
Slam!
Karuk, Riverkeeper file lawsuit in state court
The
little algae that broke the power company's back?
By
Phil Hayworth
Pioneer Press Staff Writer
Pioneer
Press
Fort Jones
,
CA
530-468-5355
mailto:pioneerp@sisqtel.net
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Page
E1, Column 2
It could be the lawsuit -- and the little algae -- that broke the power
company's back.
Klamath Riverkeeper, the Karuk tribe of
California
and the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen's Associations want to force the North Coast
Regional Quality Control Board -- and Portland, Ore.-based
PacifiCorp -- to regulate discharges of toxic blue-green algae in the
Klamath River
.
To that end, the group filed suit against the water board on Aug.
23 in the Superior Court of California in
Sonoma
County
.
The lawsuit alleges that the water board failed to establish limits on
discharges from Copco Dam and
Iron Gate
reservoir, which are owned by PacifiCorp. Now, they say, the
water is polluted with algae that, in quantity and when shaken and
stirred, becomes toxic.
That menacing martini is just another reason why the groups have long
pushed for removal of the
Iron Gate
and Copco dams. They also
claim the dams harm water quality and salmon runs in the river along the
California-Oregon border.
Some studies suggest that swimmers, animals and others who ingest or are
exposed to large amounts of the algae, called Microcystin Aeruginosa,
can get sick.
The power company operates seven dams along the Klamath River, but Iron
Gate and Copco One and Copco Two are today in the crosshair.
Iron Gate
alone produces 18,000
megawatts, the Copco dams add more to the soup, and the seven hrydro
dams together produce about 161 megawatts for about 70,000 customers,
producing power worth about $29 million a year, according to the
California Energy Commission.
But Klamath Riverkeeper spokesperson Regina Chichizola said that the
suit -- which was filed in state court, not federal court--
will only force the board and PacifCorp to initiate a study. If
the report indicates the dams are creating and releasing toxic algae,
then the water board could force PacifiCorp to remediate the problem or
pay for what Chichizola called "permits to pollute."
"We're not saying that the dams have to come down," insisted
Regina Chichizola, "just that they are creating a pollutant and
they should be regulated."
But getting permits will likely be costly and take time.
"It means we're going to court," she said. "We'll be
submitting briefs in state court, and then the court will decide whether
or not PacifiCorp needs to do a report."
"It could take at least a year," she said.
Two weeks ago, the Karuk and the Sierra Club of California were thrilled
when Yreka-based dentist and Republican Dr. Sam Wakim -- a strong
proponent of keeping the dams -- resigned from the water board. He
resigned after accusations were made that he engaged in hate speech by
posting a doctored-up California license on his personal
website nearly three years ago depicting a sombrero-wearing Mexican.
He told the Pioneer Press just weeks before his resignation that he
would promote the Governor's mission to keep the dams up, and that he
personally thought the blue-green algae could be remediated.
Thursday's suit is just one more ember on the pyre that is PacifiCorp's
presence on the
Klamath River
. The company is owned
by Berkshire Hathaway, Inc., which itself is majority owned by Warren
Buffet. They're presently trying to get relicensed by the Federal
Energy Commission. Correspondence between the Federal Energy Commission
and California Energy Commission strongly suggest that the company would
be better off financially to get rid of the dams, or at least tear down
Iron Gate
.
B.B. Blevins, California Energy Commission executive director, wrote in
a letter dated
April 19, 2007
to FERC - complete with the
Governor's signature and the
California
seal -- that "results affirm that decommissioning the
Klamath Hydro Project and procuring replacement power for 30 years would
be less costly to PacifiCorp and its ratepayers than relicensing the
project and mitigating its impacts."
After
all is done and the checks have been mailed, it'll likely come down to
whether PacifiCorp, its board and, ultimately, its shareholders, are
willing to spend the estimated $300 million needed to fix the algae and
fish problem.
This summer, the Karuk indian tribe was charged with collecting water
samples, and health workers took blood samples from area swimmers,
fisherman and boaters from August 17 through 19. The CDC granted
the Karuk nearly $85,000 to conduct the sampling, and the tribe paid $40
to every lake user who volunteered to help with the two-day sampling
effort.
Karuk Water Resources Coordinator Susan Corum said during an open-house
informational event last month at the Best Western in Yreka that recent
samples taken from area waters frequented by recreational users
contained 100-times what the World Health Organization considers a
moderate health risk.
Representatives from the Karuk Tribe and fishing association refused to
comment about last week's suit.
(Permission to post from the publisher.)
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