[env-trinity] Times Standard- Humboldt Supes ask for Trinity water, once again

Tom Stokely tstokely at trinityalps.net
Wed Mar 23 15:07:47 PST 2005


KLAMATH WATER SUPPLY: 

Supes ask for Trinity water, once again - Eureka Times-Standard 



KLAMATH WATER SUPPLY: 

Supes ask for Trinity water, once again 

Eureka Times-Standard - 3/23/05 

By John Driscoll, staff writer 



As the Klamath River Basin edges ever closer to drought this year, the 
Humboldt County Board of Supervisors has repeated its request for cold, 
clean water from the river's largest tributary. 



In what has become an annual plea, supervisors Tuesday sent a letter to 
the U.S. Interior Department asking for 50,000 acre feet of Trinity 
River water that could be used to chill and raise the lower Klamath 
River during the fall salmon run. 



The county, supervisors wrote, is entitled to the water at no cost, and 
will make it available to the entire Klamath Basin for free, to help 
fish. 



"Time is of the essence if we are to protect the lower Klamath River on 
which so many of our citizens depend," the letter reads. 



The county was promised 50,000 acre feet each year -- 16.25 billion 
gallons -- in the 1955 act that authorized the damming and diversion of 
part of the Trinity River. 

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has said the water is under the purview 
of the State Water Resources Control Board; the Interior Department last 
year answered the county's request, but dodged the issue. 



In short, the county has had no luck. For now, that appears unlikely to 
change. 



"Our position has not changed," said Reclamation spokesman Jeff 
McCracken. 



But many -- including the National Research Council -- believe the water 
from the Trinity is the best ticket for holding off another fish kill, 
like that which claimed up to 68,000 salmon in the fall of 2002. 



Last year, the bureau bought 36,000 acre feet from farmers in the 
Central Valley -- beneficiaries of the Trinity project -- to send down 
the Trinity. 



Snowpack and rainfall in the basin are only about 40 percent of normal 
this year, and the bureau has asked its central Oregon-California border 
irrigation project contractors to plan to conserve water. At the same 
time, it's taking bids from farmers interested in fallowing land or 
pumping groundwater to produce 100,000 acre feet of water from the 
Klamath side for fish. 



A picture of how that program will be put together will be available at 
the end of March. # 

http://www.times-standard.com/Stories/0,1413,127~2896~2777785,00.html 
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