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http://www.nw-connection.com/archives/NWConn_Mar12_v3.pdf Lies, Dam Lies, and Peer Review—Removing the Klamath Dams The Northwest Connection, March 2012, Page 15, by Mark Anderson |
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First off, the “public meetings” held in the Klamath Basin, designed to build consensus, were anything but public. Oregon State Senator Doug Whitsett (R-Klamath Falls), talked to me on the I Spy Radio Show and told me something that, to this day, I find blindingly offensive. | ||||
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in 2008 when Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama were in full-spin mode—“campaigning”—they talked about how government needed to be more transparent? Of course, what they meant by “transparent” and what most people mean by “transparent” are two entirely different things. Loosely translated, “transparency” means, “You’ll see what we want you to see.” It’s like the Wizard of Oz putting on a front. But every now and then, when you do get a peek behind the curtain, it’s so ugly and so unbearably shocking that one actually hopes to be struck blind, praying to God you didn’t see what you just saw. Case in point is what’s happening in the Klamath Basin and the effort by the far left to remove the dams. The Wizard wants you to think this has been a transparent and therefore legitimate process where very divergent groups—the tribes, the power company, environmentalists, fisheries, farmers, and ranchers—came to “consensus.” And all of the decisions were based on scientific and therefore impartial studies. That ain’t how it happened. Squint if you need to, but let’s take a peek behind the curtain. First off, the “public meetings” held in the Klamath Basin, designed to build consensus, were anything but public. Oregon State Senator Doug Whitsett (R- Klamath Falls), talked to me on the I Spy Radio Show and told me something that, to this day, I find blindingly offensive. The meetings were only open to a select few—mainly to those the organizers knew in advance were predisposed to removing the dams. The meetings were closed to the press, closed to the public, closed to public officials, and if you did get in, you had to sign a confidentiality agreement beforehand that said you wouldn’t discuss anything said in the room. And that you would agree to the outcome no matter what it was. If you didn’t agree to those preconditions, you weren’t allowed in. This is a clear and, in my mind, violent abuse of the public meeting laws. The use of the word “violent”
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is not accidental. We have information that someone who came out of that meeting was so distraught, and took such a shock to his sensibilities, that he committed suicide. There is also good evidence that the PacifiCorp, the power company that holds the leases on the dams, was strong-armed into the agreement. Publicly agree and things will go well for you; disagree, and it won’t matter because we won’t renew the dams’ lease anyway. I could be wrong, but I suspect the mafia creates “consensus” this exact same way. After the “agreement,” the only obstacle in their way was a pesky little thing called funding. Even the most strident environmentalist won’t do anything if someone else isn’t paying for it. To keep the appearance of still needing to make up his mind (it’s pretty clear he already has when he’s said publicly it would be “un-American to vote against removing the dams), Interior Secretary Ken Salazar commissioned a report for dam removal to provide an “assessment of science and technical information.” In other words, what’s it going to cost, how many fish will be saved, and what would be the environmental and economic impacts of dam removal. Naturally, this report is based on sound, “peer reviewed” science (you know, that thing that causes—I mean, “confirms” global warming). Peer reviewed is the “gold standard” for anything scientific. We talked with Dr. Bob Zybach, who has a Ph.D. in Environmental Science from OSU and who also spent 20+ years in forestry, about this whole peer-review process. If you’re like me, you assumed “peer review” meant fact |
