Friday, April 15, 2022 CapitalPress.com 5 Water Idaho water offi cials forecast tight irrigation supplies By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press NOAA Oregon Drought Monitor Snowpack, precipitation decline across Oregon By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press PORTLAND — March is historically when moun- tain snowpacks reach their apex across Oregon, but not this year. Persistent dry weather and above-normal tem- peratures have led to more snowmelt and less precip- itation during the month, according to the USDA Natural Resources Con- servation Service, signifi - cantly hampering the state’s drought recovery. Every river basin is mea- suring below-average for precipitation compared to the 30-year median from 1991 to 2020. All but one basin is also below-aver- age for snow-water equiva- lent, with the Hood, Sandy and Lower Deschutes watershed being the lone exception. In its monthly Ore- gon Basin Outlook Report, the NRCS predicted that, due to multi-year impacts, extensive drought will per- sist through early summer. “With the historic peak for snowpack in Oregon passed and no meaning- ful drought reduction from the start of the water year, water users and manag- ers in many regions should prepare for signifi cantly reduced water supplies during the summer,” the report states. The worst conditions are in central and southern Ore- gon, where irrigators are receiving just a fraction of their usual water supplies. The Klamath, Lake County, Harney, Owyhee, Malheur and John Day basins each have less than 50% of median snow-water equivalent — the amount of water contained in snow. Conditions are slightly bet- ter farther north, though still largely below average. Snowpack peaked for most basins in cen- tral and southern Oregon in early January following a series of winter storms that dumped several feet of snow in the Cascade Range. However, rapid snow- melt began around mid- March and several snow- pack telemetry sites east of the Cascades have recorded either their lowest or sec- ond-lowest cumulative precipitation over the last 83 days, according to the NRCS. Overall precipitation for JEWETT the water year dating back to Oct. 1 ranges from 69% in the Malheur Basin in southeast Oregon to 98% in the Hood, Sandy and Lower Deschutes basins. The Willamette Basin, which accounts for 40% of Oregon’s $5.7 billion in agricultural products, is faring comparatively well with 91% of median precipitation and 78% snowpack. Northeast Oregon is a mixed bag, with the Uma- tilla, Walla Walla and Willow basins at 90% of median precipitation and 72% snowpack. Farther east, the Grande Ronde, Burnt, Powder and Imnaha basins are at 81% precipi- tation and 65% snowpack. The U.S. Drought Mon- itor shows nearly 93% of Oregon is in some stage of drought, including 15% in “exceptional” drought, the highest category. Gov. Kate Brown has declared a drought emergency in four counties, including Crook, Jeff erson, Klamath and Morrow counties, giving state agencies additional fl exibility managing water rights. Counties under a gov- ernor-declared drought emergency can also apply for state and federal disas- ter relief funding. Another three counties, includ- ing Gilliam, Harney and Jackson counties, have requested an emergency declaration. Drought aff ects both res- ervoir storage and stream- fl ows that farms, fi sh and wildlife depend on during the irrigation season. Multi- ple years of drought means there is little reservoir car- ryover from one year to the next, resulting in critically low levels. The NRCS reports the lowest reservoir volumes are in Southern Oregon, in some cases storing less than 25% of capacity. As of April 1, sum- mer streamfl ow forecasts are also “generally below median for much of the state, with few exceptions in the Mt. Hood area.” “With the end of the snow accumulation season approaching and the his- toric month for peak snow- pack over, the timing and rate of melting and runoff will be the dominant fac- tors in further shaping the outlook for summer stream- fl ow,” the agency states. The snowpack is two- thirds to three-quarters of normal across much of southern Idaho after a dry start to spring. Soils that drank in heavy fall precipitation have since dried, making it likely some snowmelt will be absorbed into the ground instead of running off into streams and rivers. Shawn Nield, state soil scientist with the USDA Natural Resources Conser- vation Service in Idaho, said the soil-moisture profi le “has not been satisfi ed with the dry spring. “The lack of precipita- tion this spring across the state is giving us conditions much drier than normal, and that’s going to be a little bit of a concern as we get started with irrigation,” he said. Snow accumulation after Jan. 8 fl atlined across many basins south of the Clearwa- ter until widespread storms arrived in early March, NRCS said in its April 1 Idaho Water Supply Outlook Report. But the snowy win- ter needed to make up for Mindi Rambo/NRCS Idaho USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Snow Sur- vey hydrologist Mark Robertson and hydrologist and wa- ter-supply specialist Erin Whorton at Mores Creek Sum- mit snow course northeast of Boise March 31. low carryover in reservoirs did not materialize. “Early April storms may lead to a second peak in snowpack this month,” Erin Whorton, NRCS Snow Sur- vey hydrologist and water supply specialist said in a release. Snowpack will have peaked earlier than normal if little precipitation falls. The NRCS report said that depending on upcom- ing