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http://www.heraldandnews.com/news/local_news/kid-leaves-water-users-group/article_1f7eaf98-64ed-5a58-a022-c8d90c19c5e0.html#fb-root

KID leaves water users group

by Lacey Jarrell, Herald and News 11/17/15

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C Canal Flume
H&N file photo by Kevin N. Hume The C Canal Flume near the Henley schools complex on Highway 39 is scheduled to be replaced in a multi-million dollar project.

The Klamath Irrigation District board of directors voted Monday to withdraw from the Klamath Water Users Association.

In a 3-1 vote, board members Grant Knoll, Ken Smith and Brent Cheyne voted in favor of withdrawing from Water Users. Board member Greg Carleton voted against withdrawal.
 

Board chairman Dave Cacka was absent.
 
“I was disappointed to hear the news of KID’s board vote to withdraw from (Water Users),” Greg Addington, Water Users executive director, said in a statement. “I think it is unfortunate and shortsighted and I don’t believe it reflects the will of most of the agricultural producers in the district. That said, the vote has occurred and we respect the process the district went through.”
 
Board member Brent Cheyne said KID irrigators pay Water Users about $238,000 per year.
 
According to the Water Users’ website, the organization has represented Klamath Project farmers since 1953, and has lobbied for the Klamath ag sector in several arenas, including water quality and quantity, government relations and power costs.
 
Before the vote, KID Manager Mark Stuntebeck pointed out that much of the work KWUA does advocating for farmers is “behind the scenes.”
 
“They do a lot of things politically that you probably don’t ever hear about,” Stuntebeck said.
 
KID Farmer John Bair said he doesn’t believe Water Users represents his interests.
 
“It seems to me that some of the political goals of the Water Users contradicts what we are trying to do,” Bair said.
 
Bair said the board should be more focused on where money to replace the C Canal Flume is going to come from. He thinks the money being paid to Water Users should instead be dedicated to paying for the multi-million dollar C Canal flume replacement. The flume delivers irrigation water to roughly 22,000 cropland acres in the Klamath Project.
 
“That’s our No. 1 responsibility,” Bair said.
 
In his statement, Addington noted he believes Water Users has done more than most people will ever know to ensure Project contractors, including KID, have water and other resources to deal with drought and water shortages.
 
“Without those efforts, the shortages and hardship to farmers and ranchers in the Klamath Project would have likely been catastrophic,” he said. “I am hopeful there will be a path for KID and others to reconcile their differences and move forward with one voice for the irrigation community. Agricultural interests in the Basin are too fractured as it is, and this doesn’t solve any problems, it only exacerbates them.”

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