Guest opinion: Restoration proposal unfair to many in Basin
by TOM MALLAMS, guest writer, Herald and News 11/15/08
KBC NOTE: Becky Hyde, who works with tribes and Sustainable NW, is trying to create a new group, claiming to speak for the off-Project folks and supporting the agreement. She was welcomed to attend the closed-door settlement meeting in Sacramento with other chosen 'stakeholders.') More than 300 off-Project people in addition to another 1500 petitions, oppose the "agreement" |
We all know what happened to the timber industry and I see agriculture being directed down the same path. Our agriculture industry is continually changing and adapting to the demands of special interest groups. This is why I feel the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, as written, is not beneficial to all of the Klamath Basin.
Fairness is the ideal
Agriculturalists continue to be excellent stewards of the land, honing technology to increase productivity and protecting the natural resources that are so near and dear to us all.
A fair and equitable Basin-wide settlement has
always been the ideal solution for the water
issues in the Klamath Basin. Off-Project
irrigators do not prefer litigation. Litigation
is expensive, time consuming and detrimental to
the entire community. We have to pay our
attorney bills just as the Project irrigators
do.
A recent commentary in the Herald and News
announcing support for the current settlement
agreement was signed by 74 individuals. A
petition against the current settlement
agreement, as written, with close to 300
off-Project individuals was submitted to the
Klamath County Commissioners and the Herald and
News.
The Klamath Basin Alliance has a separate
petition with more than 600 signatures against
the current settlement. It’s apparent there is
no widespread support in the Basin for the
current agreement as written.
In the Reclamation Project, the boards of
directors of the various irrigation districts
have endorsed the current agreement. However,
many of the individual project irrigators openly
do not favor the agreement and acknowledge that
it is not an equitable agreement Basin wide.
Most people admit that they haven’t read the
agreement. It isn’t an easy read, but it doesn’t
take long to see major flaws and the inequity
for both Project irrigators and Off-Project
irrigators.
Some say the current agreement is the best we
can do. I do not believe that is the case. If
implemented, the current agreement, as written,
will adversely affect all irrigators in the
Basin, including all surface irrigators and
eventually all groundwater irrigators.
Ultimately, it will adversely affect the economy
of the entire Basin. This will be agriculture’s
“spotted owl.”
Off-Project irrigators have group
There have been claims that there is no
organized group representing off-Project
irrigators.
That claim is absolutely false.
Already in place is the Klamath Off-Project
Water Users Association Power Group, which has
been engaged in the power issues since 2005.
Sprague River Water Resource Foundation and the
Resource Conservancy umbrella organization
represent virtually all of the contestants in
the adjudication and they represent the vast
majority of all Off-Project irrigators. Sprague
River Water Resource Foundation has been active
in water-related issues for more than 25 years,
settling many claims in the adjudication.
Resource Conservancy has been actively engaged
in the issues for more than 11 years. To form
yet another group seems redundant.
The Klamath County Commissioners organized
facilitated meetings between Project irrigators,
the Klamath Tribes, and an acceptable
off-Project water user representation months ago
to keep dialogue moving and to look for common
ground.
Unfortunately for the Klamath Basin, the Project
irrigators and Klamath Tribes refuse to meet
with us.
We have been labeled uncooperative and
uncompromising. Yet the Off-Project Water Users
Power Group, Sprague River Water Resource
Foundation, and Resource Conservancy are the
only groups that are still willing and waiting
for the meetings to take place.
I encourage everyone to read through this
settlement agreement completely and realize what
is at stake here and what you will be giving up
if you sign on the dotted line to accept it as
written.
Remember what one of our nation’s great founding
fathers Benjamin Franklin said, “They that can
give up essential liberty to purchase a little
temporary safety deserves neither liberty nor
safety.”
About the author
Tom Mallams has been an irrigator
in the Upper Basin for more than 30 years and
has been active in agricultural and water issues
for more than 25 years. He is president of
Klamath Off-Project Water Users Association
Power Group, serves on the board of directors
for Klamath Soil and Water Conservation
District, currently chairs the Headwaters Local
Advisory Committee and is past president of
Sprague River Water Users Association.