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BOR biologists fight for jobsScientists say Reclamation wants to suppress their findings Scientists employed by the Bureau of Reclamation claimed in a complaint filed Monday that their positions were being eliminated because their research contradicted or complicated other agencies’ findings in studies related to the Klamath River. In November, the seven people were informed the local Fisheries Resources Branch was to be closed and their jobs transferred, though no one was necessarily going to be fired, according to documentation provided by Public Employees who Protect our Environment (PEER), a nonprofit organization seeking to uphold environmental laws and values.
Klamath Basin Area Office area manager
Jason Phillips said he made the decision to end the
research because of perceptions about its quality and
relevance.
Phillips stated in a Nov. 8 memo that
U.S. Geological Survey research in the Klamath Basin was
viewed as credible, although his own office’s research
was not — thus making their work redundant and
unaffordable.
Jeff Ruch, executive director of PEER,
said the biologists’ research had angered external
stakeholders, prompting scientific censorship and agency
retaliation.
“This is an effort to bring scientists
into a political line,” Ruch said.
The complaint identifies specific
research that Phillips found problematic. One area was a
finding of higher-than-anticipated populations of
endangered sucker in Lake Ewauna. The complaint suggests
this may have complicated a view that Lake Ewauna was
essentially a dead-zone for fish moving downstream from
Upper Klamath Lake. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
reportedly had to re-evaluate its recovery strategy for
Lake Ewauna and the finding led to assertions that
others’ work had been proved wrong.
Coho dispute
A second problematic and disputed point
of research was a study of threatened coho life-cycles.
The biologists argued tributary flows were more
important to these salmon than mainstem Klamath River
flows. Mainstem Klamath River flows are controlled by
Reclamation through the Klamath Project and a series of
PacifiCorp-owned and operated dams.
Phillips decided not to allow the
life-cycle research to be published after the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration raised concerns
regarding this model, the complainants assert.
In a phone interview, Phillips denied
this allegation and added he intends in the near future
to “work something out for management and employees.”
Phillips indicated he would like to keep
the biologists’ jobs local, though the process will
likely unfold over the next year or more.
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