The
Hoopa Valley Tribe, with a strong assist from a coalition led by
the Yurok Tribe, won an important victory for Coho salmon and the
Klamath River recently. If faithfully and properly implemented, the
order issued by federal Judge William H. Orrick will provide larger
river flows during winter, springtime and, if needed, early summer.
Those flows won't heal the Klamath River's ills; but they will
mitigate them and help Klamath Salmon survive.
Unfortunately,
initial actions taken by the US Bureau of Reclamation, which controls
flows from the Upper Klamath River Basin, raises concerns that
Reclamation's irrigation bias may already be impacting how much help
the River will actually get. The judge's order, why the flushing
flows are needed, the roll of tribal fish biologists, ESA corruption
and concerns about Reclamation's good faith implementation are
explored and explained below.
The
Order and River flows
Judge
Orrick's order comes after two devastating years during which
epidemic salmon diseases killed most of the young salmon produced in
the Klamath River Basin before they could reach the ocean. It also
comes when the Klamath has experienced the lowest spawning run since
modern counting methods began in 1978.
The 2016 Chinook Salmon run was the smallest since modern counting began in 1978
The
Court's order results from a challenge to the 2013 Biological Opinion
defining what would be required of the federal Klamath Irrigation
Project in order to comply with the Endangered Species Act with
respect to Coho Salmon in the lower Klamath River Basin and two
endangered sucker fish, Kuptu and
C'wami,
in the upper basin.
In his ruling
Judge Orrick found that by ignoring the Klamath's salmon
disease epidemic, the US Bureau of Reclamation violated the
Endangered Species Act. He ordered Reclamation to supply the Klamath
River with the river flows scientists say are needed to mitigate the
salmon disease disaster. Here's an excerpt from the judge's order:
With regard to the motions for summary judgment, I conclude that
the federal defendants violated 50 C.F.R. 402.16 because they delayed two years before
reinitiating formal consultation after the incidental take trigger
was exceeded in 2014. Preliminary injunctive relief, pending
completion of formal consultation, is an appropriate remedy for this
substantial procedural violation. In general, plaintiffs’ requested
injunctive relief is supported by the best available science and
plaintiffs’ proposal that the parties’ technical experts confer
on the precise timing, duration, volume, and manner of any potential
injunctive flows will allow the parties to address the Bureau’s
needs to maintain sufficient water for the sucker fish (two species
of endangered fish also impacted by the Klamath Project), comply with
various regulations, and manage safety concerns. Plaintiffs’
motions for summary judgment on Claim I are GRANTED.
The
order instructs the US Bureau or Reclamation to provide two types of
Klamath River flows:
“(1)
winter-spring flushing flows designed to dislodge and flush out
polychaete worms that host C. shasta and (2) emergency dilution
flows...between April and June 15.”
Judge
Orrick also ordered Reclamation to work with “tribal experts” on
the precise amount, timing and duration of increased river flows to
alleviate the disease epidemic. Some of those experts, Hoopa, Yurok
and Karuk tribal fish biologists, produced a “Guidance Document” specifying what the
best available science indicates are target flows sufficient to
mitigate the epidemic. Judge Orrick's order reflects the Guidance
Document's recommendations.
In
order to mobilize the riverbed and flush out disease organisms
between Iron Gate Dam and the Shasta River, the Guidance Document
calls for Reclamation to:
“Provide
a daily average flow of at least 11,250 cfs as measured in a 24 hour
period in the Klamath
River at Iron Gate Dam. This should be done at least once during the
period of February 15 to May 31 in 2017.” (Guidance
Document, page 10)
The
best available science indicates that 11,250 cfs below Iron Gate Dam is
the minimum amount of water necessary to mobilize the river
bed and, therefore, the minimum flows needed to flush out disease
organisms and reduce juvenile salmon losses.
Reclamation
acts quickly
One
day after the Court's order issued, the US Bureau of Reclamation
announced it would increase flows from Iron Gate Dam to 9600 cubic
feet per second “to reduce the risk of disease for Coho
salmon in the Klamath River”. In its press release announcing the flow increase, Reclamation emphasized that
providing court-required flows in February would “reduce
potential impacts to the overall water supply.” That's a coded
message to federal irrigators: Providing court ordered flows now will
mean a lower likelihood that the agency will need to reduce
irrigation water deliveries this summer to comply with the Court's
order.
Reclamation
increased Klamath River flows immediately; on February 10th flows below Iron Gate Dam reached 10,000 cfs. Officials from the Yurok Tribe praised the agency's action and press coverage was
positive, reflecting both Reclamation's press
releases and the Tribe's support for the action.
