http://users.sisqtel.net/armstrng/opinion072707.htm
Non-tribal Klamath mid-basin left out of
Settlement Group
By Marcia Armstrong, Siskiyou County Supervisor District 5,
7/27/07
Recently, several press releases have
been in the news concerning the “Settlement Group” set up to
find a mutually acceptable alternative for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Process concerning conditions for the
re-licensing of the Klamath River Dams. http://www.pacificorp.com/File/File17752.pdf
One joint release from the Yurok tribe and Klamath Water
Users states that its purpose is to develop “a proposal to
restore the Klamath River fisheries,
meet agricultural needs, protect water quality and sustain
the ecology and economies of the
Klamath Basin.”
This is a very broad claim. It should be made clear that
this pertains ONLY to the intent of finding acceptable
conditions for the re-licensing of Klamath River
dams. It is not intended to be a forum to solve the problems
of the Klamath system and totally ignores most of the
non-tribal mid-Klamath interests.
The release further claims that
the Settlement Group is “A diverse group of
Klamath River basin
stakeholders, including Indian tribes, farmers, and
conservation groups, and state and federal agencies.” Let’s
make it perfectly clear that there is not one representative
of the landowner group around the lakes that are most
directly affected by discussions of the dams. There are also
no timber, mining or mid-Klamath agricultural
representatives on the group. The talks do not even touch on
mid-Klamath interests, economies, issues or needs. They have
had no direct voice in this group as their operations are
not largely affected by the dams. This is not their forum.
A hearing on the Klamath called "Crisis
of Confidence: The Political Influence of the Bush
Administration on Agency Science and Decision-Making." has
been scheduled for the House Committee on Natural Resources
July 31 in Washington D.C.
http://resourcescommittee.house.gov/ News reports indicate
that it is to investigate Vice-President Cheney’s role in:
(1) influencing agency decisions on water management
following the Bucket Brigade closures on Klamath Project
irrigation operations; and (2) the fish die off that
occurred in the lower Klamath during the following year. It
is not unexpected that dam removal and other agendas may be
raised.
Let us hope that Congress does not
follow this rabbit trail down a polarizing partisan black
hole or craft legislation to “cure the Klamath” that ignores
mid-Klamath issues and needs. The fish spawn here. The fish
rear here. Regulations to protect fish have heavily impacted
Scott and Shasta agriculture, forestry, mining and the
economies of the region.
Forest health has declined due to regulations and public
lands surrounding river communities are perennially ablaze.
The problems of the Klamath will never
be solved by bringing together both ends of the river
against the middle or by ignoring the mid-Klamath as if it
were an afterthought represented by other stakeholders.
Sufficient technical and financial resources need to be made
available to mid-Klamath agriculture to advance its
long-standing work on cooperative habitat restoration.
Research on the impact of disease on Klamath
River fish and how to eliminate disease causing
parasites needs to be completed and appropriate actions
taken. Suffocating regulations need to be eased on forest
management. A stable and dependable stream of raw product
must flow to feed the local forest product industry and
economy. Public investments need to be made in establishing
bioenergy and value added products from small diameter trees
harvested for fuel reduction. The continuous attack on the
suction dredge and mining industry needs to cease and
decisions need to be based empirically on real science and
not politically on prejudice.
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