
Don't
rush toward flawed Klamath deal
Steve
Pedery and Bob Hunter
Eureka
Times-Standard
May 2, 2008
Recent Times-Standard My
Word columns (Greg King, March 20; Felice Pace, March 26; Walter Duffy,
April 7) make clear that the long history of water battles in the west
is far from resolved.
Some raise concerns over
river flows and fish, while others falsely tout the “proposed Klamath
Basin restoration agreement” as a deal for dam removal. More still
raise concerns over a lack of consensus among stakeholders, and a few
raise red flags over the “proposed settlement's” neglect of the
national wildlife refuges.
Oregon Wild and
WaterWatch oppose the proposed settlement (released Jan. 15, 2008)
because it contains water guarantees for irrigators that put Klamath
River salmon at risk, locks in harmful commercial agricultural practices
on two of the nation's premier national wildlife refuges, and as yet
contains no agreement for removal of dams from the Klamath River.
We did not reach this
conclusion lightly. Our organizations have spent 20 years advocating for
fish and wildlife in the Klamath Basin. We've gone to court to restore
water flows in the Klamath River and worked with Congress to try and
reduce the damaging effects of commercial agricultural on Tule Lake and
Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuges. In 2002, we worked to enact
U.S. Senate legislation to reduce water demand and resolve the problems
in the Klamath Basin.
Though our organizations
joined settlement negotiations with PacifiCorp in 2004, Oregon Wild and
WaterWatch were later evicted from discussions when we voiced our
disagreement with settlement framework that guaranteed water for
agribusiness without similar assurances for salmon, and locked in
commercial agricultural development on wildlife refuges.
Because
settlement-backers are willing to sacrifice important conservation
values to secure Bush support for dam removal, they have crafted a deal
that will not resolve conflicts in the basin.
Water in the basin is
severely over-promised. Giving ironclad guarantees of water to
irrigators without providing minimum, science-based flows for the
survival of salmon will not resolve the basin's water conflicts. Even if
dams are eventually removed, recovering Klamath River salmon runs will
still hinge on providing them with the water they need to thrive.
The settlement is also a
bad deal for wildlife. While backers spin the agreement as providing
more water for the refuges, fine print ensures irrigation will still
receive top priority for water in drought years at the expense of
wildlife. Worse, the deal would also continue harmful commercial
agricultural activity on 22,000 acres of Tule Lake and Lower Klamath
national wildlife refuges for another 50 years.
There are good pieces to
this settlement, such as provisions to increase scientific research and
environmental monitoring, provide funding for fish habitat restoration,
and provide some upper basin water demand reduction. These benefits are
offset by provisions harmful to conservation values, special-interest
handouts, and the fact that the settlement still contains no agreement
to remove dams.
Furthermore, to get dam
removal, an agreement with PacifiCorp is needed, but the controversial,
anti-conservation terms in the settlement proposal are dividing salmon
advocates at a time when a unified front is needed with PacifiCorp.
A truly balanced plan for
restoration of Klamath River salmon runs must start by bringing the
demand for water for irrigation back into balance with what nature can
safely supply. The Klamath needs a voluntary demand reduction program
that works with farmers to buy back water rights for irrigation and
retire them, so that salmon and wildlife can receive the water they need
to survive.
We must also phase out
the practice of leasing land on Tule Lake and Lower Klamath national
wildlife refuges for private commercial agricultural operations, both to
reduce the demand for water and restore water-cleansing wetlands.
Finally, we need a real
plan for the removal of the lower four Klamath River dams.
If they are serious about
a settlement to protect fish and wildlife, settlement-backers will step
back and take pause. Instead of rushing to lock in a deeply flawed
proposal, they might realize that in 10 months America will have a new
president, and the sacrifices made in the current proposal may no longer
be needed.
Steve Pedery of
Eaglepoint Ore., is the conservation director for Oregon Wild, an
organization that has been involved in Klamath Basin fish and wildlife
conservation efforts for two decades. Bob Hunter of Portland, Ore., is
senior staff attorney for WaterWatch, a conservation organization
dedicated to protecting and restoring streamflows for the fish, wildlife
and people who depend on healthy rivers.
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Source:
http://www.times-standard.com/opinion/ci_9129161
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