February 4,
2009
A bill
introduced by Oregon
legislators Tuesday would
create a fund for removing
dams on the Klamath River.
The
legislation would direct
money from Pacificorp
electricity customers' bills
into the account, which
would then be used toward
the effort to remove four
dams on the river. The bill
would cap Pacificorp's
contribution to the project
at $200 million.
An
agreement in principle has
been reached between
Pacificorp, Oregon,
California and the federal
government to embark on the
largest dam removal in U.S.
history. A California bond
and other federal dollars
would also be needed for the
project. That could become
part of a larger settlement
to restore the Klamath River
basin's fisheries and shore
up water supplies to farms.
Advocates
of the bill said that dam
removal would be cheaper for
ratepayers than keeping the
dams would be, considering
that federal agencies would
require fish ladders and
other expensive in order to
relicense the project.
”Gov.
(Ted) Kulongoski has helped
negotiate a win-win-win
situation that we hope
legislators will support,”
said Klamath Tribal
Councilman Jeff Mitchell in
a statement. “Tribes and
fishermen win because we
will recover salmon runs,
farmers win because dam
removal is a cornerstone of
our water sharing agreement,
and Pacificorp and their
customers win because they
control costs.”
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