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Klamath Settlement Analysis
by Marcia Armstrong, Siskiyou County Supervisor District 5
1/18/08
MUCH MORE THAN DAM REMOVAL: Last Tuesday was the
first time I, as so-called participant, was able to review the
full contents of the 200 page plus dam settlement agreement or
“Proposed Klamath River Basin Restoration Agreement for the
Sustainability of Public and Trust Resources and Affected
Communities.”
http://www.edsheets.com/Proposed%20Klamath%20Basin%20Restoration%20Agreement%20%20January%2015,%202008%20(Draft%2011).pdf
I had anticipated a dam removal alternative to the re-licensing
of the hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River. Obviously, through
the work of busy little subcommittees, this has morphed into
something quite larger than what I had anticipated. I don’t know
about anyone else, but the bulldozer has left tractor treads on my
forehead. The Board of Supervisors will be holding public meetings
on the document before it makes its decision whether to agree to
the document as a signatory. Times and places for these meetings
will be posted here:
http://www.co.siskiyou.ca.us/bos/agenda/agenda.htm Please
voice your opinion.
There are extensive portions of the document that will affect the
mid-Klamath River areas (including the Scott and Shasta Valleys,)
about which I had never previously been informed.
GROUNDWATER: The Agreement does not recognize County
jurisdiction over groundwater use.
COUNCIL OF FISH MANAGERS: The agreement would establish a
council of “fish managers” drawn from state, federal and tribal
agencies. Over the next 50 years, throughout the “Klamath River
Basin” or “Klamath Basin,” (which is defined to include lands
tributary to the Klamath River in California and Oregon –
excluding the Trinity River,) this council would create and
implement plans for fisheries restoration, reintroduction and
monitoring. Implementation will be done according to the
principles of “Adaptive Management.” The Council would be funded
with $493.2 million for the first 10 years and government agencies
would agree to reallocate current available restoration funds to
this pot of money. Fish species covered would include chinook,
coho, steelhead, rainbow trout, lamprey, bull trout, suckers,
sturgeon and eulachon.
This portion of the proposal is reminiscent of the now defunct
Klamath River Basin Fisheries Restoration Task Force (KRBFRTF),
but without any representation by the Counties that have general
land use authority over the area in question. It also does not
include the selected special interest lobbyists (commercial and
in-river fishermen) that served on the prior Task Force, although
it does include the tribes. Taking a look at the performance
review of the previous Task Force over the last several years of
existence, out of $1 million allocated per year, a bout $450,000
of that went to the US Fish and Wildlife regional and Yreka
offices. Of the remaining $550,000, about $150,000 went to Chinook
population studies, (carcass counts, spawning escapement, juvenile
emigration studies,) often performed by the tribes. Of the
remaining $400,000, about $150,000 went to core funding for the
various watershed councils. That left about $250,000. Some of that
went to education and awareness. Most of it went to various fish
studies – commonly performed by the tribes. Total funding for
actual restoration projects dwindled to an annual allocation of
about $50,000 to be shared in the Klamath River Basin below Iron
Gate.
In reviewing the entire KRBFRTF over its 20 year life, funds were
allocated as follows: 14% was spent on support of the federal
committees; 15% was spent on program administration; 11% was spent
on project management; 8% was spent on small tribal hatchery
rearing ponds; 1% was spent on education; 19% was spent on
“assessment, monitoring and research”; and 10% was actually spent
on on-the-ground habitat restoration projects. Regionally, Scott
Valley received 6% of the funds and 41% of that went to habitat
restoration; Shasta Valley received 7%, with 41% of that going to
habitat restoration. Considering this long established pattern, I
can’t see that this would play out differently, except all
government restoration money would be funneled through the new
fisheries council without any semblance of balanced
representation.
FEDERAL AGENCY GOVERNANCE: Federal government control over
water allocation has been disastrous to agriculture in the federal
Klamath Project. This is because of what is called the “federal
nexus” or legal requirements flowing from federal involvement of
the Bureau of Reclamation (BoR) in the management of the Klamath
Project. They do not have this type of jurisdiction over the Scott
and the Shasta. The hue and cry has been for a “basin wide
solution” to draw other areas of the system away from State, local
government and court jurisdiction and under this same federal
control. For several years, there was talk from the BoR of
creating a basin wide Conservation Implementation Program (CIP.)
The purposes of the CIP were to: (1) sustainably restore the
ecosystem of the Klamath River basin system; and (2) manage water
to meet federal endangered species and tribal trust obligations
for the Klamath Project by coordinating efforts across the whole
Klamath system. The CIP central federal governance umbrella was to
include a coordinating council.
