More than 6,000 fall-run Chinook salmon have returned to the Klamath River and tributaries above the former Iron Gate Dam site since dam removal was completed this October, according to preliminary SONAR camera data released by conservation organization California Trout. Read More.
The future is the quintessential “Silent Majority” who has no voice and isn’t here to stand up for itself. Who among us will stand up for the future and stand with water?
We appreciate everyone who showed up for this eye-opening event on Sat. Oct. 26th. Thank you to our speaker, Christopher Hall of The Water League!
By Cassandra Profita Video captures four Klamath River dam sites before and after a $500 million removal operation.
The largest dam removal project in U.S. history was completed Oct. 2 on the Klamath River in Southern Oregon and Northern California. Four dams were taken out, allowing adult salmon to swim all the way up the Klamath River from the Pacific Ocean and into more than 400 miles of newly reopened habitat.
Thank you to everyone who came out on a Saturday for this special event. We had lots of great questions and conversations. A big thank you to those on our panel and to our supporters for attending!
By Alex Baumhardt (Oregon Capitol Chronicle) / Sept. 19, 2023 11:08 a.m
About one-third of forests across 80 drinking watersheds serving coastal cities have been cut during the last 20 years, NASA found
Oregon’s coastal communities that rely on drinking water from forested rivers and creeks have lost substantial tree cover during the last 20 years, a recent NASA analysis found. That’s bad news for residents and the environment. Read article Here.
By Soumya Karlamangla / Photograph by Loren Elliott Aug. 27, 2024
The Klamath River was once so flush with fish that local tribes ate salmon at every meal. The nation’s largest dam removal project is nearly complete after a lengthy campaign by Native tribes to restore the river at the California-Oregon border. Read the article Here.
The 133-year-old Winchester Dam, which essentially provides a private lake for 100 “influential” people near Roseburg, has a history of environmental violations. “The folks that own the dam are extremely anti-regulatory, very wealthy and influential, and they’ve been able to mysteriously repair a 450-foot wide, 17-foot tall dam on a major river in the state of Oregon for years and years and years using amateur repair methods and without permits,” said McCarthy. Read the article Here!
The 133-year-old Winchester Dam near Roseburg underwent repairs from August to early September. (Kirk Blaine/Native Fish Society)
Jim McCarthy, Southern Oregon Program Director at WaterWatch of Oregon, joins the Jefferson Exchange to discuss the controversy over incomplete repairs of the 134-year-old Winchester Dam and the growing movement to remove it altogether. By Mike Green, Natalie Golay
Jefferson Public Radio | By Erik Neumann Published August 11, 2023 at 3:37 PM PDT
“We are definitely concerned about the juvenile Pacific lamprey in the substrates upstream of the reservoir. We are assisting with an emergency salvage,” said Michelle Dennehy, a spokesperson with ODFW. Read the article Here!
A juvenile Pacific lamprey stranded in the mud in Winchester Reservoir. (Bob Hoehne, courtesy of Native Fish Society)