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AgLifeNW
Magazine
February 2004 issue
The State of the Union Address
President George W. Bush
January 20, 2004
Mr. President, I would like to respond.
We are irrigators in the Klamath Basin. Yes we
agree with your words...they
bring light and hope. But, your statement won’t
leave my mind; “I believe
that God has planted in every heart the desire
to live in freedom. And even when
that desire is crushed by tyranny for decades,
it will rise again.”
It brings my thoughts to another statement by a
neighbor in 2001 when our
stored water was taken away from farms and
refuges. Velma Robison, a WWII
homesteader’s wife, stated, “April 6, 2001 was
as infamous to the people of Tulelake
as December 7, Pearl Harbor Day, was to the
citizens of the United States.” I
remember Aline Terry, 80 yr old WWII
homesteader’s wife calling me crying
because she feared having to slaughter their
cattle herd of 50 years because the
pasture and alfalfa were dying and the cattle
were starving. I remember
sitting in my car crying as over 100 unemployed
farmers drove their tractors down
the streets of Klamath Falls as their crops died
and pastures withered. I
remember a Hispanic man, a Klamath Basin
resident of over 20 years, crying,
wondering what he and his people would do, and
where they would go. I remember the auctions. I
remember my elderly neighbors standing at the
fence by the
headgates, with armed marshals keeping them from
the wheel that they could turn to
keep their fields from dying. I remember my
friend telling about her husband’s
suicide, because without water on farms, there
is no life. I remember
90-year-old settler Nellie Takacs going without
well water for a few weeks because over 100
domestic wells went dry from the empty canals
and pumping our groundwater
excessively. I remember the day the National
Academy of Science (NAS) interim
report, and also the final report, came out
saying that the WATER SHUTOFF WAS
NOT JUSTIFIED. We rejoiced...justice at last!
And today I see, once again, the total disbelief
as your government agencies
are taking our water, pouring our stored
irrigation water into the ocean.
Disregarding the NAS ‘best available science’,
they are using the same false
science that shut down our farms and refuges in
2001 to demand these
higher-than-historic elevated river flows and
lake levels.
Tonight I attended a meeting in Fort Klamath.
You should have seen the fear
and disbelief in the eyes of these farmers and
ranchers whose land is surround
ed by National Forest. This public forest,
690,000 acres, may be given to the
Klamath Tribes again, encouraged by your
Department of the Interior and Bureau
of Indian Affairs. The Tribes told us they want
to shut down backroads, let
fires burn naturally, downsize agriculture, and
claim all of our water. Their
claim in our state adjudication process is for
more water than exists in our
watershed. Tonight this same group was being
told that an organization,
Klamath Basin Rangeland Trust, is trying once
again to rent water rights from our
local ranches with federal money, dewatering our
fields and destroying our
cattle industry, using the same false science
that, ‘unjustified’, shut down our
community in 2001. Is this not tyranny?
And today we are being told that, if we do not
pump our aquifer and let
fields go dry in a scheme called ‘Water Bank’,
the Klamath Project will be shut
down again to achieve artificially-elevated lake
levels for an endangered fish
that your agencies refuse to count, and that is
being considered for delisting.
This water-bank, 75,000 acre feet of irrigation
water, is demanded of us
regardless of water year type. Those who do not
call it ‘blackmail’ call it
‘extortion’.
Mr. President, we still raise our flags. We
still pray. We still have hope.
Actually, I think most of us believe that if
you really knew what was
happening here in the Klamath Basin, the land
grabs and agricultural downsize
regarding our water, we believe that you would
not allow this to happen. We do
want to believe in you, but your agencies and
bureaucrats are making it very very
difficult.
Again, like you said, “I believe that God has
planted in every heart the
desire to live in freedom. And even when that
desire is crushed by tyranny for
decades, it will rise again.”
Jacqui Krizo
submitted by www.klamathbasincrisis.org
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