Latest CBB News | Archives | About Us | Links | Free Newsletter

 

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE WEEKLY E-MAIL NEWSLETTER 


CBB's Top Picks

Yakima Herald-Republic: Modernized irrigation system aims to help fish and farmers
A three-year, $16 million improvement project that starts next year to modernize a dilapidated and inefficient irrigation system will help farmers and yield benefits throughout the three-county irrigation project. 

Toronto Globe And Mail: Fund to save salmon shrinks with economy
$165-million endowment loses more than $35-million, could endanger projects in Canada and the U.S. 


Eureka Times-Standard: Trawl fishing sees overhaul 

Portland Tribune: Devil’s in the details?
To work, complexities of carbon cap, trade system must be ironed out 

The Tyee: Do Salmon Hatcheries Work? Millions of eggs plus so much human good will. Does it add up to more fish? 


Vancouver Sun: Pink salmon in sharp decline near Broughton fish farms
Numbers spawning in five key indicator streams down 90 per cent

 


Archive log-in

  


Latest CBB News > Free Newsletter
Draft EIS Considers Additional Water Allocations From Lake Roosevelt
Posted on Friday, May 16, 2008 (PST)

The Washington Department of Ecology has released a draft supplemental environmental impact statement that analyzes options for additional allocations of water currently stored behind Grand Coulee Dam.

The draft SEIS evaluates numerous policy choices for determining who will receive the additional water and the timing of releases of that water from Lake Roosevelt.

The additional water is being made available through Washington state's Columbia River Basin Water Management Program, authorized by the Legislature in 2006.

Ecology proposes releases that will increase stream flows in the Columbia River for fish, and provide water to the Odessa Subarea, and relief to irrigators whose waters may be interrupted during drought, as well as deliver new water to cities and farms.

"For the first time in many years we'll be able to issue new water rights from the Columbia River and do so in a way that balances both the environmental and economic needs of the region," said Derek Sandison, Ecology's central regional director in Yakima.

The draft SEIS looks at three scenarios for releasing the water based on time of year, demand, and to maximize fish flows. In addition, the document considers policy options for who receives the water.

Under consideration are the impacts associated with releasing up to 132,500 acre feet of water from Lake Roosevelt based on a 1938 water storage right now held by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.

According to the proposal, 82,500 acre-feet of water would be released from storage on an annual basis for the following purposes:

-- 30,000 acre-feet to replace groundwater now used to irrigate agriculture in the Odessa Subarea,

-- 27,500 acre-feet to enhance flows downstream of Grand Coulee Dam, and

-- 25,000 acre-feet for municipal and industrial use along the Columbia River.

In drought years, 50,000 acre-feet of water would be released as follows:

-- 33,000 acre-feet to support existing interruptible water right holders along the Columbia River mainstem, and

-- 17,000 acre-feet of storage water to enhance flows downstream of Grand Coulee Dam.

The draft SEIS for the proposed management program can be viewed online at: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wr/cwp/cr_lkroos.html


 

THIS MONTH'S MOST VIEWED CBB STORIES

 New Study: Salmon Smolt Survival Similar In Dammed Columbia, Undammed Fraser

 Climate, Streamflow Predictions For Winter 2008-2009? Hard To Say

Fed BiOp Filing: Comprehensive, Grounded In Science, Improves Status Quo, ESA Compliant 
 

Irrigators Release Documents Linking Hydro BiOp With Mainstem Harvest BiOp

Miniature Tagging, Tracking Opens Secrets: Where Do Fish Come From, Where Do They Go?

NOAA Says Nez Perce Gill-Net Fishing Must Mesh With BiOps, Harvest Agreements

Ninth Circuit Hears Arguments On NOAA's Wild/ Hatchery ESA Listings Policy

Salmon Spawning Above White Salmon’s Condit Dam First Time In 100 Years

Wave Energy Device Prototype Testing Off Oregon Coast Successful 

Dam Removal/Supplementation Aimed At Restoring Natural Spawners To Hood River 

 

 

The Columbia Basin Bulletin, 19464 Summerwalk Place, Bend, OR, 97702, (541)312-8860 fax: (541)388-0126 e-mail: info@cbbulletin.com Web System provided by Smart Solutions. Visit us on the web at www.smartz.com
Produced by Intermountain Communications  |  Site Map