determine that to survive and
recover Chinook need more water in the
Klamath River in September. If the proposed
Klamath Water Deal
is enshrined in federal legislation that water will have
to come from the Shasta and the Scott. No wonder Siskiyou County opposes the
Water Deal!
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