For weeks now, news from and about the
Klamath River Basin has been dominated by speculation that “calls”
for water would be made in the Upper Klamath River Basin. A water
“call” is a term of art in western water law indicating when a
water right holder with senior rights calls for those with junior
rights to curtail water use so that the senior right holder gets
water.
Speculation
ended on June 10th
when the US Bureau of Reclamation and the Klamath Tribes of
Oregon1
asked the State of Oregon to shut down irrigation above Upper Klamath
Lake so that the Reclamation and the Tribes' senior water rights
could be met.
Along with the Williamson and Sprague Rivers, the Wood River flows
into Upper Klamath Lake. Hay and Cattle Agriculture dominate here.
The current “calls” are the first
ever in the Oregon portion of the Klamath River Basin and are
possible now because the State of Oregon has completed its part of
the long-running Klamath Water Rights Adjudication.
The state proposed Final Order of Determination is now
in the hands of state-court Judge Cameron Wogan where challenges to
the proposed Final Order will be resolved.
Irrigators above Upper Klamath Lake are
private entities and engage primarily in hay and cattle operations.
Some of the pastures are used by cattle trucked in from California.
According to the State of Oregon, irrigators above Upper Klamath Lake
hold water rights which are junior to those of the Klamath Tribes for
in-stream flows as well as to rights held by the Bureau of
Reclamation for federal irrigation by private entities below Upper
Klamath Lake.
Some of the irrigators who will be
required to stop diverting water have asked Judge Wogan for a “stay”
to prevent the state from enforcing the Adjudication's Final Order
pending challenges in his court; a decision on the stay request has
not issued. When the water “call” was made, these same irrigators
asked Judge Wogan for a temporary restraining order to prevent
irrigation shut offs. That request has been denied.
As surface water diversions above Upper
Klamath Lake are shut down, more water will flow into Upper Klamath
Lake. That means more water will be available to the Bureau of
Reclamation. Reclamation will decide how to divide that water among
three uses:
- irrigation within the federal Klamath Irrigation Project,
- a water supply to maintain wetlands on Lower Klamath and Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuges, and
- flows in the Klamath River for ESA-listed Coho Salmon and to sustain Chinook Salmon, Lamprey and other aquatic resources to which the Yurok, Hoopa, Resighini and Quartz Valley tribes have a right by virtue of their federally-designated reservations.2
When not under
court order, Reclamation has almost always prioritized delivering
irrigation water to private growers within its Klamath Irrigation
Project. This year will be no different. Buoyed by a new Biological
Opinion on how its operations affect ESA listed species, the Bureau
is already dewatering Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge.
Spring
flows
in
the
Klamath
River
have
been
reduced by Reclamation to about
1,000
cfs
which
could
be
an
historic
low
for
spring
river
flows.
In fact, during the current water year (beginning October 1st),
Reclamation has been starving the Klamath River for water as it has
every year since the KBRA Water Deal was signed.
Below is a graph
showing flows below Iron Gate Dam since October 1st
along with the long term (52 year) average or median flows. This
water year actual flows – which are controlled by Reclamation -
have been far below the historic average except when the federal
agency had to dump water down the river because high storm run-off
had already filled all available Upper Basin storage.
Flows below Iron Gate Dam since October 1, 2012
Historic (52 years) median(average) flows are the gold dots
The
other water “calls”