Klamath Tribes, Fishermen Will March
on PacifiCorp to Urge Dam Removal
(KBC NOTE:
HERE for website of IP3, the Ruckus Society,
who trains the tribes and enviros how to destroy
our American infrastructure.)
A
broad coalition of Klamath River Indian Tribes,
conservation groups, fishermen and ratepayer advocates
is sponsoring a "Day of Action Against PacifiCorp" at
the company's headquarters in Portland, Oregon on
September 18.
The group will march from Holladay Park to PacifiCorp’s
headquarters to demand the removal of the lower four
Klamath dams, owned by PacifiCorp, a subsidiary of
Billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway
Corporation. The group will assemble at Holladay Park
(the corner of Multnomah and NE 11th Ave., Portland, OR)
and at noon march to PacifiCorp headquarters at 825 NE
Multnomah, a few blocks away. A press conference and
rally will be held in front of PacifiCorp’s office at 1
p.m.
"We want to draw attention to the urgent need for
PacifiCorp to agree to dam removal in order to restore
the river," said Georgianna Myers, spokesperson for the
Klamath Justice Coalition. "The company hasn't agreed
yet to remove the dams in the current basin restoration
agreement. We need to start the decommissioning process
immediately - we can't wait 10 to 15 years."
The protest occurs during a year when commercial and
recreational salmon fishing in ocean waters off
California and most of Oregon is closed for the first
time in history. Fishing in Central Valley rivers, with
the exception of a short season from November 1 through
December 31 on a small stretch of the Sacramento River,
has been closed also.
Although the reason for this year's closures is the
collapse of the Sacramento River fall chinook salmon
population, just two years ago a precipitous decline in
Klamath River fall salmon stocks caused the federal
government to impose severe fishing restrictions upon
commercial salmon fishermen fishing the ocean off
California and Oregon. The decline was largely the
result of the Klamath fall fish kill of 2002, when over
68,000 adult fish perished from disease caused by low,
warm water conditions stemming from a change in water
policy by the Bush administration.
During the spring of 2002, hundreds of thousands of
juvenile chinooks perished from disease when the water
heated up, spurring an outbreak of disease. Since that
time, the majority of juvenile salmon migrating down
river have been killed in warm, disease-infested water
on the river every year. In addition, Karuk Tribe water
quality experts have documented an outbreak of highly
toxic microsystis algae every summer in PacifiCorp's
Iron Gate and Copco reservoirs on the Klamath in
northern California near the Oregon border.
Myers said that there will be some form of direct action
during or after the rally. A group of 10 members of the
Klamath Justice Coalition, including members of the
Yurok, Hoopa Valley and Karuk Tribes, have been training
in direct action techniques with the Indigenous Peoples
Power Project, IP3, in recent months. The IP3 is a
project of the Ruckus Society.
"We encourage people to come and support us," she said.
"We will taking a 40 passenger bus from the North Coast
to the march and rally on September 18."
The bus and carpools will be leaving from McKinnleyville,
Klamath, and Somes Bar, California on Sept. 17. For more
information contact Georgiana Myers, Klamath Justice
Coalition spokesperson, at 707-599-0877,
sregonlady [at]
gmail.com, or Craig Tucker, Karuk Tribe
spokesperson, office 530-627-3446 x3027, cell
916-207-8294, ctucker [at] karuk.us.