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Governors to meet for water summit
Kulongoski
Schwarzenegger
Gov. Ted Kulongoski and Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger will meet with
stakeholders this year to discuss a
plethora of water-related issues in the
Klamath Basin and along the Klamath
River.
The summit will address such
issues such as irrigation and endangered
fish species, and will include
irrigators, fishermen, American Indian
tribes, environmental organizations and
other interested groups, said Charlie
Burr, spokesman for Kulongoski.
An exact date and location
have not been determined, but
Kulongoski’s office has indicated a
strong desire to hold the summit in
Klamath Falls, a fact that pleases
county officials.
“It makes no sense to hold the
meeting in a town that is not impacted
by the watershed,” said John Elliott,
Klamath County commissioner.
The Basin and Klamath River have been
focal points of several controversial
issues.
Low runs
This year, federal fisheries managers
cut the commercial salmon catch by 90
percent off Oregon and California
because of low Klamath returns. Federal
aid has been sought.
PacifiCorp is attempting
to relicense four hydroelectric dams on
the Klamath River that some say harm
water quality and resident fish species.
Kulongoski stated earlier this
year that he wanted to hold the summit,
and he worked with Schwarzenegger’s
office and other government officials to
bring it about, Burr said.
The need to address the
region’s water and other interrelated
issues is paramount, he said.
“Both governors’ schedules are
at maximum capacity but both recognize
the need to get it done this year,” Burr
said.
John Snyder, spokesman for
Rep. Greg Walden, said he hadn’t spoken
to Walden about the announcement yet.
Snyder said he would probably take the
announcement as extremely good news.
“This is exactly what he
wanted,” he said.
The two governors hope to meet
in December. Prior to the summit, both
staff from both governors’ offices will
work with interested individuals and
organizations to develop a list of
issues to be discussed to make the event
as productive as possible, Burr said.
Federal interest
Congressional representatives
from both sides of the state line will
be invited along with organizations
directly tied to the region’s water
issues.
While not committed, Interior
Secretary Dirk Kempthorne and Commerce
Secretary Carlos Guiterrez support the
summit and may attend, Burr said.
Klamath County Commissioner
John Elliott said he was glad to hear
the summit was going to be a reality.
Newspapers in the state of
California have taken a great interest
in the river and have blamed the upper
basin for many of its problems, he said,
adding, it is “extremely important” to
hold the summit in Klamath Falls to
resolve those accusations and because of
the river’s influence on the city and
region.
Elliott said he hopes he and
the rest of the Klamath Board of County
Commissioners can play an active part in
the summit and its planning.
“Whatever we can do to assist,
we will do,” he said.
Greg Addington, executive
director of the Klamath Water Users
Association, said he had been informed
of the summit about two days ago while
attending hearings regarding the four
dams on the Klamath River.
What the goal or outcome of
the summit would be is unclear to
Addington and he said that there was
still a lot of work to be done before it
happened. But he is happy that something
is being done to address concerns and
that the association would do what was
needed to participate.
Burr acknowledged that much
still needed to happen before the summit
was held, but emphasized the governors’
commitment to it.
“We’re 100 percent committed,”
he said.