Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Group fighting KBRA validation in
court
Petition asks court
to throw out requests
By JOEL ASCHBRENNER Herald
and News 2/10/11
Leaders of Citizens
Protecting Rural Oregon say three Basin irrigation
districts do not
The group filed a
petition in Klamath County Circuit Court Monday asking
the court to throw out the irrigation districts’ request
for validation.
The KBRA is document
that aims to establish sustainable water supplies and
affordable
About 60 people,
mostly Basin irrigators, rallied Tuesday outside the
Klamath County Government Center, protesting the KBRA
and the irrigation districts’ request to validate the
agreement.
Al King, a rancher
in the Malin Irrigation District and spokesman for
Citizens Protecting
“Does a board, does
Congress, does any elected representative have the
power, without your vote, to take away a property
right?” King said. “That’s the heart of it.”
Greg Addington,
director of the Klamath Water Users Association,
disagreed. Irrigation district leaders, who are elected
by irrigators, have the right to seek validation on
behalf of their respective districts, he said.
“If they don’t like
what the irrigation boards are doing there’s a way to
deal with them — they have elections.”
Klamath Irrigation
District had three board members up for election last
year, Addington said. One challenger — who opposed the
KBRA — lost to an incumbent who supported it.
The KBRA stipulates
that each of the irrigation districts involved must ask
a court to validate or confirm the legality of the
agreement. The Klamath Irrigation District, the
Nine other Klamath
Project irrigation districts have already completed the
validation process, said Luke Robison, manager of the
Shasta View and Malin irrigation districts.
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Page Updated: Wednesday February 16, 2011 03:39 AM Pacific
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