Surprise, surprise! The current proposed Settlement Agreement
includes a Klamath Basin Coordinating Council (KBCC.) Its purpose
is to promote “sustainable restoration and renewal of the Klamath
River Basin." It will serve as a FACA (Federal Advisory Committee
Act) body that will make recommendations to federal agencies for
funding and other actions. The Fish Managers Council will send it
annual reports of what it has done with the restoration money. The
KBCC will set priorities, share information, seek funding and
provide dispute resolution related to the implementation of the
Settlement Agreement. The KBCC will operate on a "basin wide
perspective for hollistic solutions and approaches;" and “no
Klamath Basin interest shall bear an unreasonable portion of the
burdens imposed." In other words, it will endeavor to share the
pain.
The interim KBCC will include state, federal, tribal and local
governments that are parties to the Agreement. Then a corporate
governance Charter will be drawn which will include selected
representation from the federal agencies, the two states, Klamath
Siskiyou and Humboldt Counties, the Klamath Yurok, Hoopa and Karuk
tribes, the “On-Klamath Project” Water users; the Upper Basin
“Off-Project Water Users, commercial fishing, and environmental
groups. But wait…where is your seat at the table? Surprise,
Surprise! You aren’t invited. But don’t feel bad, neither was
Pacific Power or it’s 70,000 ratepayers. Also, the KBCC will link
and coordinate the Settlement Agreement with Biological Opinions,
Recovery Plans, watershed working groups and RCDs in the entire
Klamath River Basin. (The strategy here is to apparently pull the
watershed groups out from the land use oversight of the Counties
and under oversight and financial sponsorship of the new regional
governance structure.)
In addition to being very disturbed at this effort to set up a
basin wide chartered governance structure over riverian resources
that includes selected non-elected special interests, I am also
concerned at the intent to sustainably manage resources solely for
fisheries and ecosystem restoration. In case the basin wide
community has not noticed, Siskiyou County’s economy has been bled
to death by reorienting management priorities from putting bread
on our family’s tables to fisheries production and other species
management. In case they hadn’t noticed, our local economy gets
very little out of reallocating resources to fisheries, spotted
owls and salamanders. Where is the environmental and social
justice in Siskiyou County’s 12.3% average unemployment; massive
job loss in the timber (80%) and agricultural (45%) sectors; 65%
of our children in low income and 27% in poverty? Enough is
enough.
THIRTY PIECES OF SILVER: As you have no doubt read, the
Klamath Water Users have bargained for a variety of provisions to
offset the new regulatory exposure of potentially introducing
endangered salmon into the Upper Klamath area: a secure water
supply, continued historic low electrical rates, and a Safe Harbor
Habitat Conservation Plan. I have unanswered questions as to who
will subsidize the proposed electrical rate break to the Klamath
Project. I know that California ratepayers are currently
subsidizing Project rates as they gradually increase to rates
equivalent with the mid-Klamath. It also appears that the Upper
Basin will be the recipient of new alternative energy facilities
to offset loss of the Klamath hydropower dams. I wonder why they
are not to be constructed in the same area where the loss will
occur?
In mitigation for dam removal – (1) the loss of local power
generation capacity; (2) the long term loss of tax revenue on the
hydropower facilities and potentially devalued properties around
Copco and Iron Gate Dam; (3) the loss to local businesses; (4) the
loss of hydropower control over river flow levels; (5) the
potential release of large amounts of sediment; and (6) in
mitigation for the aesthetic and environmental impacts of dam
removal, Siskiyou County gets the promise of the group to ask the
California Legislature for a quantity of money (estimated at $20
million) to be paid to the County. Also, the area where the lakes
are drained will be rehabilitated and damages to roads accessing
the area will be mitigated in the CEQA (California Environmental
Quality Act) process. Local land owners will be ineligible for
just compensation due to any property devaluation as this is a
private and not a public power project. Also, it is anticipated
that the party removing the dam will seek immunity from suit for
any damages that might ensue. That sounds fair – right?
The tribes have secured an active role in “collaborative
management of the fisheries program” and will also receive $80
million in economic revitalization funds for the first 10 years.
Funding can be used at the tribes’ discretion for internal
capacity building, administration of the fisheries program or for
restoration projects. Tribes shall have priority for federal
grants under the fisheries program. The parties to the Settlement
Agreement will support tribal efforts to get additional long tern
economic revitalization dollars. The Klamath tribe also will
receive money to purchase the Mazama Forest Project in Klamath
County.
There is more, but I have given myself a headache – with the
bulldozer tracks on my forehead and all…….. |