The meeting attracted ranchers, tribal members and environmental groups, all concerned about access to water during the third year of a punishing drought in the state.
鈥淲e鈥檝e officially been experiencing drought conditions for a year now and, unfortunately, there doesn鈥檛 appear to be any relief in sight,鈥 said Ann Marie Ore with the California State Water Resources Control Board.
Governor Gavin Newsom proclaimed a drought emergency for Siskiyou County in May, 2021. Current precipitation levels range from 40-60% of normal throughout the Klamath Basin and the Scott and Shasta River watersheds are 鈥渆xperiencing one of the most severe droughts on record,鈥 according to the agency presentation.
In response, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife is to protect salmon, steelhead and other native fish.
The Shasta and Scott rivers are home to federally and state-listed threatened Southern Oregon and Northern California Coho salmon, as well as Chinook salmon and steelhead.
While the plight of California鈥檚 native fish species often focuses on the larger Klamath and Sacramento rivers, these small Northern California tributaries where fish spawn are equally important to their survival.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife Program Manager Joe Croteau said just 53 adult Coho salmon returned to the Shasta River last year.
鈥淲hen you look at these numbers and how low they are, we think we are flirting with a Coho salmon extinction in the Shasta River if we don鈥檛 take care of them in these drought years,鈥 Croteau said.
Renewing the drought emergency regulations would maintain minimum water levels to help fish survive another critically dry water year, extend prohibitions on inefficient livestock watering, and require irrigators to coordinate with local watermasters to manage drought emergency flows.
The proposal drew criticism from agricultural interests, including Theodora Johnson, who spoke on behalf of farmers and ranchers with the Scott Valley Agriculture Water Alliance.
鈥淲e鈥檙e really talking about the end of our business and our way of life if we can鈥檛 change these regulations,鈥 Johnson said.
Meanwhile, Yurok Tribal Chairman Frankie Myers focused on the importance of maintaining stream flows in these farthest reaches of Coho salmon habitat.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 engage here, in these tributaries, the key portions of what we need for the overall health and well-being of the Basin as a whole doesn鈥檛 work. It all has to come together,鈥 Myers said.
The board will create draft regulation over the next month and release proposed rules during the week of June 6, 2022.