http://www.siskiyoudaily.com/articles/2008/04/21/news/news01.txt
Board of supervisors continues work on Klamath resolution
By DAVID SMITH, Siskiyou Daily News, April 21, 2008
YREKA - At their April 15 meeting, the Siskiyou
County Board of Supervisors continued a process from
last week to further improve its resolution in
opposition of dam removal and the current Klamath River
Basin Restoration Agreement (KBRA).
District 5 Supervisor Marcia Armstrong stated that the
board wishes to pursue all alternative avenues to dam
removal.
Board Chair Bill Overman stressed that the resolution is
not the end of the issue, and that he'd like to see a
coalition that would band together to lobby in
Sacramento and Washington for help on the issue.
The board members also discussed the implications of
the Klamath Compact and how it might affect the dam
removal issue and ultimately the KBRA, alluding to the
fact that decisions made with the Klamath Compact
haven't always favored Siskiyou County, but that it may
still have some answers for the situation.
The Klamath Compact became effective in 1957 when it was
ratified by California, Oregon and the federal
government. The compact details what waters from the
Klamath River are to be used for, delegating which
applications will be given a greater preference, with
domestic use, irrigation, recreational, industrial and
hydroelectric uses, in that order.
The compact also says, 'Each state shall exercise
whatever administrative, judicial, legislative or police
powers it has that are required to provide any necessary
reregulation or other control over the flow of the
Klamath River downstream from any hydroelectric power
plant for protection of fish, human life or property
from damage caused by fluctuations resulting from the
operation of such plant.'
At the end of the discussion, the board voted to
approve the revisions to the draft of the resolution and
the accompanying cover letter, both of which have been
released to the public. The cover letter addresses the
fact that the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors is
'strongly opposed to removal of the dams along the
Klamath River' and that 'there has been a marked lack of
meaningful effort to identify and mitigate the
far-reaching consequences of these proposals on Siskiyou
County and its citizens.'
The resolution reveals concerns about the financial
responsibility of removing the dams, the effect of the
release of sediment build-up on river wildlife, economic
impact on the county and the loss of property value to
homeowners in the affected areas.
Supervisor LaVada Erickson said Friday that she feels
the resolution accurately addresses concerns that
opponents to dam removal in Siskiyou County have, and
she said that there are probably more concerns out
there.
'There are several issues tied to [the dam issue] down the road if these concerns are not addressed,' she continued, concerned that the various questions raised by the board had been disregarded in the KBRA.