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Klamath
farmers face continuing water questions
By
Christine Souza
January 8, 2008
Assistant Editor, AG
Alert
TULELAKE - Tulelake grower Sid Staunton, who has farmed in the Klamath
Basin for the past 35 years and who was personally impacted by the water
shut-off of 2001, said he would rather not experience it again. Now,
with the 2008 growing season fast approaching, he and other farmers are
worried about the development of new federal biological opinions that
will guide water deliveries and impact the region’s agriculture for
the next 10 years.
’During the water shut-off of 2001, we gave up production on over 60
percent of our farm base. We had to buy water, install a well, we
implement a lot of different measures to survive,’ said
Staunton
, who grows potatoes,
onions, wheat, peppermint and alfalfa. ’For me to sit and hope for a
big winter so I get to farm again, that is pretty idiotic when I’ve
got to make investments to stay modern in today’s current
agriculture.’
The U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation recently released a final biological assessment, which
evaluates the potential effects of the proposed operation of the
bureau’s Klamath Water Project on listed species under the Endangered
Species Act.
The agency determined that the operation of the project may affect the
threatened coho salmon found in the Klamath River and the endangered
Lost River and shortnose suckers found in Upper Klamath Lake, therefore
the Bureau of Reclamation has requested a formal re-consultation with
the regulating agencies-the National Marine Fisheries Service and the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The time frame for the final biological opinion is from April 1, through
March 31, 2018
.
The Klamath Water Users
Association, the organization that represents Klamath Irrigation Project
farmers and ranchers, has pushed for a re-consultation ever since 2002
when biological opinions that are currently being used became official.
’We’ve taken a look at this biological assessment and we’re
nervous because there are still some pretty high flow requirements. In
some months it is less, but in the summer months when water is critical
the flows are either the same or higher than what we have now,’ said
Greg Addington, Klamath Water Users Association executive director.
’There is some more flexibility built into this with lake levels, but
our big fear is that it won’t translate into any flexibility for
project operations. It just gets sucked down the river for more flows.
Every year it is just touch and go for us. Every month it is touch and
go for us. It is no way to try and exist.’
Staunton
said it is impossible to be
economically viable in farming if water deliveries are cut during the
middle of the growing season.
’We can’t afford to
take that risk. About 50 percent of a farmer’s costs are in that crop
with the planting and rise to 75 percent by the middle of the season,’
Staunton
said. ’Yet they are going
to tell you, ’each month we are going to look at a level-and it is a
hypothetical level-it might save fish, it might not.’’
Staunton
has been faced with
challenges related to water in the
Klamath
Basin
for the past 15-20 years
and he said he remains worried for future generations who wish to farm.
’I have a son who is 22 who really enjoys farming. He came back home
to the farm this year and worked a full season. I’m basically going to
pat him on the back and say, ’go try the world and make sure before
you do farming,’’
Staunton
said.
Third-generation farmer
Scott Seus of Tulelake, said it is challenging to plan for this year
without certainty of a stable water supply.
’Where in the history of any of this related to endangered species or
re-consultations has it ever gone our way? It always means more
regulations or less of what you need to make your farm work.’ Seus
said. ’We are not excited about most of what we see in the biological
assessment, but at this point it is simply an assessment. If it is any
glimpse into the future, then we have some very major concerns.’
Seus, who grows onions, horseradish, peppermint and alfalfa, said the
re-consultation process also creates doubt among bankers and contracted
customers that farmers may not be able to deliver.
’Having no water is a
threat and is certainly something that bankers look at. It goes beyond
the bankers; it also goes to the people that we do business with,’
Seus said.
Seus recalls that the 2001 water cut-off impacted the entire
Klamath
Basin
community.
’We definitely watched a lot of our neighbors go hungry that year,’
Seus said. ’We were fortunate. We were able to get groundwater and
provide it not only to our neighbors, but also to the federal wildlife.
While farmers in the
Klamath
Basin
are awaiting for the
biological opinions, a recent report by the National Research Council
(NRC) focused on two studies that attempted to better understand the
Klamath
River basin
in
Oregon
and
California
. The report concluded that
both studies - one completed by
Utah
State
University
and the other by the
federal Bureau of Reclamation - would be more useful to decision makers
if a comprehensive analysis of the basin were conducted to identify all
research and management needs.
Dr. William L. Graf, professor of geography at the University of South
Carolina and chairman of the Klamath review committee said, ’Science
is being done in bits and pieces and there is no conceptual model that
gives a big picture perspective of the entire Klamath River basin and
its many components, as a result, the integration of individual studies
- such as the two examined by the committee -into a coherent whole has
not taken place, and it is unlikely to take place under the present
scientific and political arrangements.’
Water users have long agreed with the NRC report’s conclusions about
the importance of downstream tributaries to salmon health. They also
support the committee’s finding that a comprehensive approach is
what’s needed on the Klamath.
’This is encouraging
news, because this type of philosophy underscores the approach we have
been advocating for many years,’ said Luther Horsley, president of the
Klamath Water Users Association. ’We have consistently advocated that
the challenges of the
Klamath River
can only be solved on a
coordinated, watershed-wide basis.’
Klamath Water Users Association indicated, however that media headlines
and reaction from special interest activists regarding the report, focus
on sensationalism rather than on the true content of the report.
’It’s even more frustrating when we are bending over backward to try
to work with parties we have been in conflict with in the past,’
Addington said.
In the early 1990s, when
the
Klamath
Basin
experienced one of its
driest years on record, water usage and protecting fish species became a
great concern. Prior to that time, Seus said, farming had been done the
same way for generations with flood irrigation. Since that time, farmers
have changed their practices by conserving and using water more
efficiently.
’Klamath Basin farmers are an innovative group of agriculturists whose
hearts are in not just farming for this generation, but for generations
to come and we'll do what has to be done to protect that,’ Seus said.
In recent years, irrigators have supported the following steps to
benefit the environment and protect fish species (and in some cases paid
for improvements):
* More than $500 million
in federal funds has been spent in the
Klamath River
watershed since 2002, including for lake and river
restoration and habitat improvement projects.
* Construction of a $12 million fish screen at the A-Canal, the Klamath
Water Project’s primary diversion point.
* Construction and installation of ’sucker friendly’ fish passage at
Link River Dam.
* Environmental Quality Incentives Program provided $50 million in
matching funds. Local landowners took advantage of this program and
cost-shared on thousands of projects to improve irrigation efficiency
and conserve water.
* Landowners in the Tulelake and
Lower Klamath
areas have developed ’walking wetlands’ as a rotation to
traditional crops.
* Since the early 1990s, thousands of acres of productive farmland has
been converted to wetlands to support water quality and habitat
improvement.
* In the past five years,
Klamath
Basin
irrigators have contributed
up to 100,000 acre-feet of water per year to the water bank for
environmental purposes.
The final biological assessment is available online at www.usbr.gov/mp/KBAO.
For more information, contact Jon Hicks at the Bureau of Reclamation, at
(541) 880-2561 or e-mail at jhicks@mp.usbr.gov.
(Christine Souza is a reporter for Ag Alert. She may be contacted at csouza@cfbf.com.)
Permission for use is granted, however, credit must be made to the
California Farm Bureau Federation when reprinting this item.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/articles/2008/01/08/news/69100808news3.txt
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