Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
‘... I think they wronged us ...’
DONNIE BOYD, owner, Floyd A. Boyd Co., Merrill
Herald and News
11/7//11
MERRILL — Donnie Boyd says this irrigation season was
defined for him in early July.
That was when
officials with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation announced
that another 35,000 acre-feet of water could be released
to irrigators on the Klamath Reclamation Project. Until
then, irrigators were to receive only about 150,000
acre-feet.
“That’s when I
realized that this wasn’t about the lake level,” Boyd
said, “this was about the government controlling the
Basin.”
Business has
remained slow at the Merrill store for the
third-generation owner of farm implement dealer Floyd A.
Boyd Co. Sale volumes are down compared with past years,
and Boyd said he hasn’t hired anyone back after laying
them off earlier in the season.
“We’re in the black,
but that’s because we’ve cut overhead significantly,” he
said.
Boyd said what he
took away from the season was that all the issues
surrounding water supplies weren’t about what is best
for the environment or for fish. Rather, it was about
using the fact that the Basin was below average in water
early in the season to push a political agenda.
“I think they
wronged us,” he said.
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Page Updated: Thursday November 11, 2010 01:15 AM Pacific
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