[env-trinity] Times Herald June 23 Klamath Dams

Byron bwl3 at comcast.net
Wed Jun 23 11:50:34 PDT 2004


DAM OPERATIONS / KLAMATH RIVER BASIN

Klamath people tell feds dams must go 

Eureka Times-Standard - 6/23/04

By John Driscoll, staff writer

The time is now to consider bringing down dams on the Klamath River and
breath life back into its fishery, dozens of speakers told the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission on Tuesday.

More than 200 people packed a large hotel conference room, all adamant that
Portland, Ore.,-based PacifiCorp properly weigh its effects on the river.
Most at the public hearing insisted the small amount of electricity produced
by the facilities doesn't match the benefits restored salmon fisheries would
have. 

"This is wrong, and this is a chance to right that wrong," said Yurok Tribal
Chairman Howard McConnell. 

PacifiCorp, a division of Scottish Power, is seeking a 50-year license for
Iron Gate, Copco I and Copco II, J.C. Boyle, Keno and Link River dams. All
told, the dams generate 150 megawatts of electricity -- enough to supply
70,000 homes. 

McConnell pointed out that despite the dams, many on the Yurok Reservation
are without power. He said PacifiCorp has failed to do the most basic
studies on the dams' impacts to the river and its people. 

The license for the dams expires in 2006.

FERC will determine the range of issues PacifiCorp must analyze. The agency
said it hopes to have a draft environmental impact statement done in July
2005. 

The lowermost dam, Iron Gate, stops salmon from reaching historic spawning
grounds in the upper river. Despite protest from American Indian tribes and
fishermen, PacifiCorp has opted not to consider building fish ladders,
opting only to look at trucking fish around the dams.

The company has also resisted the idea of removing any of the dams, though
lower river advocates, the National Research Council, and the California
Energy Commission, among other groups, have encouraged such an evaluation. 

Nancy Stark, aid to California Assemblywoman Patty Berg, D-Eureka, read a
statement asking FERC to demand an analysis of decommissioning all the dams.


PacifiCorp has proposed plans to improve whitewater rafting, fishing and
recreation at its facilities, and said it's open to exploring oxygenating
water in the often fetid Iron Gate Reservoir.

Yurok elder Richard Myers told the commission staff that the fish in the
Klamath can't afford another 50 years of dams. The past few years, which
have seen major die-offs of both adult and juvenile fish, have been
troubling, he said. 

"We need to pray and make these men change their minds," Myers said, urging
PacifiCorp to remove its dams. 

A number of speakers talked about the devastating impacts the dams and other
problems on the Klamath have had on North Coast communities. The commercial
salmon fishery in Northern California and Southern Oregon is all but closed
in an effort to protect the Klamath's ailing stocks. 

Eureka commercial fisher Marge Salo said FERC shouldn't need an 80-pound
document to "do the right thing."

Salo said coastal communities are dying, while her boat is tied up.

"I resent it," she said. "I really do."

By deadline, dozens more still had not addressed the commission staff. 

 

 

Byron Leydecker

Chair, Friends of Trinity River

Consultant, California Trout, Inc.

PO Box 2327

Mill Valley, CA 94942-2327

415 383 4810 ph

415 519 4810 ce

415 383 9562 fx

bwl3 at comcast.net

 <mailto:bleydecker at stanfordalumni.org> bleydecker at stanfordalumni.org
(secondary)

http://www.fotr.org

 

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