"Last year's fish kill was devastating to the Yurok tribe, yet indications
are that the Bureau of Reclamation will provide even less water to sustain
our fishery during the coming year," said Sue Masten, Chairwoman of the
Yurok Tribe. "The bottom line is that there is not enough water to meet the
demand in a dry year or critical dry year. In the case of dry years, the
resources of the river should come first."
The Klamath Basin water crisis is entering its third year and several
important decisions looming in the next 12 months could intensify the
conflict or lead to improvements, according to American Rivers. In 2001,
angry Klamath Basin farmers, supported by the Pacific Legal Foundation and
other "wise use" groups, demanded that Gale Norton and the Bush
administration provide farmers with irrigation water in a dry year. The Bush
administration caved in and sent the water to the fields, paving the way for
the massive fish kill in September 2002.
The White House-appointed Klamath River Basin Federal Working Group is
expected to report on solutions for this river basin and Congress will take
up legislation that proposes to bring water supply and demand back into
balance.
On the same day the report was listed, Congressman Mike Thompson (D-Napa
Valley) introduced legislation to attempt to solve the water crisis in the
Klamath Basin. Thompson's legislation, the Klamath River Basin Restoration
and Emergency Assistant Act, would allocate $200 million to landowners and
tribes throughout the Klamath Basin who participate in water conservation
projects.
"The only way we are going to solve this mess is by buying back water rights
and reducing the demand for water," said Wendall Wood of the Oregon Natural
Resources Defense Council.
Jeff McCracken, spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, reacted to the
report by saying that "you can point the fingers wherever you want, but the
Bush administration is doing lots of things to make the river a viable
fishery."
McCracken stated that Federal Judge Oliver Wanger, at the Bureau's request,
ruled that in the event of similar conditions on the Klamath as last year,
the Bureau would have the ability to release 50,000 acre feet of cold water
down the Trinity.
He also cited the establishment of a water bank of 50,000 acre feet of water
to benefit Klamath fisheries, under the management of NOAA Fisheries. "We
hope that people recognize that we're trying to meet both the obligations to
both the upper and the lower river basins," said McCracken.
However, Sue Masten dismissed the Bureau's water banking plan, saying that
it wouldn't help alleviate the fishery problems. "The Bureau established
water banking last year also and it benefit the fish at all," she said.
"Last year's plan was a recipe for disaster and their plan this year is
essentially the same. They're not using science to make their decisions, but
politics."
Masten emphasized that if the problems of the river's current water
management aren't addressed, the dramatic decline in coho salmon, a federal
and state "endangered" species, will be followed by further declines in the
rivers's fall chinooks, spring chinooks, steelhead and green sturgeon
populations.
"In the Yurok way, if one species declines, it is a signal for us to do
something seriously different because our goal is to preserve and protect
the entire eco-system," she said. "Everything impacts something else. We all
have a responsibility to protect our resources that are left. The days of
taking everything just for dollar gain are over."
"The Yuroks are a fishing people," she added. "Our spiritual and cultural
traditions are intimately tied to the health of the river. The Yuroks have
always had a commercial fishery, but we have not been able to subsist on our
fishery alone since the arrival of Europeans. At the same time, there is 90
percent poverty rate and 70 percent unemployment on the reservation."
"While the report is a sad thing, it is also a good thing," said Masten.
"The sport fishermen, commercial fishermen, environmental groups, coastal
communities and tribes are all uniting in a common cause to restore the
ecosystem, so something good is coming out of last year's horrific event."
For more information about the Klamath and other endangered rivers, contact
www.americanrivers.org. Through this website, you can also easily send a letter telling your Representative in Congress to support Congressman
Thompson's Klamath River Basin Restoration and Emergency Assistance Act.
More Editorials by Dan