Friday, May 21, 2021 CapitalPress.com 5 Fighting to stay alive “I think everybody is just trying to fi nd their way through this the best they can,” Seus said. “This is an extreme situation. We’re making tough decisions where we need to make them.” Zero water allocation pushes Klamath Project farms to brink By GEORGE PLAVEN AND HOLLY DILLEMUTH Capital Press KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. — What was already forecasted to be a histori- cally bleak water year in the Klamath Project has quickly become a living night- mare for farms and ranches fi ghting for survival in the drought-stricken basin. The U.S. Bureau of Rec- lamation shut down the Project’s A Canal for the entire irrigation season May 12 in response to worsening conditions — allotting zero surface water from Upper Klamath Lake for thirsty crops and livestock. It is the fi rst time in more than a century the A Canal will deliver no water. Mean- while, irrigators are left to wonder how they will pay the bills as fi elds turn to dust. “We know what a zero allocation is going to mean to our indi- vidual farms and the com- munity as a whole,” said Ben DuVal, who grows alfalfa hay Ben DuVal and raises registered Black Angus cattle near Tulelake, Calif. “It’s going to mean a lot of farms go out of business.” DuVal, who is also pres- ident of the Klamath Water Users Association, said he has already had that diffi cult conversation around his own kitchen table. “I don’t think there are any of us who are insulated from this,” he said. “Every- body is going to feel the eff ects, even businesses on Main Street.” A Canal shut down The Klamath Project encompasses roughly 315 square miles of farmland straddling Southern Ore- gon and Northern Califor- nia. The market value of agricultural products sold in Klamath, Modoc and Siski- you counties totaled nearly a half-billion dollars in 2017, according to the latest USDA Census of Agriculture. Under the Endangered Species Act, the Bureau of Reclamation is required to operate the Project so that it will not threaten the survival of endangered fi sh, includ- ing suckers in Upper Klam- ath Lake and coho salmon in the lower Klamath River. Lost River and short- nose suckers are central to the culture and iden- tity of the Klamath Tribes, while salmon are revered by tribes and anglers alike downstream. With the region suff ering through extreme drought, Reclamation says there is not anywhere near enough water to satisfy its ESA obli- gations. The agency initially allocated 33,000 acre-feet of water to the Project in April, less than 8% of nor- mal demand. By May, the situation had only grown more dire. Rec- lamation took the dramatic step of nixing water for the A Canal, leaving the majority of the Project high and dry. Paul Simmons, execu- tive director of the KWUA, which represents 1,200 fam- ily farms and ranches in the basin, said 2021 will be an “extraordinarily awful” year for local agriculture. Looking ahead into the summer, Simmons said he expects domestic wells will dry up due to a lack of recharge in the A Canal sys- tem. Dust storms will be an issue from blowing top- soil in barren fi elds, and farms will be lost — some of which normally employ 100-200 people seasonally. “Many of those jobs are going to be nonexistent or Supplemental water right Holly Dillemuth/For the Capital Press Midland cattle rancher and Klamath Drainage District board member Luther Horsley is preparing for a devastating summer in the Klamath Basin. George Plaven/Capital Press Holly Dillemuth/For the Capital Press Scott Seus, owner of Seus Family Farms in Tulelake, Ca- lif. Paul Crawford looks over his farm near Malin, Ore., in the Klamath Basin in this fi le photo. lost,” Simmons said. “The businesses that provide agri- culture with tractors and seed have lost revenue. All of those people do business with retail business in all these little towns, so it just echoes all the way through.” left dry. “I’m going to feel pretty accomplished if I’m still in business in 2022,” Craw- ford said. “As a small fam- ily farm, we have fairly tight margins to begin with ... Now I’m going to produce 40% of what I’ve already invested in.” Crawford said he typi- cally spends up to 80% of his annual expenses before cutting his fi rst hay crop in June, months before he will see any return on investment. “We’ll know at the end of the season, depending on the yields and price, but we’re defi nitely not going to be able to cover all the bills,” he said. Buyer’s market for cattle Luther and Candy Hors- ley inherited their cattle operation in Midland, Ore., from Luther’s dad. They have been through their fair share of bad droughts and worst-case water scenarios, including 2001 when water was shut off , but nothing like this year. The herd has been down- sized over the years. This year, they are down to 57 cows and will have to sell