Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
KBRA, experience key in race
Candidates
exchange points in race for state House position
By ELON GLUCKLICH,
Herald and News, 4/11/10
H&N photo by Elon Glucklich - Bill Garrard, right, details
his opposition to the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement as
Karl Scronce looks on. Scronce is looking to unseat the
incumbent Garrard in the May 18 primary election for 56th
District Representative in the Oregon Legislature.
Spurred by
opposing views on Klamath Basin water settlement and dam
removal agreements, state Rep. Bill Garrard and Republican
challenger Karl Scronce exchanged pointed comments Tuesday
on the other’s ability to hold effective leadership in the
state Legislature.
The two are
vying for the Republican nomination to represent the 56th
District in the state Legislature. They spoke Tuesday at a
Klamath County Republican Women’s forum, where candidates
for a number of local, state and federal offices spoke to a
crowd of about 30 in advance of the May 18 primary election.
Garrard, who
has represented the district since 2000, opposes the Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement and its related dam removal
settlement, which aims to resolve water disputes in the
Klamath River Basin and advocates removal of four dams.
But Scronce,
past president of the National Association of Wheat Growers
and a board member of
the Klamath Water
Users Association, believes the agreements are necessary and
accused Garrard of developing his position on the KBRA based
on information from water rights lobbying organizations.
“It is time
for a change. It is time to start fresh. It is time to get
true representation for our citizenry,” Scronce said.
Garrard said
Scronce was running as “payback” for his position on the
KBRA.
Garrard said
his experience working with political blocs from around the
state makes him best-suited to bring state resources to the
Klamath Basin.
“Never in
the history of this
state have we ever needed legislative experience more than
we will in 2011,” he said. “My opponent in this primary has
never run for public office, never held a public or
political seat, yet he wants to go to Salem and make a lot
of changes. The next Legislature is no place to send a
rookie.”
County commissioner
Also at the
forum were Klamath County Commissioner John Elliott and
challenger Dennis Linthicum.
An opponent
of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, Linthicum called
it a “glaring example of misrepresentation”
by the state Legislature.
“The vast
majority of the community would rather not suffer the
economic burden of removing the dams,” Linthicum said.
Elliott said
community efforts, such as the push for a long-term veterans
care facility and the approval of an independent tax base
for the county library system, are evidence of the current
commissioners’ work to increase Klamath County’s standing
throughout Oregon.
“I am
privileged to be part of a dynamic team, looking to the
future and dealing with current challenges,” Elliott said.
|
Page Updated: Sunday August 29, 2010 02:52 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2010, All Rights Reserved