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A Call for Speedier Klamath Dam Removal

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Wednesday, December 16, 2009   

KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. - One of the parties in the negotiations for the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement (KHSA) officially left the table this week and joined ten other organizations to propose an alternative agreement.

The Northcoast Environmental Center (NEC) is now part of the new Klamath Conservation Partners, along with Oregon Wild, WaterWatch and eight other conservation groups from Oregon and California.

Together, they are suggesting a new plan to manage the long-running Klamath River Basin controversy over fish habitat and water rights. They say it would work faster than the draft settlement now on the table between the U.S. Interior Department, PacifiCorp, local tribes and irrigators.

According to Jay Wright, NEC's Klamath campaign coordinator, the new alliance members believe Klamath River dam removal should be at the top of the priority list - not tied to the other restoration efforts, and not put off any longer.

"Later on, once we've actually gotten dam removal firmly secured on the table, we'll be able to work through the restoration objectives. What the settlement parties are doing, is putting off the decision for dam removal until 2012."

Those who have been at the negotiating table for the current draft settlement have called it a "first step" toward dam removal. But Wright points out that the earliest target date for dam removal to begin is 2020. After years of talks, he adds, the deal still isn't final and contains no guarantees.

"There's going to be compromise along the way - and there'll almost have to be, with a $985 million restoration package tied to dam removal. So, we're just putting something out there, a compromise position, that I think legislators can work with."

The new alliance is proposing separate legislation for dam removal. Its reasoning is that, by separating the dams from the overall Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement (KBRA), both bills are more likely to get through Congress so the work can get underway more quickly.

The proposed legislation can be viewed online, at https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1780/images/Klamath_Facilities_Removal_Act_2009_12.09.pdf.




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