Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Tribes’ land purchase would be huge mistake
Herald and News
Letter to the Editor 9/29/09
by Charles Patterson,
Wilsonville.
Editor’s note:
The letter refers to the Tribe’s interest in buying
385 acres of land known as French Prairie near Wilsonville
south of Portland.
The Klamath Tribes are making the leaders’ worst mistake since termination.
Then at least, tribal
members I knew walked away with cash to begin anew.
Today, tribal leaders
are working with distant speculators to evade land-use
laws. The leaders believe there is profit in this
evasion. Not likely.
Providing water, sewer
and roads is too costly. The I-5 bridge over the
Willamette is already over capacity and will require more
than $500 million to upgrade. Can the Tribes afford that?
Oregon can’t in any foreseeable future.
This deal also mocks
the words of the tribal mission statement offering respect
for the land of their heritage. The land at issue is
Oregon’s finest farmland according to the Oregon
Department of Agriculture, classified as “Foundation
Agriculture Lands.” Speculators luring the tribe into a
deal have learned every jurisdiction and community nearby
believes the land should remain in agriculture. City,
county, metro and state governments have held discussions
about the land for years.
When thoughtful people
are asked, the result is the same: The land belongs in
agriculture. The proposed deal will involve the tribe in a
long, costly struggle with little benefit for members.
Only the same sort of fast-talking speculators who
promoted termination will likely profit. Can the Klamath
Tribes afford another costly mistake?
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