Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Merkley visits Basin; talks funding, policy
by SARA HOTTMAN, Herald
and News 1/21/12
H&N photo by Shelby King
From left,
Klamath Falls City Schools
Superintendent Paul
Hillyer and Dan Keppen of the Family Farm Alliance talk with
Sen. Jeff Merkley.
He emphasized education
and infrastructure as national issues — funding and policy —
that have impacts locally.
“That’s part of the
conversation I’ve been trying to encourage,” he said. “We
have to wrestle broadly with how we spend money in this
nation. …. The bill for Afghanistan last year was $120
billion.
“We need to spend less
nation building abroad and spend more nation building at
home on both the education side and infrastructure side.”
• Is there any chance
the federal government will do away with the
Endangered Species
Act?
“There are people
locally saying scrap the (Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement), we don’t need it,” said Dan Keppen, executive
director of Family Farm Alliance. “Get rid of federal laws
like the ESA and all our problems will go away.”
Merkley, who introduced
legislation to implement the controversial KBRA, said he
doesn’t know of any legislation currently seeking to reform
or kill the ESA, which is the force behind endangered
species protections that hinder timber production and water
use in the area.
The KBRA, with a related
hydroelectric settlement agreement, seeks to remove four
PacifiCorp-owned hydroelectric dams on the Klamath River,
create sustainable water supplies for irrigators, fund
habitat restoration in the area, and help the Klamath Tribes
acquire 90,000 acres of private timberland.
• Where is KBRA
legislation headed?
In November, Merkley and
U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., introduced legislation in
their respective chambers to implement the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement. Congressional approval is required to
fund most of the nearly $800 million agreement.
“We wouldn’t have what
we have in Congress right now if it wasn’t for Sen. Merkley,”
said Dan Keppen, executive director of Family Farm Alliance.
“His leadership is greatly appreciated by the Klamath
irrigation community.”
Still, most federal
politicians in the area have not committed to supporting
Merkley’s legislation efforts. U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif.,
is co-sponsoring, but Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden, Ore., and
Dianne Feinstein, Calif., have so far declined.
None of the Republican
representatives in the area have signed on.
“I don’t feel like I’m
out on my own,” Merkley said, noting he’s been in
communication with the other senators. “I knew from the
beginning folks were very shy about getting into this. It’s
no surprise to me. … You’re stepping into the middle of a
firefight and there’s going to be arrows coming from every
direction.
“The legislative
conversation will not be easy,” he added. “I don’t think
it’s a surprise to anyone in the process that it’s going to
be complicated.”
• What’s happening
with Secure Rural
Schools funding?
Merkley said Oregon did
its part in preparing to battle for timber reimbursements,
which are set to end if federal legislation isn’t renewed —
a devastating blow to the county’s already strained
finances.
“We’re running
completely against the stream,” Merkley said. “We’re going
to keep trying to educate our colleagues … from states that
don’t have timber counties. They’ve never heard of the issue
or don’t view it the way we view it.
“... We need to hold the
federal government accountable for its social contract with
timber counties.”
• We want to keep
the 173rd Fighter Wing at Kingsley Field. Can you support
expanding the mission?
Todd Kellstrom, Klamath
Falls mayor, said if there’s a chance Kingsley Field could
expand its mission to include F-35 fighter jets, the city
wants them.
“We love our military
here,” he said. “In case that’s one of the tipping points.”
Merkley said broadening the base’s mission would keep it viable as the F-15 ages and eventually becomes obsolete.
“Every weapons system
goes through a life cycle,” Merkley said. “If you don’t
succeed in broadening a mission, when the life cycle comes
to an end it becomes a huge economic blow.
“Seizing any opportunity
along the way to take steps to get the F-35 would be very
important.”
• With the Social
Security office closing, cutbacks and closures at the post
office, locals are worried that by the time the economy
recovers, all the services that could help us will have
left. What can rural areas do?
Merkley said local
offices for federal services are important, and he has led
the fight to keep rural post offices open, getting 20
offices removed from the list of closures.
“I’m going to fight this
with every tool I possibly can,” he said.
He was on the road in
Eastern Oregon when the list of post office closures came
out.
“I talked to local
citizens … and it became clear to me immediately that people
were raising huge issues,” he said. “Small businesses
operating in the area would go down if they didn’t have
access; they’d have to move to a bigger town. … It’d hit
seniors hard.”
Post office officials
said they wouldn’t close offices that were more than 10
miles from another one. Merkley went down the list of
closures and found 20 that fit that distance criteria. They
were removed from the list, and he got a six-month stay on
other closures.
The U.S. Post Office is
trying to cut millions of dollars to balance its budget, and
it says small offices don’t make enough to cover
expenditures, so closing them would make up for the deficit.
“That’s not the right
framework,” Merkley said. “It makes more sense to employ
people for a couple of hours a day than to have 200 to 300
people go roundtrip 30 miles to go to the post office.
There’s no contest. It’s much more efficient to have a post
office.
“This is one of those
important things for a delegation to band together on.”
• Sky Lakes Medical
Center is looking
at millions of
dollars of deficits because of cuts in Medicare and Medicaid
payments. Where are we going with health care in the
country?
Merkley said the big
problem facing rural health care is supply and demand: there
are fewer doctors and nurses, but more aging people who need
health care.
“If remaining
practitioners can fill their schedules with people who (pay
more) through private insurance, they’re not open to taking
Medicare payments,” he said. “That’s a huge problem.”
The hospital has no
choice; it has to take all patients. Additionally, Merkley
noted, small hospitals have more overhead and more
uncompensated care.
“We’re going to have to
raise Medicare payments to be market competitive,” he said.
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Page Updated: Monday January 23, 2012 03:40 AM Pacific
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