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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
June 25, 2004 |
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Community Prepares for Congressional
Field Hearing and Klamath Falls Rally
House Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo (R-CA) announced
this week that the Committee will hold a field hearing in
Klamath Falls, Oregon on the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The
hearing, to be held at 9:00 a.m. on July 17 at the Ross Ragland Theater
in downtown Klamath Falls, will cover the ESA's impact on the Klamath
Project, one of the nation's oldest federal irrigation projects. A
recent report completed by the National Research Council (NRC) on
Klamath River fishes will also be addressed at the hearing. Local
community leaders are preparing for this important event, and are
organizing a pre-hearing rally in Klamath Falls.
"Endangered Species Act implementation is not just about fish and
family farms and water," said Bob Gasser, co-owner of Basin Fertilizer.
"It affects loggers, outdoorsmen and business owners. It affects rural
communities. If you want to invest in your future, now is the time for
your voice to be heard."
Event organizers have asked the community to meet at Veteran’s Park
in Klamath Falls at 7:00 on the morning of July 17th. The
assembled crowd will then march to the Ross Ragland at 7:30 a.m. for a
rally and speeches from invited guests.
The Klamath Project was the subject of international coverage in 2001
when ESA regulations protecting sucker fish and coho salmon forced the
bulk of the project to virtually shut down its water delivery system for
almost the entire growing season. Local business leaders estimate that
the termination of water deliveries in 2001 inflicted $200 million worth
of economic damage on the Klamath Basin community.
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Community Prepares for
Field Hearing and Klamath Falls Rally (Continued)
Although federal and state efforts have focused on resolving the
situation, the Klamath project was nearly shut down last summer because
of ESA requirements. Klamath irrigators face another dry summer this
year, prompting many worries of another devastating irrigation water
cut-off. Meanwhile, a NRC Report last year questioned some of the
underlying endangered species science behind the 2001 shut down.
"The water shut-off in the
Klamath Basin is a dramatic example of how, after 30 years, the
Endangered Species Act has failed the species it was designed to
recover. Unintended consequences have devastated communities. We
must find a sound and balanced approach, one that conserves species
while caring for our local communities as well. This hearing is
specifically designed to discuss the abuse of this law and to find a
scientific solution to updating and improving the ESA so that
further generations will not have to suffer as the Klamath farmers
have."
Rep. Richard W. Pombo (R-CA), Chairman, Committee
on Resources |
The Klamath Water Users Association (KWUA) and its members in 2001
strongly advocated for an independent peer review of the 2001 Klamath
Project Biological Opinions, the underlying science, and the related
overall scientific process. The final report from the NRC Committee on
Endangered and Threatened Fishes in the Klamath Basin represents a
critical step towards ensuring proper assessment and maintenance of
healthy fish populations.
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Klamath Water Users
Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
June 25, 2004 |
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Community Prepares for Hearing and Klamath Falls Rally (Cont’d from
p. 1)
The final NRC report reaffirms the findings of an earlier NRC
report, which concluded that insufficient scientific evidence
existed to justify the higher lake and river levels to protect coho
salmon and sucker fish. The final NRC report is remarkable for two
other key reasons:
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The report clearly
indicates that recovery of endangered suckers and threatened coho
salmon in the Klamath Basin cannot be achieved by actions that are
exclusively or primarily focused on operation of the U.S. Bureau
of Reclamation’s (USBR) Klamath Project.
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The NRC determined
the operation of the Klamath Project was not the cause of the 2002
Klamath River fish die-off and that changes in the operation of
the project at the time would not have prevented it.
Despite the NRC
findings and a 2003 court decision which found no link between
Klamath Project operations and the unfortunate die-off of 33,000
salmon on the lower Klamath River, vocal critics of Klamath Project
operations and Bush Administration environmental policy continue to
use this unfortunate event to renew their now-familiar arguments.
Even though the fish die-off occurred 200 miles downstream from the
Project, at a location below the confluence of the main stem Klamath
River and the Trinity River, traditional advocates for higher river
flows quickly assigned blame to Klamath Project farmers and
ranchers.
Some of these same
interests and radical environmentalists have even attempted to
directly
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Community Prepares for Hearing and Klamath
Falls Rally (Continued)
link the fish die-off to political maneuvering orchestrated by
senior policy officials in the Bush Administration. As a result,
presidential hopeful Senator John Kerry called on the U.S. Interior
Department's Inspector General (IG) to look into whether "political
pressure from the White House is intimidating staff and influencing
policy" in Klamath River management decisions. Interior Department
Inspector General Earl Devaney’s report – released last March -
found "no evidence of political influence affecting the decisions
pertaining to the water in the Klamath Project."
"We owe the
American people the very best scientific answers when it comes
to balancing human water needs with endangered species
protection. Time and again, we have found that the Endangered
Species Act needs to be updated to both improve species
protection and provide needed water to our farmers and cities.
When the science has been questioned by a team of independent,
qualified biologists and that two conflicting species
regulations continue to provide environmental and water use
uncertainty in the Klamath basin, it's our duty to help provide
the roadmap to resolution and this hearing will help accomplish
that."
