Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Water issues are important to Whitsett
http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2004/04/23/news/community_news/cit1.txt Published April 23, 2004
Doug Whitsett, a retired veterinarian and landowner,
has spent considerable time in Salem as a water
rights lobbyist. Whitsett built early
momentum in the Senate race. He had raised $19,500
in campaign funds by April 1. He secured the
endorsement of the incumbent senator for District
No. 28. And he sides with agriculture on water
rights issues, which could resonate with voters in
the rural five-county district, which includes
Klamath, Lake, Crook and parts of Jackson and
Deschutes counties. But the water lobbyist
is facing his first test as a politician - a
different role for a man who was straightforward
enough to admit in February he wished the incumbent,
Steve Harper, would just seek another term so he
wouldn't have to run. While his speeches at
political candidate forums seem to have been geared
more for water rights experts than prospective
voters, he's steadily been building financial
support in the community. Whitsett raised $19,500 in
less than two months, and loaned himself $10,000 as
well. By the April 1 deadline for campaign reports,
he had spent more than $24,000 on his campaign. As president of
non-profit group Water for Life, Whitsett is
involved in lobbying in favor of irrigators' rights
and against projects like the proposed Cob Energy
Facility that would be built in Langell Valley. He
said he hasn't made a decision whether he would
remain in his unpaid position of president of the
non-profit group, if elected senator. Whitsett and his wife,
Gail, own 40 acres in Poe Valley, where she has been
raising horses for more than 10 years. At least 165
foals have been sold during that time, at roughly
$10,000 to $15,000 each. The couple lives off
North Poe Valley Road, east of Klamath Falls. They
have three daughters. 1) To what extent
should Oregon rely on lottery revenues? 2) What are your views
on gay marriage? 3) What are the most
vital services offered by state government? Community safety is the
primary role of government. No other issue is more
important than a safe community and the sanctity of
a secure home. Oregon's seniors are
largely responsible for having built the
infrastructure, and the basis for the economy that
sustains us. We must insure that these "veterans of
Oregon" receive appropriate care as they age. 4) What are three big
issues in your district that you'd address in Salem? Job creation in the
private sector must be job one. Oregon is among the
nation's leaders in unemployment and poverty. Almost
all of rural Oregon is experiencing 10 percent, 15
percent, or even higher rates of poverty. We must
change the strangling regulations, the oppressive
tort liability, the crushing income tax and
unemployment insurance premiums, and the entry level
wage structure that make Oregon one of the most
business unfriendly states in the nation. We can
bring good jobs to Oregon by establishing an
economic environment where businesses are able to
thrive. Small businesses,
farms, and ranches are the economic engine that
drives Oregon's economy. Collectively, they
represent Oregon's largest sector of employment and
largest generator of revenue. From land use
planning, to building code permitting, to
reallocation of irrigation water rights, these
owners are under intense, and ever increasing
regulatory pressures that restrict the use and
productivity of their privately owned property. Our
private property rights must be secured if Oregon is
to prosper. Republican
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