weather, much of Idaho “is poised to enter another summer with below normal streamfl ow and concerns about adequate irrigation supply.” Water users should prepare for a short irrigation season and curtailments, NRCS said. Shortages can be expected in the Boise, Owyhee, Wood, Lost, Salmon Falls and Oak- ley basins, and in the upper Snake basin above Heise. State Department of Water Resources hydrologist David Hoekema said in an April 5 release that half the state is in severe drought, “and that per- centage will increase in com- ing months. We are predicting water shortages in every basin in southern Idaho, including the Payette.” He expects streamfl ow to be 20-70% of normal in the Snake, Big Lost, Big Wood, Little Wood, Salmon Falls, Payette and Weiser river basins. NRCS said water left in reservoirs after the last irri- gation season is below nor- mal in many locations, so it is unlikely reservoirs will fi ll if demand starts early and exceeds natural fl ow during runoff season. Expected reduced runoff refl ects low soil moisture and depleted shallow groundwater as well as potentially above-average summer temperatures. Storage in Magic Reser- voir on the Big Wood River is 43% of normal, and about 45 days of full water delivery is expected, NRCS said. Boise reservoir system storage is 86% of normal, and Owyhee Reservoir storage is 62%. Sustainability means water certainty, California dairy group leader says By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press With every geographic region in California coping with severe or extreme drought, water is top of mind for the state’s dairy farmers. Due to the lack of rain across the state in the last three years, every sin- gle dairy farmer is suff ering, said Anja Raudabaugh, executive director of Western United Dairies. Even California’s North Coast, which has been unscathed in previous droughts, is aff ected. And farmers there don’t even have access to groundwa- ter and won’t have water for their live- stock starting in May, she said during the latest “Dairy Download” podcast. “So this is a severe crisis. It, of course, has larger ramifi cations on the feed cost,” she said. Last year, WUD designated a new sustainability role beyond envi- ronmental and regulatory standards around air quality, water quality and methane reduction, she said. It became apparent to WUD “that we could not have any eff orts in sus- tainability if we didn’t have water and access to resources that would get us either paid for the loss of water or paid to access more expensive water transfers,” she said. WUD decided as an organization that sustainability meant water certainty and brought in a new director of sustain- ability to address the issues, she said. Anja “So essentially the Raudabaugh two things that we’re looking at are how do we fi nd drought resources for farmers to keep them in business during this hard time, which will hopefully off set some of their higher feed prices. And then the sec- ond thing we started to see we needed help with is something called land fl exation,” she said. Farmers are being forced to fallow ground with no payments and no con- sideration for the bank notes that are on those properties, she said. “We set out on a policy side to make sure that a farmer’s water rights were attached legally to his land own- ership and mineral rights,” she said. WUD was successful at establish- ing a statewide policy that ground- water throughout the Central Valley, which is the majority of the state’s milkshed, shall go for no less than $750 an acre-foot, she said. Under the Sustainable Groundwa- ter Management Act, the state will pay farmers in a designated critically overdraft basin for water saved — not pumped and kept in the ground for local communities, she said. That has been a huge eff ort WUD has lifted because farmers were being told to just fallow, and they weren’t being compensated for it, she said. The water issue in California is broader than the drought, she said. “The regulatory policy, which is to remove water rights from the system away from people that have had them for centuries, is very much in play,’ she said. But generally, the state’s water system was built to supply 21 mil- lion people and there are now 39 million people in the state. And over the last 20 years, courts have redi- rected about half of the water sup- ply toward environmental purposes, she said. In addition, irrigable acres have doubled over the last three decades due to demand and the state’s strate- gic position in the Pacifi c Rim. But that growth has come with no addi- tional water supply. There hasn’t been a new reservoir built in the state since 1969, she said. “So you add these things together … we don’t have enough water, ever,” she said. Best Prices on Irrigation Supplies CAMERON SEED WHOLESALE PRICES TO THE PUBLIC! GRASS SEED GRAIN SEED ANIMAL FEED CLOVER SEED We are your local North Valley seed dealer! Open Monday to Friday 7AM to 3:30PM 503-647-2293 WWW.JEWETTCAMERONSEED.COM 31345 NW Beach Rd. Hillsboro, OR. 97124 FLAT CARS- THE BETTER BRIDGE • Lower Cost • Custom Lengths up to 90' • Certified Engineering Services Available • Steel Construction Sprinklers • Rain Guns Drip Tape • Dripline • Filters • Poly Hose Lay Flat Hose • Micro • Valves • Air Vents Fertilizer Injectors ...and much more! Fast & Free Shipping from Oregon Contractor License # 71943 P.O Box 365 • 101 Industrial Way, Lebanon, OR 97355 Office: 541-451-1275 Email: info@rfc-nw.com www.rfc-nw.com S235809-1 1-844-259-0640 www.irrigationking.com 10% OFF PROMO CODE: CAP10 S280808-1