Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Dear
Representative Pombo,
from Lee Riddle, Brookings, Oregon, 7/17/04
I entered written
testimony at the Klamath Falls Congressional
hearing on Saturday.
It was a 400 mile
round trip to get there, but worthwhile, thanks
for the opportunity.
I want to add two
additional comments that were not in my previous
testimony.
BISCUIT FIRE
The original DEIS
made no mention in any of the 7 proposed
alternatives of Wilderness Additions as a proposed
action.
Thus this issue was
not on the table during either the "scopeing"
process or the "public comment" process.
Yet when the final
statement came out, we found Wilderness additions
surrounding all four sides of the Kalmiopsis
Wilderness area both in the text and with maps of
the additions in the appendix. The News Media
reported that this was a "last minute idea that
Oregon Governor Kulongoski had discussed over
lunch with the US Forest Supervisor, and that he
really wanted more acres added to the wilderness
than the Forest Service added".
WHAT? WHEN DID THIS
HAPPEN?
Where is the public
process? Now the Governor supercedes public
involvement?
The USFS obviously is
not even following the semblance of the law in
this case.
SNOWY PLOVER
Also reported in the
news is that 25% of Oregon's Public beaches will
be closed to Public uses in the near future, with
more beach closures to come over the next few
years. This is to "protect" the "endangered" Snowy
Plover, a bird that lays its eggs on the ground,
in the sand of the dunes areas. The public is
being told that they can no longer walk in the dry
sand (only on the wet sand where the waves break),
Oh, and no dogs, no
kite flying (scares the plovers), no campfires,
ect.
The closures will
only be part of the season, just the part of the
season when people usually go to the beach !.
The public will be
allowed to go to the beach during the winter rainy
season.
Now this is a bird
that has a host range all up and down the Pacific
Coast, and clear back to Texas.
If anybody is truly
"bothering" the Plover, you might just look at the
wildlife agents that routinely put tracking bands
on their legs, snoop in their nests, and generally
disturb this bird more than the public would ever
dream of.
Wildlife agents admit
that they have observed the Plover nests, and that
humans have almost NO influence on the nesting
survival. Their own observations point out that
the major causes of breeding failure are due to
sand blowing over the eggs, and other wildlife
species preying on their unprotected nests.
The only major human
contacts between Plovers and Humans were the
wildlife agents themselves.
Seems like a simple
solution to me, tell the agents to leave the birds
alone.
Thanks Again for
Listening,
Lee Riddle
96370 Wildwood Road
Brookings OR 97415
|
Home
Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:15 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2004, All Rights Reserved