The
press did not notice that Reclamation never planned to provide the
11,250 cfs which tribal specialists and the Court's order called for.
Nor did they question why Reclamation would schedule increased flows when
most of the Basin's watersheds were at or approaching flood stage.
Were Reclamation's increased flows “for Coho salmon in the
Klamath River” actually a
prudent and necessary action to avoid flooding? Apparently, the
question did not occur to reporters.
Whether
or not they were planned for fish or to avoid flooding the City of
Klamath Falls, the flows Reclamation announced it would release were,
according to the best available science, inadequate to flush disease
organisms from the River's bed. That unreported fact should cause
everyone who cares about the River and Klamath Salmon concern.
Will
Reclamation provide the 1125 cfs flushing flows which scientists and
specialists say are needed before the end of May? And come spring
will the agency again play the old bait and switch game, denying the
River the water young salmon need during migration, claiming the
water must be denied in order to help endangered suckers? Recent
history provides hints and indications of what can be expected.
Klamath
Corruption
I
began calling for a legal challenge to the 2013 Biological Opinion
soon after it was adopted.
I did that because the Opinion was the result of corruption at the US
Fish & Wildlife Services and National Marine Fisheries Services.
While claiming to provide what Coho, Kuptu and C'wam
need, the corrupt 2013 Biological Opinion actually prioritized
federal irrigation over the needs of the three fishes.
The
official most responsible for that Biological Opinion, Curt Mullis,
retired from federal employment soon after the opinion became final.
He was promptly awarded a seat on the Board of the Klamath Water
Users Association (KWUA), the political arm of the Klamath's federal
irrigators. Those irrigators have opposed adequate river flows at
every turn.
Because
it prioritized irrigation over the needs of threatened and endangered
fishes, the 2013 Biological Opinion was illegal when it was adopted.
Nevertheless, it was not challenged for over three years. Tribes and
fishing organizations had recently signed the KBRA Water Deal with its 19
pages of “regulatory assurances” designed to relieve federal
irrigators of the burden of complying with federal endangered species
and state wildlife laws. They were willing, at that point, to support
a corrupt Biological Opinion in return for the “benefits” they
expected for the River and themselves if the KBRA were endorsed and
funded by Congress.
These
are, of course, inconvenient truths. Nevertheless, they must not be
swept under the rug and forgotten. Secret water deal negotiations are
once again taking place. While we all hope those in the back room
have learned lessons from the KBRA debacle, one never knows. So long
as the Klamath River Basin's tribal governments are dependent on the
US Bureau of Reclamation to fund their fisheries and restoration
departments, they will remain vulnerable to manipulation by the feds
on behalf of the Irrigation Elite, the small group of fat-cat growers who control the majority of
irrigation within the 200,000 acre plus federal Klamath Irrigation
Project.
Finally
the Hoopa Valley Tribe,
which never accepted the KBRA Water deal, stepped
up to the plate and informed the feds that in 60 days they
would be sued for not
complying with the Endangered
Species
Act
with respect to Coho salmon. A couple of
weeks later, the chief promoters of the KBRA, the Yurok Tribe and
PCFFA, along with others,
followed the Hoopa Tribe's
lead. That's a good sign.
Hopefully the tribal and
fishing organizations which produced the KBRA Water Deal have
awakened,
at
least partially, from the back room
induced trance state they've been in
for far too
long.
What
Kuptu and C'wam really need
Because
of the recent court victory, a new Biological Opinion delineating
what the US Bureau of Reclamation's Klamath Irrigation Project must
do to avoid further endangering Coho, Kuptu and C'wam will
be developed. That presents
an opportunity to finally get the conservation science right for all
three fishes. Stronger
protections are needed not only for Coho Salmon but also for Kuptu
and C'wam.
The
2013 Biological Opinion claimed
that keeping Upper Klamath
Lake full to the brim in
spring must be the #1 priority in
order to provide for the
survival of juvenile Kuptu
and C'wam. However, as
the second independent Klamath science report by the National
Research Council pointed out,
there is no evidence that keeping Upper Klamath Lake full at that time of year actually
helps the two endangered sucker species.
More recent research by US
Geological Survey scientists confirms that fact: while high
springtime lake levels have been provided faithfully by Reclamation
for over a decade, very few endangered juvenile Kuptu
and C'wam in Upper
Klamath Lake have survived beyond their first year. Scientists do not
know why juveniles
are not surviving in Upper Klamath Lake; they are working hard to
uncover the causes.
