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©
2002 |
SCID
hopes to pipe ditch
Several property owners have
petitioned the Squaw Creek Irrigation District to form a "subdistrict" for
the purpose of piping the Fryrear irrigation ditch to prevent water loss.
In a split decision, the three-member
SCID board voted to approve formation of the subdistrict at its January
15 annual meeting. Lee Christensen and Glenn Cooper voted in favor. David
Keith was opposed.
Keith wanted to get water
users who opposed piping the ditch "to the table to talk about it" before
forming the district.
Christensen and Cooper said
that concerns about the piping project would be discussed at a hearing
to be held February 6 at 5:30 p.m.
Notification of the public
hearing went out to 11 affected landowners on January 16, according to
SCID General Manager Marc Thalacker.
The piping project is expected
to cost about $275,000, according to the 2002 reimbursement budget.
The goal is to pipe four miles
of the Fryrear ditch and save approximately 3 cubic feet of water per
second, according to Thalacker.
Water rights on the Fryrear
ditch total about 9.5 cfs, and water loss is estimated to be about 55
percent on average, Thalacker said.
Of the 3 cfs saved by piping,
1.5 cfs would go back to Squaw Creek and 1.5 cfs would be available to
users in SCID, according to Thalacker.
To pay for the project, Thalacker
said SCID will receive $125,000 from Deschutes Resource Conservancy, $120,000
from the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board, and $25,000 National Fish
and Wildlife Foundation.
A subdistrict may be formed
if owners of more than half the properties request it.
There are 10 water users on
the ditch, according to Thalacker, with 474.6 acre-feet of water right.
Those served by the Fryrear
ditch requesting the subdistrict include Eric Vetterline of Desert Springs
Ranch with 162.5 acre-feet of water right, Larry Sharpf of the Black Diamond
Ranch with 114.1 acre-feet, Gene and Julie Kolbe with 15 acre-feet and
Janet Herring with 65 acre-feet.
Gene Kolbe said at the annual
meeting that the goal of forming a subdistrict is to expedite piping the
ditch and saving water.
Those who have signed the
agreement to pipe the ditch also include Denny McCarthy, owner of the
KOA with 10 acre-feet, SCID board member David Keith with 16.5 acre-feet,
and James and Barbara Kimberly with 12 acre-feet.
Opposing the project are Dan
and Patty Little with 25 acre-feet, Jerry and Nancy Buell with 14 acre-feet,
and David Abbajay with 40.5 acre-feet, according to Thalacker.
The Fryrear ditch carries
water along Highway 20 east, crossing the highway for the last time to
the north near Cloverdale Road.
Patty Little said she and
her husband Dan decided not to sign the piping agreement on the counsel
of advisors who cautioned them that there were "too many things in the
agreement undisclosed to us."
As an example, she cited a
clause that appeared to make it Fryrear user's financial responsibility
if the project hit rock.
Little also said the Fryrear
ditch had created an environment over the last 100 years, and that putting
the water in a pipe would "change that environment" with a negative impact
on trees and deer.
There will be an unofficial
meeting on Tuesday, January 29 at 7 p.m. with individuals concerned about
the project, prior to the February 6 public hearing.
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