HighCountryCommando
Active member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2018
- Messages
- 107
The water rights issues is largely just a red herring opposition folks use to push back in the media with. Lower Granite, Little Goose Dam, Lower Monumental Dam, and Ice Harbor Dam are the dams on the chopping block. Of the four, only Ice Harbor provides any irrigation benefit, to the tune of about 47,000 acres irrigated. The Army Corps defines the irrigation at Ice Harbor as "incidental irrigation." In context, eastern WA has about 5 million acres of irrigated land use. Irrigation districts largely get their water from pumps and diversion dams on the main-stem tributaries to the Snake and Columbia (think the Yakima and Clearwater Rivers and their smaller tributaries) or from direct pumping from the Snake and Columbia, not from the Army Corps. The vast majority of these tributary dams have excellent to decent fish passage facilities. The four Snake dams were never built to store water, they are not storage dams. Technically they are called run-of-river dams built specifically for recreation, navigation, hydroelectric generation, and flood control. This is really a cost/benefit issue. Billions of dollars are being spent to maintain four dams that never delivered on their intended economic impact and for the most part are money pits. The cost of maintenance goes up every year. Add to that the fact that 15 billion has been spent on trying to recover Snake salmon and steelhead via restoration (improving aquatic habitat) without any appreciable affect. Throwing more money at the dams and chasing your tail trying to improve the degraded habitat (which is largely caused by the dams) seems counter productive at the least, and asinine at the worst. Maybe a few decades ago there was a good rational for leaving them in, but its become hard to make a rational case for leaving them in and its only getting harder. If the removal writing is on the wall...just put the dams out of their misery and at least save the public some money in the long run.
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