One thing is clear, however, keeping Upper Klamath Lake full to the
brim in the spring has not resulted in more juvenile Kuptu
and C'wam surviving.
While
it does not appear to help the endangered suckers, keeping Upper
Klamath Lake full in spring does accomplish one sure
thing: it maximizes the amount of water that can be supplied to
federal irrigators during summer. And that, I believe, is the real
reason the corrupt 2013 Biological
Opinion
prioritized keeping Upper
Klamath Lake full in
springtime even when that dooms most of the young Coho and Chinook
salmon before they can reach the Pacific Ocean.
Recent science from the USGS gives a clear indication of what actually
is most important to the
survival of Kuptu and
C'wam. The only lake
in the entire Klamath and Lost
River Basins where significant numbers of juveniles of
both species have survived to
breeding age is Clear Lake, high in the Lost River Basin.
Clear
Lake, a natural waterbody, is used by Reclamation as an irrigation
water source. The
same corrupt US Fish & Wildlife official who delivered the 2013
Biological Opinion also removed Critical Habitat ESA protection from
the Lake.
That in turn has allowed Reclamation to draw down Clear
Lake to the point where adult Kuptu
and C'wam can't get to
their spawning grounds in Willow Creek. A new Biological Opinion must
reverse that corrupt action: Kuptu
and C'wam in Clear
Lake must not be further endangered by Reclamation's Irrigation
First agenda.
from the elimination of ESA Critical Habitat from the Lost River Basin
The ESA is the real hero:
Once
again, the federal Endangered Species Act has proven a powerful tool,
not only for salmon but also for the people who depend on salmon.
While tribal biologists played a key roll in the victory, as did the
lawyers at Earthjustice and the Hoopa Valley Tribe's lawyer, Tom
Schlosser, to date, the federal Endangered Species Act is the only
thing that has ever put more water for salmon into the Klamath River.
While
all who care about the River and Klamath Salmon appreciate what
tribal salmon specialists and lawyers have done, the ESA is clearly
the real hero: a protector not only of birds, mammals and fish but
also of the Hoopa, Yurok and Karuk people who depend on the River and
its salmon. Perhaps rather than Salmon Festivals we should be having
ESA Appreciation Festivals!
A
call for citizen vigilance
If
implemented properly, The Court's order will give our sick Klamath
River what it most needs: more water. The water will let the River
flow in a more natural rhythm; one which mimics, to the extent
practicable and safe, the River's natural flow variations, what
California Department of Water Resources calls “unimpaired flows”.
But,
as explained above, proper implementation of the Court's order is not
guaranteed. Early implementation by the US Bureau of Reclamation
raises important questions to which the people of the Klamath River
deserve answers. Will Reclamation provide the 11,250 cfs flow below
Iron Gate Dam which experts tell us is the minimum needed to mobilize
the River's bed and flush out salmon disease organisms? And will the
agency reserve water to augment summer flows if needed?
I
called the Bureau of Reclamation's Klamath Falls manager seeking
answers to those questions. The receptionist told me their “Public
Affairs” specialist would get back to me.
The
eleven decade history of the Klamath Irrigation Project teaches that,
when it comes to fish, whether salmon or suckers, the good faith of
the US Bureau of Reclamation can not be relied upon. The KBRA fiasco
is part of that history. It showed that Klamath River citizens can
not always trust tribal governments and fishing organizations to
assure that the needs of our River and Klamath Salmon are not
compromised.
Hopefully
the tribes' specialists, who have been empowered by the judge, know
enough not to be fooled by Reclamation's games and false claims. In light of Reclamation's recent actions and history of duplicity,
however, tribal and other citizens would do well to remain vigilant and
engaged. Citizen activists must assure that politics does not once
again deny our River the water salmon, and the aquatic ecosystems on
which salmon depend, need.
KlamBlog
WILL remain vigilant and engaged. Will you?
____________________
____________________
i.
Kuptu (often written Qapdo) is the Klamath People's
word for the Lost River Sucker; C'wam is the Klamath People's word
for the Shortnose Sucker.
It's interesting that the underlying science behind the "Guidance Document" - Append B, C, D, and E - were removed from the document link in this post. The four technical memos included in the guidance document teed up the disease control recommendations granted by the court. In aggregate, the memos represent one of the most significant contribution to science influencing future water management on the Klamath and should have been included with the rest of the document, as intended. Why were they removed and not made available with the rest of the document - because they were written by feds?
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