NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Wednesday, July 10, 2019 Yakima Basin irrigation water woes continue Prosser Dam into Chandler Canal, and 11 miles down- stream. The Chandler Power and Pumping Plant pumps the water up to the district’s main canal to serve its customers. Hydraulic pumps at Chan- dler use 1.25 gallons of water for every gallon they pump to the main canal, said Jason McShane, KID engineering and operations manager. A proposed $23 million project to electrify pumping would double the water going to the district in water-short years, he said. Such water may be made available to KID only to replace reductions caused by conservation. The KID and bureau managers don’t agree on how to quantify the amount, according to a May 16 letter from Stuart to Freeman. The KID serves 65,000 Kennewick and Richland res- idents and 20,200 acres, of which about 11,000 acres are in orchards, vineyards and some blueberries, hay, pasture and row crops. The district has rights to 102,674 acre-feet of water annually from the Yakima River and uses about 87,000 acre-feet, McShane said. As the last major irriga- tion district downriver on the 214-mile system, the KID uses water returned to the river from operational spills and seepage from other irrigation districts upriver. Increased conservation by By DAN WHEAT Capital Press KENNEWICK, Wash. — Mismanagement of Yakima Basin water conservation by the U.S. Bureau of Reclama- tion is threatening the supply of water to the Kennewick Irri- gation District, the district’s managers say. “The threat to our water supply is coming from a lack of leadership at the bureau. We’re not contesting conser- vation. We do it, too. We con- test how the bureau manages the conserved water,” Charles Freeman, KID manager, told Capital Press. While not directly respond- ing to the allegations of “mis- management” and “lack of leadership,” Chad Stuart, man- ager of the bureau’s Yakima office, issued a statement say- ing KID is a “valuable part- ner” in the Yakima Basin. The bureau is aware of KID’s water supply challenges and will continue regular meetings with KID to address them, Stuart said. “Electrification (of the Chandler pumping plant) is one of many options that has been discussed to replace any reductions to KID’s water sup- ply” resulting from conserva- tion authorized in the Yakima Basin Integrated Water Resource Management Plan, Stuart said. The KID diverts water from the Yakima River at the Capital Press Photo/Dan Wheat, File The Yakima River flows through Prosser, Wash., to the top of Pross- er Dam, where diversion for Kennewick Irrigation District starts. those districts in recent years has reduced return-flow water for the KID, causing it to call for direct releases of mountain reservoir storage water for the first time this year. Direct releases are not a sustainable solution because they take water away from upriver districts and are not sufficient in severe drought, McShane said. Less return-flow was antic- ipated and planned for in the 1994 enabling legislation of the Yakima Basin Integrated Water Resource Management Plan, McShane said. “We supported that legis- lation because it obligates the Secretary of the Interior to replace water loss for the dis- trict,” he said. The law gives the secretary options to do that. The one KID has pushed for is electri- fication of the Chandler pump- ing plant. Another option, called subordination, is reduc- THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY Widening of shoulders completed in June Partly sunny Partly sunny Partly sunny Mostly sunny Partly sunny and pleasant By DICK MASON EO Media Group PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 86° 61° 85° 61° 91° 61° 90° 63° 85° 60° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 90° 66° 91° 67° 95° 66° 94° 65° OREGON FORECAST 89° 64° ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 68/61 77/56 85/55 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 85/64 Lewiston 73/61 91/67 Astoria 69/60 Pullman Yakima 88/61 71/58 85/64 Portland Hermiston 76/64 The Dalles 91/67 Salem Corvallis 75/59 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 82/57 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 80/60 81/52 86/57 Ontario 95/68 Caldwell Burns 88° 54° 88° 58° 106° (1968) 42° (1935) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 76/60 0.00" Trace 0.06" 4.55" 5.10" 5.76" WINDS (in mph) 93/64 87/52 0.00" 0.02" 0.09" 9.59" 6.49" 7.66" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 79/53 76/61 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 85/61 82/63 86° 52° 87° 58° 110° (1919) 42° (2011) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 73/60 Aberdeen 79/60 80/61 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 73/61 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 87/59 Thu. WSW 6-12 WNW 6-12 WSW 6-12 W 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 83/47 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 5:16 a.m. 8:45 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 1:13 a.m. Full Last New First July 16 July 24 July 31 Aug 7 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 108° in Zapata, Texas Low 24° in Truckee, Calif. and August we get less than everyone else because the water is not there,” Freeman said. Some say KID is misinter- preting the 1994 legislation but its “plain language” protects the KID, he said. “We need the federal gov- ernment to provide leader- ship and resolve these issues. In our opinion the bureau is more concerned with the pol- itics of the basin than what the law requires. Our contract and the law is clear,” Freeman said. The Roza Irrigation Dis- trict in Sunnyside and Kittitas Reclamation District in Ellens- burg are two members of the joint board and the junior water right districts most affected in water shortage years. The Roza has spent $10 million since 2015 piping open canals and lining and sealing canals to conserve water. “The KID has taken a more bellicose approach lately. They filed an appeal on the environ- mental permitting of our pipe project last year and we have ongoing litigation on that,” said Scott Revell, manager of the Roza Irrigation District. “It’s unhelpful to working together.” Urban Eberhart, Kittitas Reclamation manager, said he’s optimistic the bureau, KID and state Department of Ecology can work things out through the integrated man- agement plan. Progress