
Editor's Note: The day after this article went to press in the print edition of the Fish Sniffer, representatives of the state and federal governments, Klamath Basin Indian Tribes, PacifiCorp and environmental and fishery conservation groups on April 6 signed the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement that this piece discusses.
Representatives from the state, federal, Tribal and county governments, environmental and fishery conservation NGOs and the public convened in a packed meeting room in Sacramento on March 16 to discuss amendments to the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement that proposes the removal of four Klamath River dams.
The amended KHSA, a 133-page document, focuses on removing three dams in California and one in Oregon, through the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission dam relicensing process. PacifiCorp, a subsidiary of Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway Corporation, owns the dams.
The parties had previously tried to pass legislation empowering the KHSA through Congress, along with two other related agreements including the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, but those efforts failed during the past two Congressional Sessions.
The States of Oregon and California, PacifiCorp and the federal government, through the U.S. Departments of the Interior and Commerce, in February announced agreement-in-principle in February to move forward with amending the KHSA.
Under the agreement, the KHSA parties will pursue its implementation through the administrative process governed by the FERC using existing funding and on the same timeline, according to PacifiCorp.
The agreement lays out a new path while achieving the goals of the original agreement and it provides the same protections, said Sara Edmonds, Vice President and General Counsel of PacifiCorp Transmission, at the meeting.
The 4-hour long meeting featured opening comments by state, federal, Tribal and county governments, a point-by-point review of the agreement by the parties and a public comments period.
For Thomas Wilson, a member of the Yurok Tribal Council and owner of Spey-Gee Point Guide Service, dam removal is very personal, since he and other members of the Tribe depend on the river’s salmon for their income and food.