The Times-Standard
Article Launched:
The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has backed away
from a proposal to take more water from the
Reclamation was considering a shift from a
normal year to a dry year, which would have stifled releases from Lewiston Dam
to the river. Water managers were looking to possibly adjust the seasonal
forecast used to craft the flows to reflect conditions in May, instead of the
April 1 date called for in the 2000 record of decision.
“It's what the record of decision calls for,”
said bureau spokesman Jeff McCracken.
Much of the state is headed for drought, and snowpack in the
Half of the
The Hoopa Valley Tribe
wrote in a May 6 letter to reclamation that such a move would be patently
illegal.
”There is no legal justification for such a
'transition' and the Hoopa Valley Tribe urges you to refrain from taking such a
damaging action,” wrote tribal counsel Tom Schlosser.
Schlosser also pointed
out that the addition of spawning gravel into the upper river is occurring now,
and requires high flows to move the material effectively.
Reclamation officials
met with members of the council that sets policy for the river this week, and
on Thursday informed the group that the issue was now settled.
http://www.times-standard.com/ci_9206662