more than half of them because of the drought conditions. Having to sell off many of their cows is both an eco- nomic and emotional loss for the couple. Farming runs in Luther’s blood. “In 2001, we sold them incrementally and we’ll do that again this year,” he said. “A cow’s not a complex being. I mean, she wants to eat, drink and raise her baby. If we can’t provide that for her, you’ve got to let some- body else do it.” Luther said it’s a buyer’s market in the cattle industry, because so many herds are being liquidated. He antic- ipates having to sell in the next couple of months. “If we make it a month, I’ll be pretty happy,” he said. In order to have a more positive future for farm- ing in the Klamath Basin, Luther said growers need certainty when it comes to irrigation water. Stakehold- ers had signed the Klamath Basin Restoration Agree- ment in 2010 to settle water rights and usage, though Congress failed to pass leg- islation enacting the agree- ment by the Jan. 1, 2016 deadline. “What the community needs is some kind of bal- ance,” Luther said. “Law- suits are fl ying ... We need to get out of that and try and fi nd some solution, because I don’t think you really win in courts too much.” Making tough decisions Paul Crawford, who grows alfalfa, orchard grass and small grains near Malin, Ore., said he is farming just 40% of his normal acre- age this year, focusing on ground that he can irrigate with wells. The rest, which was already planted in hay and winter wheat, will be Scott Seus, of Seus Fam- ily Farms in Tulelake, said he is working with his neigh- bors to stretch every drop of groundwater they can. PVC pipe is in short sup- ply around the basin as farm- ers buy up what they can to deliver water from wells to fi elds with higher-value crops like garlic, mint and onions. Onion planting is now underway, with fewer acres available to farm, Seus said. Processors buy onions in the Klamath Basin which they dehydrate to use in things such as soup mixes, ketchup and salad dressing. Farmers risk losing those contracts if they can’t deliver. VT 100 SERIES GII VERTICAL MAXX ® Only the Klamath Drain- age District has received any water from the Klamath River system in 2021, exer- cising a supplemental water right with the state dating back to 1977. Two other irri- gation districts, the Langell Valley and Horsefl y districts, are also part of the Klamath Project, but rely exclusively on water from the Lost River system. Scott White, KDD man- ager, said the district is diverting 42 cubic feet of water per second — 8% of its permitted rate — into the North Canal, south of Klam- ath Falls. The diversions, which began in April, drew a sharp rebuke from the Bureau of Reclamation, which ordered the district to immediately stop or be exempt from fed- eral emergency drought funding. White has asserted the district is doing nothing wrong. “Whenever Project water is curtailed, we exercise this permit,” he said. “This is no diff erent than any other drought year.” In its announcement shut- ting down the A Canal, the bureau cited both drought and “unauthorized diversions at private facilities along the Klamath River and Upper Klamath Lake,” though it did not call out KDD by name. A spokeswoman for the agency did not return messages for comment. “We can only assume that they acknowledge our rights as being legal,” White said. “We have certainly asserted that our (diversions) are not illegal.” KDD’s supplemental water right applies to just under 20,000 acres of private land within the district. DuVal, with the Klamath Water Users Association, said that while he does not necessarily like it, he does not blame KDD for taking advantage of supple- mental water. “I don’t think there’s any resentment in the commu- nity for them trying to sur- vive,” he said. The bigger fear, DuVal said, is outsider and extrem- ist groups coming into the community and using the Klamath Project’s crisis as a soapbox for their own agenda. “We don’t need that,” he said. “It’s the people in this community who live and farm here whose voices need to be heard.” Twin-Auger Mixers 320 - 1,10 0 cu. ft. mixing capacities truck, trailer and stationary models • FAST , COMPLETE MIXING AND PROCESSING Advanced auger design for superior Efficient mixing chamber feed movement and auger clean off promotes a fast, complete mix California Oregon Papé Machinery Fall River Mills Fortuna INVEST IN QUALITY Rugged front and side conveyors Front, side and rear discharge KuhnNorthAmerica.com for reliable service and long life options offer maximum versatility Papé Machinery Cornelius, Madras, Merrill, Tangent ® Boyd’s Implement Tillamook Washington Farmer’s Equipment Burlington Lynden Papé Machinery Chehalis, Lynden, Mount Vernon, Quincy, Sumner, Yakima Central Machinery Sales Pasco Sunnyside Visit your local KUHN Livestock dealer today! www.kuhn.com S228093-1