Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Locals to attend signing
Water agreement ceremony will be at state
Capitol Thursday
by Beaver, Herald and News 1/17/10
Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement stakeholders and the Klamath County Board of
Commissioners will be in Salem Thursday to sign the landmark
document that aims to resolve conflicts in the Klamath River
watershed.
Some supporters expected a
couple hundred people to attend the event at 10 a.m. in the
rotunda of the Oregon Capitol.
Along with Gov. Ted
Kulongoski and representatives of dozens of stakeholders, U.S.
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar will attend.
Signing of the restoration
agreement will allow stakeholders to approach Congress about
legislation and funding, a necessary but difficult step, they
say.
“I don’t think the heavy
lifting is over,” said Craig Tucker, Klamath campaign
coordinator for the Karuk Tribe of California.
A final draft of the
agreement was released in early January, and stakeholders and
their constituents had until Feb. 9 to say whether they
supported or rejected the documents.
Most stakeholders, from
irrigators, local governments and tribes to environmentalists
and fishermen, have agreed to support it, including dam owner
PacifiCorp.
A few others, including
two environmental groups, the Hoopa tribe and a group
representing irrigators off the Klamath Reclamation Project,
oppose it.
Some groups have yet to
make a final decision, taking advantage of a part of the
document that gives them up to 60 additional days to decide.
Greg Addington, executive
director of Klamath Water Users Association, said he would
attend the signing along with 20 to 30 irrigators on the
Klamath Reclamation Project.
“I think it will be the
accumulation of a lot of hard work,” he said.
Rally possible
Tucker said a number of
Karuk tribal leaders and other tribal members are expected to
attend. He anticipated a large contingent from the three
tribes who approved the agreement to be in Salem and
said they may have a rally in support Thursday morning.
Opposition
Tom Mallams, president of
Klamath Off Project Water Users, one of the groups to reject
the document, said he wasn’t planning to attend to protest the
signing, nor was he aware of any other plans to do so.
“Why would we want to go
to the irrigated interests’ funeral?” he asked.
His group is continuing
with lawsuits, including one against PacifiCorp, and looks
forward to the completion of the state’s water adjudication
process in the Basin.
Tucker and Addington said
they don’t expect opposition to the restoration agreement to
let up, but added that it wouldn’t hamper their efforts.
It’s unclear when the
signed document will be taken to federal lawmakers, but Tucker
said it would reach them before the current session ends.
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Page Updated: Saturday February 25, 2012 05:26 AM Pacific
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