Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
ESA and CWA need
changes
A March 2012 ruling
by the U.S. District Court of Oregon has the potential
to profoundly influence our state’s farming, forestry,
grazing and related practices on private, state and
federal ground.
The court
invalidated the Environmental Protection Agency’s
decision to approve Oregon’s accepted water quality
standards as set forth under the Clean Water Act. This
ruling will force even tougher compliance with often
Oregon will be
required to revise its watershed protection plans and
implement new pollution control regulations on nonpoint
sources, such as agricultural, forested or urban lands.
Municipalities (like
the city of Klamath Falls or Lakeview) will be required
to reduce the amount of heat that their industrial
wastewater discharge permits now allow. With inherently
high Upper Klamath Lake water temperatures, this
portends huge problems for any municipal or industrial
water user with or without already set point source
temperature standards.
The city and south
suburban sewer systems, several of our local schools,
lumber products companies, farmers, ranchers or any
other business using water may find itself with
substantially higher water use fees in the future to
meet these unattainable standards.
The suit was brought
by the Northwest Environmental Advocates against the EPA
to invalidate Oregon’s Natural Conditions Criteria for
temperature to protect fish. We again find ourselves at
the mercy of extremist groups and judicial activist
judges who are effectively destroying Oregon’s private
property, businesses, farms and forestry industries.
Like the spotted owl
fiasco, where after 25 years and hundreds of thousands
of acres of pine bark beetle blighted forestland, we
discover that the “science” behind these environmental
decisions is flawed if not outright false.
When will our U.S.
Congress take the needed action to modify the ESA and
the CWA to meet reality?
Gail Whitsett
Klamath County
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Page Updated: Friday March 30, 2012 12:36 AM Pacific
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