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The Illinois Leader  http://www.illinoisleader.com/letters/lettersview.asp?c=6380

Klamath Basin homeowner reports sucker fish nightmare

Monday, June 16, 2003

I am responding to the invitation to comment on Joyce Morrison's June 10 column, "This land was our land."

How do we ever awaken the people about the upcoming doom if this path does not end? I live in the Klamath Basin, and my family was given a homestead to farm after WWII to provide food for America.

The pioneers in the past 100 years built our community from scratch, as it was an old lake bed. Now these elderly veterans have been "treated worse than traitors, because traitors are taken to court." These were the words of an 80 year-old WWII veteran, who spent his late teen years defending our country, then the rest of his life growing food for our nation.

And the excuse to decimate our community was the Endangered Species Act. They do not know how many endangered sucker fish there were, there are, or how many they want to have, but they are "listed."

So they take the water from the farmers and raise the lake level... while the only fish kills of suckers were on HIGH water years.

Yes, we in the Klamath Basin are living this nightmare, seeing the invasion of communism and control. And yet everyone still has a flag waving. There have been suicides, divorces, auctions, and major emotional and physical ailments, and the tens of thousands of sucker fish go their own way, happy as when the water was lower, having no clue why all this water was dumped on them.

Now the government is forcing us to pump out our untested aquifer, as domestic wells are going dry, yet allowing a huge power company to come in and pump out billions of gallons of water, given preference for a permit above farmers wanting to water their crops. They have forced us to retire land from farming. They have taken water that we stored... every penny of the storage paid for by the farmers, and sent it down the river where there have been record runs of fish salmon and the catch limit has been raised.

Then they demand "tribal trust" water, a blank check for them to take water from our area and dump it into the ocean. Historically, this water did not go down the river. It was a closed basin before the settlers drained some of the water from the basin so they could farm this fertile land. The river used to go dry.

The Nature Conservancy and government agencies have taken over 90,000 acres out of farm and cattle production to form more wetlands that used twice as much water as farmland. Over $13 million was spent on a fish screen when they have not even counted the fish. Thousands of ducks, geese, and wildlife thrive on our farmland and in our canals. There are programs to give temporary easements to the government for our land. The people do not realize that when the sucker fish swims in, they will never get to farm again.

This land was our land.

Jacqui Krizo
Tulelake, California (in the Klamath Basin, near the Oregon border)

 

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