Rep. Ken Calvert (R-CA), Chairman, Subcommittee on Water and
Power |
"The NRC report is
consistent with what we have been saying for years – the Klamath
Project cannot solely bear the burden for species recovery in this
basin," said Dan Keppen, KWUA Executive Director economy. The NRC
final report can be downloaded at:
www.nationalacademies.org/morenews/
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly Update
June 25, 2004 |
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KWUA to Introduce New
Web Site: Check Out
www.kwua.org
The Klamath Water
Users Association (KWUA) next week will launch the official website
of the organization: www.kwua.org.
The first website of the association was started during the 2001
water crisis but was never completed. As the events of 2001
unfolded, nationwide attention allowed another website –
klamathbasincrisis.org – to flourish and serve as a forum for
up-to-date news and on-line discussion regarding the water cutoff.
The KWUA Board of Directors earlier this year authorized the
development of an independent website that will provide the public
with the association’s perspectives. Meanwhile,
klamathbasincrisis.org will continue to serve as a separate,
grass-roots forum managed by Jacqui Krizo of Tulelake.
"KBC, Klamath Basin
Crisis, is the grass roots website of the Klamath Basin irrigators
and their community," said Krizo. "The night our water was shut off
in 2001, I emailed the world in total disbelief and despair. A
friend, Ronnie DeShon, an old neighbor whose father also was a
Tulelake homesteader, called and ask what he could do to help, and
within a week he created
www.klamathbasincrisis.org."
"In 2001, KBC was our
voice, our informational resource, and our place to go for
information," she said. "In the midst of the crisis there was
minute-by-minute news. Ronnie acquired a team of a couple dozen
people to do different jobs, including having a laptop and live cams
at the headgates. Ronnie also created a discussion forum where the
latest information was shared. It also became, and still is at
times, a place where anti-agriculture folks vent their anger at our
existence."
Numerous individuals
and organizations, including KWUA, the Klamath Bucket Brigade and
Water for
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Life, Inc. have contributed information that can be viewed on KBC.
For example, the KWUA "Weekly Update" is posted every week on
Krizo’s website. Like the Bucket Brigade, KWUA made the decision to
develop an independent website to ensure that the association
message and policy positions were clear to the local community and
website visitors from outside the Klamath Basin. KWUA will continue
to contribute information to KBC, but the new website,
www.kwua.org, will focus solely
on Klamath River watershed and Klamath Project issues that the
association is engaged with.
The new site will
include:
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Association
Background Information
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Information on
Directors and Staff
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Weekly Updates
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Letters
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News Articles and
Press Releases
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Speeches
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An Awards Summary
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Fact Sheets
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Conservation
Information
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Legal, Power and
Science Updates
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Legislation and
Regulatory Information
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Links to Other
Websites
The site will be
regularly updated and will also include stunning photography
developed by local camera buffs.
"We are excited about
offering this new forum for the public to learn about our
association and our community," said KWUA Executive Director Dan
Keppen.
KWUA Urges Commission
to Delay State Listing of Coho Salmon
The California Fish
and Game Commission (Commission) today in Crescent City will
consider
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Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |
Weekly
Update
June 25, 2004 |
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whether to add coho salmon on the Klamath River to the list of state
threatened species. The Klamath Water Uses Association (KWUA),
landowners in the Scott and Shasta Valleys, commodity associations
and timber interests have all urged the Commission to consider new
information before adopting new regulations for coho salmon
protection. At a hearing in Crescent City, the Commission will
discuss both the petition for reconsideration of the finding and the
rule making based on the finding.
In a June 23, 2004
letter, KWUA urged the Commission not to adopt the proposed
amendment to section 670.5, title 14, California Code of
Regulations, which would add coho salmon populations between Punta
Gorda and the northern border of California to the list of
threatened species under CESA.
"In addition to our
belief that additional, new information must first be considered
before new regulations are adopted, we strongly urge the Commission
to consider the possible negative effects that new regulations may
have on landowners’ motivation to participate in truly effective
salmon restoration efforts," KWUA wrote to the Commission.
The KWUA letter
outlined the extensive and proactive efforts undertaken by Klamath
Basin irrigators in the past decade, in an effort to get ahead of
the Endangered Species Act (ESA) curve. Because these efforts have
not yet provided any relief to Project irrigators towards meeting
the ESA-driven requirements imposed by NOAA Fisheries
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KWUA Urges Commission to Delay State Listing of Coho Salmon
(Continued)
and U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, local irrigators have assumed a more reluctant
stance in recent years to support further, similar efforts. The
disastrous water cut-off of 2001 – after years of proactive actions
taken by local water users – contributed largely to this current
perception
"It is our fear that
imposition of new regulation on irrigators in the Scott and Shasta
Valleys may have similar negative effects," KWUA noted in its
letter.
Historic Potluck
Picnic Social Planned
History buffs,
irrigators and local residents are invited to a historic potluck
picnic social at the Pacific Power Keno Recreation Area Park on July
27, 2004 from noon to 3:00 p.m. The Klamath River Watershed Working
Group has organized the event to share historical perspectives,
practices, anecdotes, and reminiscences of the Klamath River.
Pacific Power
representatives will provide back-ground information on the Keno
Dam, generating facilities, and the irrigation project. Some of the
information gathered at this event may be incorporated into a
watershed assessment collection to show how historical uses around
the river have changed over time. For further information on the
Potluck Picnic Social, contact Danette at (541) 883-7131 or Anita at
(541) 884-2015.
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Content and Logo: Copyright
© Klamath Water Users Association, 2002 All Rights Reserved
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