White House
official brings encouragement to the Klamath
Basin,
4/25/03, KBC News
David Anderson, a key player in
President Bush's Klamath Basin Federal Working
Group, was the featured speaker at the 49th
Annual Meeting of KWUA at the Oregon Institute
of Technology on April 24th. "This
President is so aware if the importance of
agriculture...... President Bush often
asks about your well being."
These were some of the
encouraging statements brought to the Klamath
Basin, attended by over 250 people.
Anderson is the Associate Director of
Agriculture and Public Lands Issues for the
White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ).
He is the CEQ Chairman's designated lead on
Healthy Forest Initiative, and the Klamath
Basin Federal Working Group. Anderson
provided an overview of the Klamath Basin
actions undertaken by the Administration in the
past year.
Anderson stated that, as
we have seen, President Bush is a 'doer'. Since
the Federal Working Group's formation, they
immediately began identifying sources of benefit
to the endangered fish. A multimillion
dollar fish screen was built, "on time", with
the efforts of the Bureau of Reclamation, with
the participation of KWUA. "What has
been working for this President? A Congressional
delegation, committment and forsight."
The Dept. of the Interior, Dept.
of Ag, and several agencies attend all the
meetings, "It is the most challenging and
rewarding thing I have ever worked on." They are
very determined and organized, focusing on what
each agency can bring to the table. "If
we don't integrate with private efforts, we
won't succeed.....and we need both states to
work together." "We assure you that decisions
will be based on sound science." This was
refreshing to hear from the locals, since much
of the media and environmental news propagate
untrue 'news' about the Klamath Basin, and
invent 'science' to accomplish their goals. In
response to a question he stated, "A
judge agreed that the Trinity is an important
component"...to the water solutions in the
Klamath watershed.
The meeting was opened by Claud
Hagerty, Malin farmer and preacher, praying for
the Bush administration, honesty and sound
science.
Bill Kennedy, KWUA board member,
was the Master of Ceremonies. Bob Gasser
and Rob Crawford presented awards to John Walker
and Tim Fought of the Herald and News for their
great job in presenting impartial news reports
to the public.
Anders Tomlinson was presented a
special award by Deb Crisp, executive director
of the Tulelake Growers Association, for his
endless efforts in documenting the Klamath water
situation. Throughout the evening he
presented documentation of the huge salmon run
on the Klamath River in 2002. He
interviewed fishermen and fishery workers
exclaiming what a huge run of salmon there were
last summer, and showed the overcrowded fish.
The fish are so plentiful that the limits of
fish to be taken are increased for 2003. He
provided a video and a slide show,
validating the true details of the 2002 fish die
off, and also the current water situation and
effects of the 2001 water cut-off.
Troy Tidwell, Washington D.C,
gave an update, as did Paul Simmons, KWUA
attorney. Simmons updated us on the many
lawsuits against the irrigators by environmental
groups. We are being sued for irrigating
our crops, using water that the Tribes feel is
all theirs to 'hunt and gather' from, for
spraying weeds so water can flow down ditches
and crops can grow in fields. In the
Tribes litigation, what began as a right for
them to 'hunt and gather' to maintain a 'modest
standard of living', has become, if anyone else
needs water, they have to prove that the tribes
don't need that water. (In the
situation of Tulelake, it was a closed
basin--the water never left the basin before the
diversion. Last summer it was demanded by the
DOI that TID pump their untested aquifer to go
down the river for "tribal trust" which resulted
in some wells going dry. The alternative was
possible getting the irrigation water shut off.)
KWUA president Dave Solem
addressed the audience, describing the positive
efforts the irrigators and BOR have taken to
improve the fish situation. Thousands of acre
feet of water have been taken from the
irrigators already in 2003 in the form of a
water bank, there is presently a lot of water
available, hundreds of conservation projects
have been accomplished by irrigators, and a fish
screen was just constructed. Yet the PCFFA
and other environmental groups are suing the
irrigators, trying to cripple agriculture, "They
need to channel their efforts to help find
solutions, rather than fighting the irrigators."
"We irrigators support the fishermen".
The NRC chairman Bill Lewis stated that
Cooperman and Markle of OSU have shown that
their main purpose is to devalue the NAS
committee, because the committee recognizes that
water levels are not amongst the factors that
will save the fish. Then we have Congressman
Thompson dumping dead fish on the steps of the
capital, blaming the Klamath Project for fish
that died 200 miles away by the Trinity
Diversion.
Dan Keppen, KWUA executive
director, showed facts of the 2002 fish die off.
He presented facts of the fatal water
temperature of the Klamath River at the time,
and science of David Vogel, fisheries scientist
of 28 years. His documented facts made it
clear that the Klamath Project, providing 2 % of
the watershed in the Klamath River, could not
have been responsible for a fish die off by the
ocean. The fact that Trinity Water, which
is cold water, diverts up to 90% of the water
near where the die-off occurred, was completely
overlooked by California Dept. of Fish and Game.
Keppen explained the history of
the project, with Tomlinson's photo slide show,
allowing the audience to see the reality. It
showed where the river would historically dry up
on low water years before the dams. It
showed Tulelake, which historically did not flow
down the Klamath River. Keppen described
numerous conservation accomplishments by
irrigators in the basin, and slides showed the
bountiful fields of produce and wildlife, which
coexist together.
Earl Donosky, TID manager,
closed the meeting.
Dena Keppen and Deb Crisp
provided coffee and cookies. Videos were
available to buy in the lobby of 'Homesteading
in a Promised Land' video. Over 80
residents in the Tulelake basin, with the
filmmaker Anders Tomlinson, tell the story of
the settling of Tulelake, from when the lake
filled the basin, up til 2002. The
settlers tell their story.
The audience was filled with
hope, prayer, and encouragement that honesty and
sound science will lead our administration and
courts in deciding the fate of the Klamath
Basin. Thousands of people, farms and ranches,
businesses, refuges and our rural economy
are at stake.