Klamath Public Hearing Testimony
To: United States Department of Interior Officials
From: Bill Brown, Past Klamath County
Commissioner
Date: October 18, 2011
Subject: Non-Support of the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement and Dam Removal
As one of the sitting Klamath County Commissioners when the work
began on the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement (KBRA) in 2007,
I had hopes that an agreement could be hammered out , supported
by factions up and down the Klamath River Basin, that would
offer real solutions to our future power needs and sustainable
water deliveries to our farms and ranches. Many solutions have
been discussed prior and should have been included in the KBRA
proposal including but not limited to: a) supporting additional
water storage (Long Lake, Boundary Dam Proposals and/or other
natural alternatives) in order to deliver water to agriculture
and down-stream when deemed necessary. b) supporting amendment
of the Endangered Species Act which has paralyzed the entire
Klamath Basin through poor decisions based on unproven science
and history, c) re-establishing the hatcheries to maximum
instead of minimum capacities for a variety of fish species, d)
establishing an aggressive plan to control the number of
predators which we know are a large part of the problem related
to fish numbers up the Klamath River, and e) additional controls
being established for the large commercial fishing vessels that
lay off our coast and contribute greatly to unsustainable fish
runs. These are but a few of the many parts of a total solution
that I expected to see in the KBRA proposal along with other
solutions that have not been thought of or addressed.
Because of the confidentiality agreement approved when the KBRA
work began, stakeholders could not openly discuss the proposed
KBRA. Once I had the January 2008 KBRA Draft Proposal in my
hands and the confidentiality agreement was fulfilled I
expressed, after careful thought and investigation, my
disappointment in the KBRA proposal publically. While there were
a couple parts of the proposal that I thought could be
beneficial, those were widely over-ridden by the four dams to be
removed at taxpayer and rate-payer expense, purchase of a 90,000
acre tribal forest by taxpayers, idling of 18,000 acres in upper
Klamath donating nearly 30,000 more acre feet of water to a
political cause that has already cost our county dearly. Along
with this was the fact that I witnessed very few real solutions
identified above.
Following is a summary of major concerns that formed my
decision, as a Klamath County Commissioner and now a private
citizen, to not support the KBRA proposal as presented:
1. The KBRA does not have the support of the Klamath County
Natural Resources Advisory Council, agriculture related
organizations and a large majority of our citizens as proven by
recent surveys and discussions with citizens. Citizens do not
have a clue as how this will effect adjudication and costs in
taxes, electrical rates, etc.
2. Taking out dams will not provide a salmon run under past or
current conditions due to the historical fact that the salmon
were dead or dying at the location of the Irongate Dam which is
why it was placed at that location along with geological
reasons. For the fish to climb another 2000 plus feet in
elevation and swim approximately another 80 miles when they are
dead or dying at the Irongate location creates a reality of why
there is no evidence of salmon runs this far up the river. That
is also why the engineers and scientists placed the fish
hatchery at the Irongate Dam also. In other words, science and
history teach us that we will have salmon runs in Klamath County
"When Salmon Fly". The cost of dam removal, estimated between
$400 million and four billion, seems estimator's could come a
bit closer, far exceeds the cost of developing additional water
storage and implementing other real solutions. "Follow the
Money" related to this KBRA proposal.
3. Over 100,000 acres of productive farm/ranch lands have been
idled in Klamath County not counting conservation easements
purchased by agencies with taxpayer funds. Using a conservative
average of $300 net income per acre of productive ground, this
totals a net loss to our local economy of $30 million dollars
per year. Why would anyone need or want to negatively affect our
gross income from agriculture further by taking another 18,000
acres out of production? This does not include losses to farm
implement dealerships, veterinary services, ag suppliers,
restaurants and all types of other retail shops.
4. The KBRA is an agreement with no legal basis. Klamath County
Legal Councils (former and present), wrote opinions that this is
only an agreement and is not legally binding. So, my question is
why are we relying on an agreement that can and probably will
change given new leadership locally, statewide and nationally?
Seems like a perfect storm for future generations.
5. Purchasing tribal land under this agreement was one of those
"Oh, By the Way" additions asked for by the Klamath Tribes a
week or two before the draft was presented in January 2008. In
my opinion, it has no place in this agreement. My stated opinion
of purchasing tribal land is that the tribes have every right to
purchase land with their own funds but the taxpayers have no
obligation to assist or be responsible for said purchases.
6. I personally observed a great deal of deceptions,
manipulations and outright misinformation that occurred during
the development and proposed implementation of this KBRA
proposal. Ugly politics, attempts to discredit those that oppose
the KBRA proposal, illegal meetings and non-objective/balanced
reporting by the Herald and News, especially after the Herald
and News came out very early in favor of the KBRA proposal, was
and is the norm. This type of behavior and game-playing has no
place in such an important issue that will affect all Klamath
Basin communities and citizens now and in the future. We all
deserve better in order to fight future battles united.
In conclusion, while the current KBRA blew an excellent
opportunity to bring forward real solutions, the reality is that
this KBRA has caused division among our citizens for the benefit
of the few. The solution is to not give in to small special
interests rather work towards real solutions that are recognized
as being supported by the majority with integrity in the
process. Also, the United States of America is nearly bankrupt
with enormous debt incurred through exorbitant spending. We, the
taxpayers of America, need a break from these spending sprees on
projects that are neither scientific nor necessary.
Sincerely,
Bill Brown
642 Pacific Terrace Klamath Falls, OR 97601
541/891-7352
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