By
Elon Glucklich,
Herald and News
10/15/10
Editor’s
note: This is
one in an
ongoing series
about the impact
of the Klamath
Basin
Restoration
Agreement. An
advisory measure
about the KBRA
and dam removal
is on the Nov. 2
ballot.
The
issue:
Three state
legislators
conducted a
public opinion
poll last year,
asking for
thoughts on the
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement and
dam removal
settlement.
Two-thirds of
those polled
said they
opposed the KBRA.
Why
voters should
care: Stakeholders
on both sides of
the KBRA have
used public
opinion as a
means of
defending their
positions. Each
side says its
view represents
the best
interests of
Klamath Basin
irrigators.
What
opponents say:
The lawmakers’
poll is
misleading.
Questions often
can be asked
with slanted
wording that
influences
responses. The
lawmakers also
did not ask
enough residents
for the poll to
be valid.
What
proponents say: The
poll confirms
what opponents
of KBRA have
long been
saying:
restoration and
dam removal will
force taxpayers
to foot the bill
for a project
that will
greatly reduce
the region’s
future
agricultural
capability.
A public opinion
poll conducted
last year by
three state
lawmakers
indicated about
two-thirds of
Klamath Basin
residents oppose
the Klamath
Basin
Restoration
Agreement and
hydroelectric
dam settlement.
But supporters
of the KBRA
argue that the
polling was
skewed and asked
too few
residents to be
an accurate
gauge of public
opinion.
The KBRA aims to
resolve water
conflicts among
stakeholders in
the Klamath
River Basin. It
also advocates
removal of four
dams.
Klamath County
voters on Nov. 2
will be asked
whether the
county should or
should not be
involved in the
agreement and
its
implementation.
The vote is
advisory.
Oregon State
Sen. Doug
Whitsett,
R-Klamath Falls,
and state Reps.
Bill Garrard,
R-Klamath Falls
and George
Gilman,
R-Medford,
conducted the
poll in May
2009.
With the help of
a polling
company owned by
Oregon state
Sen. Larry
George,
R-Sherwood, the
three lawmakers
were able to
reach 301 county
residents.
Those residents
were asked five
questions,
including
whether they
favored or
opposed the KBRA,
how they felt
about purchasing
land for the
Klamath Tribes
and how they
felt about KBRA
meetings being
confidential and
closed to the
public.
Sixty-five
percent of those
polled said they
opposed the KBRA,
while 11 percent
said they
supported it.
Twenty-five
percent said
they didn’t
know.
Sixty- eight
percent polled
said they
opposed the
agreement
purchasing land
for the Klamath
Tribes, while 7
percent said
they favored it.
When asked about
confidential
meetings, 73
percent said
those meetings
were detrimental
to public
policy. Five
percent said the
meetings were
good public
policy.
The polling
“told us what we
had been hearing
from our
constituents
across the
county,”
Whitsett said,
adding he had
been receiving
calls from
people concerned
about the KBRA
since it was
first announced.
Garrard said he
participated in
the polling
because he
wanted to know
where his
constituents
stood on the
KBRA and dam
removal issues.
“At the time we
took the survey,
my primary
interest was
finding out, do
people want the
KBRA or don’t
they?” Garrard
said, adding the
results helped
form his opinion
on the issue.
“It’s pretty
overwhelming
that they oppose
dam removal,” he
said.
But some KBRA
and dam removal
proponents
believe there
was a high
likelihood the
polling was
skewed.
Kirk Oakes,
Democratic
candidate for
Klamath County
commissioner,
called the dam
removal survey a
“push poll.” A
push poll is a
campaign tactic
used to sway
public opinion,
based on
misleading or
biased wording
of the
questions.
“It was designed
to elicit a
specific
response,” Oakes
said. “There is
a lot of
dishonesty going
on” in regard to
the KBRA.
“The arguments
that are being
placed against
dam removal are
based on a lot
of individuals”
who have a
financial stake
against dam
removal, he said