Feds To Let Klamath Irrigation
Water Flow; Fish Not In Peril
GRANTS PASS, Ore. —(AP)— The federal government said last week
it expects to deliver water this year to Klamath Basin farmers, unlike
a year ago when irrigation was sharply curtailed to save water for
officially "threatened" and "endangered" fish.
Last year's cutbacks set off a tense confrontation between farmers
and the federal government.
The Bureau of Reclamation said resumption of full irrigation was
due to a bountiful snowpack and a National Academy of Sciences review
that threw doubt on the need to reserve water for fish.
``This presents an ... environmentally responsible approach to the
competing water needs in the Klamath Basin,'' Reclamation Commissioner
John Keys said in a statement.
The bureau's plan must be reviewed by biologists for the Fish and
Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service. Those
agencies are supposed to complete their review in time for irrigation
to begin April 1.
Last year, federal agencies cut water to irrigation canals serving
about 1400 farms to preserve water levels in Upper Klamath Lake for
the "endangered" sucker fish and to increase flows into the
Klamath River for the "threatened" coho.
The plan was bittersweet news for farmers because it does not
provide an immediate guarantee of water.
``Nobody can get a bank loan 'til we get a guarantee of water,''
said fertilizer dealer Bob Gasser, a spokesman for the Klamath Water
Users Association. ``The banks have said unless you have a well, we're
not giving loans.''
Commercial salmon fisherman, too, expressed displeasure.
``They are plunging the entire downriver into permanent drouth,
offering in some cases less than one-third of what fish need for
minimal survival,'' said Glen Spain of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Associations.
(No need for last year’s devastating cutbacks? Looks like
somebody failed to do their homework. But that’s okay, they’re
Civil Service; they’ll be paid no matter what their screw-up costs
others. A few bankruptcies, a suicide here and there … thank
goodness it wasn’t something serious. — Ed.)
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