Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Second
take: The water agreement
Giving a
voice to the Shasta tribe
By LEE JUILLERAT,
Herald and News 11/27/09
Submitted photo
- Athena Bagwell, whoI
is Shasta, is concerned that removing dams will
have negative impacts.
DORRIS
— It was 2002, and Athena Bagwell was living in Atlanta
when she saw a TV news report on the massive dieoff of
thousands of Klamath River salmon.
“I saw that on CNN and
thought, ‘It’s time to go home,’ ” she said.
Home was Butte Valley,
which she said was part of the ancestral home of Shasta
Indians.
According to Bagwell,
the Shasta Indian Nation’s vice chairwoman, the Shastas
had the largest aboriginal land base of Northern
California tribes, including what is now Siskiyou County,
along with sections of Klamath, Jackson and
Josephine counties in
Oregon. The main body occupied lands along the Klamath
River from Keno to Happy Camp, Calif.
Bagwell, 38, who lived
in New York City until she moved to Atlanta as a 20 year
old, first visited her tribe’s ancestral lands in 1996
while escaping the crowds in Atlanta during the 1996
Summer Olympics.
Since moving to
Dorris, where she owns and operates Second Time Around,
Bagwell has
become involved in the
contentious politics of the Shasta Indian Nation. The
tribe, which does not have federal recognition, has been
involved in a leadership dispute since 1999.
The lack of
recognition is a sore spot.
“That’s a really ugly
political issue. It’s a terrible injustice considering we
were the largest tribe in the region,” said Bagwell.
“We’re still working toward recognition. It’s a very, very
important issue to me.”
The Shastas, unlike
recognized tribes, have not been allowed to participate in
negotiations involving the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement, which deals with water rights along the
Klamath River.
“We would like our
rights and our interests protected,” Bagwell said, noting
concerns about tribal artifacts and fears sediment behind
dams proposed for removal will destroy Klamath River
fisheries.
The tribe opposes the
proposed removal of four Klamath River dams and, she said,
wants to work with the California Department of Fish and
Game to create tribal fish hatcheries and participate in
other projects.
“Our main objective,”
Bagwell said, “is to establish a working relationship with
local and state government agencies, tribes and community
members so that we all may benefit.”
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