checking, devil’s advocate, and even a standardized process to this. Nope. Not one bit. Each “peer review” makes up its own rules. Imagine practicing law in hundreds of different courts where each court had its own procedural rules and laws. That’s the peer review process. As Dr. Zybach put it, “[it’s] checking out each other’s models for whether they’re functional statistically, but not checking them out as far as assumptions… And among me and my friends, we all like the Dodgers, so we have consensus.” You can guess how this “peer reviewed” study turned out. By the way, I should mention that Dr. Zybach is part of the Environmental Sciences Independent Peer Review Institute (www. esipri.org), which is comprised of current and retired scientists who want to reform the peer-review process. They just launched last month. So where are we at now? Sec. Salazar is due to make his decision in March, and back in Nov. 2011, Sen. Merkley introduced a bill to codify (fund) the Klamath Agreement. Strange—wouldn’t you think you should wait for the Secretary to make up his mind before you ask to fund his decision? The end of the page is fast approaching, so I’m going to have to resort to bullet points (this is what happens when you try to condense 4 hours of radio and dozens of hours of research into a 1,500-word article): The report says this will only cost $291 million but that’s only to remove the |
dams. Merkley’s bill requests $750 million—and you know that’s low-balling it. That total does not account for the economic loss of power by yanking out four fully functioning dams—another $1.3 billion—or replacing them with politically favored green power. Minimum total costs, $2–3 billion. $200 million of this is going to come from PacifiCorp ratepayers—to tear down dams that currently power their homes. The report forecasts an 83% increase in fish, which sounds like a lot but if you remember your math that’s not even doubling the population (which would be 100%). We’re spending $3 billion and not even doubling the fish population? The study doesn’t account for the disposal costs for the 22 million tons of accumulated silt behind the dams. According to Sen. Whitsett, that’s a line of quad-axel dump trucks stretching 12,500 miles. Dam-removal proponents assume (hope) the silt will wash out to sea and not choke the Klamath. However, this is exactly what happened on similar rivers. Sen. Whitsett and his geologist wife believe it’s a disaster in the making. According to Congressman Tom McClintock (R-Granite Bay, CA), the study does not count the more than 1 million adult fish from the Iron Gate fisheries. If counted, these fish would multiply the number of “official” fish by more than 22.5 times, thereby grossly undercounting the fish in the river. If the dams are pulled out, the fishery is also slated to be destroyed—along with the million-plus fish it generates. To demonstrate “public support” for dam removal, the study sent out 10,000 surveys—not just to the Klamath Basin but nationwide. Respondents were encouraged to reply, “even if you have never heard of the Klamath River.” That’s right. People in |
Ohio and Massachusetts can now weigh in on what we do here in Oregon. (Some good news: Oregonians are now qualified to weigh in on traffic flow in New York City.) 76% of these non-scientific surveys were sent to people outside the Klamath Basin. It should be blindingly obvious that this agreement and process has been hugely flawed and that pre-determined outcomes have been based on nothing short of outright lies by the environmentalists who want to return the river to its pre-historic (pre-man) condition. (If this bugs you, isn’t it worth a call to Sen. Merkley’s office to say you’re opposed to his bill?) Fortunately, Congressman McClintock sits like a dam blocking all this. As the chair of the subcommittee that would hear this, he is solidly against it. However, he realizes dam-removal supporters may try to slip it in another bill to bypass his committee. That, or simply hope McClintock and the Republicans are voted out. Once that happens, all bets are off. I’ve said it before: Oregon is the Petri dish for all things environmental and it does not stop here. This is a test of their methods. According to an eye witness, in a December 2010 meeting in Klamath Falls, the Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation called removing the Klamath dams a “precedent setting event,” indicating to those who heard it that the Snake and Columbia are next. There is a colossal fight ahead. Just one of the dam removal proponents, American Rivers, has dedicated $100 million to taking out dams all over the country. But this is also why we need to stand with our neighbors in Klamath. If we can’t stop this here and now, no river is safe. If you’d like to hear our interviews with Sen. Whitsett, Cong. McClintock, and Dr. Zybach, they’re available as free downloads from www.ispyradio.com . Mark Anderson is an MBA and the host of the I Spy Radio Show, heard Saturdays, 11-noon, on KYKN (1430-am) in the greater Salem area or anywhere via kykn.com. Podcasts are also available after the show airs via www.ispyonsalem.com He can be reached at mark@ispyonsalem.com . |
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