made at Ladd Canyon Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY ing the 12,000-kilowatt power production at Chandler to save water, and the bureau already is doing that, according to Stu- art’s letter. Even with electrification of the pumps, the bureau and some of its other constituents are concerned about having enough water in the remaining portion of the river from Ben- ton City downriver for fish, McShane said. “It’s a timing issue,” he said. “There are fewer con- cerns during certain times of the year when fewer fish are present.” KID raised its issues with the bureau in 2014 and it has taken the bureau four years to acknowledge it has an obliga- tion to do something, McShane said. There’s been a lack of lead- ership at the bureau from the local to national level, but Brenda Burman, bureau commissioner, has visited the Chandler pump station and the bureau finally is acknowledg- ing the Secretary of the Inte- rior’s obligation to do some- thing, McShane said. “Our customers have a right to federal water and the federal government has to meet that obligation,” he said. Two Sunnyside Valley Irri- gation District conservation projects and one Roza Irriga- tion District project have saved approximately 39,200 acre- feet of return flow from reach- ing the KID, Freeman said, adding he doesn’t know how much has been saved by other projects. Last October, the KID withdrew from the Yakima Basin Joint Board, a group of irrigation districts that dis- cusses basin water policy. “The board has moved away from a collaborative approach to a more paro- chial one, which often works against the lower river basin and KID’s interests,” Freeman wrote to the board. Some board members didn’t support Chandler pump electrification, saying it might harm fish, Freeman wrote. Some also said loss of KID water is justified because KID receives more water than other districts during pro-rationing in drought and because a large amount of KID water goes to residences instead of agricul- ture, he wrote. “It’s true the KID receives more on average but in July NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY LA GRANDE — Life in the fast lane is becom- ing safer for those driving between La Grande and Ladd Canyon on Interstate 84. The shoulders of the westbound and eastbound fast lanes of the 10-mile La Grande-to-Ladd Canyon stretch of I-84 have been widened by 3 feet as part of the first phase of the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation’s $30 million Ladd Canyon Freight Improve- ment Project. The widening of the shoulders, completed in June, is part of a project in which crews will also add a 1.5-mile eastbound third lane to the Ladd Can- yon entrance and replace a bridge. The expansion of the shoulders, which are now 7 feet wide, provides more space for drivers to pull over during emer- gencies, said Mike Rem- ily of ODOT, manager of the Ladd Canyon Freight Improvement Project. Rem- ily also said the expanded shoulders will be a big help when ODOT has to close the slow lanes to do main- tenance work. All slow- lane traffic will be diverted to the fast lanes, where the additional space will be make things less hazardous for drivers as well as main- tenance workers. “(The expanded shoul- ders) will make it safer for everyone,” Remily said. Other I-84 work that has also been completed as part of the project includes repaving Exit 265, about 5 miles west of Ladd Canyon. Remily said the Exit 265 roadway was badly in need of repair. “It was cracked and rut- ted,” he said. Although the Ladd Can- yon Freight Improvement Project was hindered by wet weather this spring, its con- tractor, Knife River Con- struction of Boise, Idaho, remains right on schedule. Regardless, Remily said he is looking forward to the drier weather Northeast Oregon is expected to have in July and August. “Everything always moves faster in construc- tion when conditions are dry,” Remily said. All of the project’s remaining work is being done over a 2-mile stretch around the entry into Ladd Canyon. The speed limit in the zone is 50 miles per hour 24 hours a day and will remain so until the Phase 1 work is completed in late October. Remily said not all drivers are obeying the limit. “A number of (work zone traffic) citations have been issued (by law enforcement officers),” Remily said. Since early April, every- one in the Ladd Canyon area, including those who have cabins, have not been able to leave via I-84 on weekdays between 7 a.m. and noon and between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. because of bridge removal work crews are doing. No restric- tions for leaving Ladd Can- yon via I-84 will be in place this week because work crews will be in a differ- ent area. The restricted weekday schedule will take effect again July 15. The bridge being removed is one in an east- bound lane. It will be replaced by a concrete box- like structure that will be large enough to accom- modate log trucks and semitrucks, Remily said. “It will feel like you are driving under a tunnel,” he said. The bridge is being replaced because it tends to get icy and has long posed a problem in freezing weather, the ODOT official said. About half of the bridge has been removed and the rest will be taken out by the end of September. The con- crete box is being installed as the bridge is being taken out and should be in by October. ODOT will resume its Ladd Canyon project in April 2020. The work done will include the addition of a 1.5-mile third lane on I-84 from milepost 269.5 to milepost 271. The new lane will be meant for trucks. The expanded space should reduce the number of acci- dents by spreading out traffic. The number of times Ladd Canyon has to be closed due to trucks block- ing lanes will also decrease, Remily said. He explained that if a truck crashes in the future, there will be enough room for traffic to move around it while it is being cleared. Truck drivers will be allowed to use only the inner and the middle lanes while automobile drivers will be permitted to drive in all three. The three-lane stretch, Remily said, will be similar to an eastbound one on I-84 just east of Pendleton. The entire Ladd Canyon Freight Improvement Proj- ect is expected to be com- pleted by October of 2020, Remily said. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s 50s ice 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. 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