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Klamath
River Tribes and Fishermen Disrupt Berkshire Hathaway Meeting in Omaha
by
Dan Bacher
May 6th, 2008
This
is my report on the trip to Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway meeting
in Omaha that I made with members of Klamath River Indian Tribes,
commercial fishing groups and conservation organizations from May 1-4.
The group, stepping up their protest tactics from last year's meeting,
delivered a clear message on the urgent need to remove Klamath River
dams to Buffett, the shareholders, the media and the public.
Klamath Tribes and Fishermen Disrupt Warren
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Meeting in Omaha
by Dan Bacher
A unique coalition of Klamath River Basin tribal leaders, commercial
fishermen, recreational anglers and conservationists successfully
disrupted Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders
meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 2 in their battle to restore the
river’s salmon runs.
The group is demanding the removal of four Klamath River dams owned by
Buffett subsidiary Mid American Energy, contending that they kill salmon
and create massive blooms of toxic algae. Dam removal advocates stepped
up to the microphone to deliver their message to Buffett, the world’s
second richest man, in a packed convention center including Bill Gates,
the world’s richest man, and a crowd of 31,000 shareholders.
Although Buffett rebuffed dam removal advocates just like he did when
they attended last year's meeting, this year's actions made the Klamath
River the largest single issue addressed at the meeting. With their
in-your-face actions and tactics, the group made shareholders, the media
and the public aware of Buffett's role in maintaining fish-killing dams
on the Klamath – and vowed to keep disrupting Buffett’s meetings
until he signs an agreement to remove the dams.
“We went to Omaha to send Warren Buffett and his executives a clear
message that as long as there is no business as usual on the Klamath,
there will be no business as usual for him, Mid American Energy, or
PacifiCorp,” said Leaf Hillman, Vice-Chair of the Karuk Tribe.
The protest of Buffett’s meeting came in the wake of the declaration
of a commercial fishery failure by U.S. Secretary of Commerce Carlos M.
Gutierrez on May 1. This year, for the first time in history, commercial
and recreational fishing in California and Oregon has been closed by
state and federal regulations.
Although the immediate cause of the fishery failure this year was the
unprecedented collapse of Central Valley chinook salmon, just two years
ago salmon fishing was severely restricted because of the decline of
Klamath River chinook salmon spurred by the fish kills of 2002.
Tribal members, commercial and recreational fishermen impacted by this
year’s fishery closures and Regina Chichizola of the Klamath
Riverkeeper camped out in front of Omaha’s Qwest Center at 1 a.m. in a
cold, windy rain typical of spring in the Midwest. This allowed the
group to get at the head of the cue to ask Buffett questions during a
six-hour question and answer session.
Buffett’s Hypocrisy Challenged
Chook-Chook Hillman, a 23-year-old Karuk World Renewal Priest (Fatawan),
spearheaded the strategy and was the third person to speak at the
meeting. After introducing himself in the Karuk language, he challenged
Buffett by saying, “as a European-American you are the visitor in our
country…will you not meet with the native people impacted by your fish
killing dams.”
“You say you want to address poverty and disease in the Third
World," Hillman said. "But you are creating those same Third
World conditions right here in America. We want to meet and resolve the
issue in a way that saves you money and saves our culture!”
Chook-Chook then presented a dam removal agreement for Buffett to sign.
As he spoke, Georgiana Myers and Annalia Norris of the Yurok Tribe
unfurled a large banner that read “Klamath Dams Equal Cultural
Genocide.”
Buffett responded, “I’m prohibited from speaking out by an agreement
that we signed with FERC. However, there is strong disagreement in your
area about this issue.”
He then referred the question to Mid American CEO David Sokol who echoed
that “it would be inappropriate for Buffett to comment on Klamath
relicensing.”
“We would be pleased to ahead with a solution when the 28 parties
agree on a solution,” Sokol said, claiming that the dam relicensing
process is complex. “If public policy moves in the direction of the
removal of dams, fish ladders, or the status quo, then that would be
where we go. It is a complicated situation where a cooperative solution
is needed.”
Before lunch the group asked two more questions. Klamath Riverkeeper
Regina Chichizola focused on the toxic algae blooms in Buffett’s
Klamath reservoirs, while Mike Polmateer of the Karuk Tribe brought up
the 2002 fish kill and algae pollution on the river.
Like he had done with Hillman’s question, Buffett each time briefly
commented on the questions and then passed it off to Mid American CEO
David Sokol. And each time another banner was unfurled.
One read, “Buffett’s Dams kill salmon, communities, and jobs, while
another read “Warren: Un-dam the Klamath - sign the agreement now!”
Although security escorted the Tribal members from the building, there
were no arrests.
“FERC will rule on the dam relicensing issue and will listen to 28
others and you,” replied Buffett to Chichizola. “We will do what
they say and will follow the dictates set by FERC. We are neutral in
this."
Sokol acknowledged the existence of the toxic algae, but dismissed the
role of the dams in creating the algae and blamed the high nutrient load
in the river on Klamath Basin agriculture.
“Upper Klamath Lake is hyper eutrophic,” Sokol said. “Those
nutrients that cause the algae flow down into the river form the upper
basin.”
“We aren’t polluting the river,” emphasized Sokol. “We aren’t
adding anything to the river when it comes out of Oregon. The water goes
through our pen stocks and then comes out at your end.”
However, Chichizola noted that this toxic blue green algae isn’t found
anywhere in the upper basin, only in PacifiCorp’s reservoirs and river
below the dams. “The science demonstrates that toxic algae blooms are
created in Buffett’s reservoirs when the water is warm and stagnant
during the summer,” said Chichizola.
After the lunch break, Buffett, clearly upset about the questions asked
him, said that he would not field any more questions about the Klamath.
Commercial salmon fishermen Dave Bitts, Karuk fisherman Ron Reed, and
Karuk Medicine Woman Cathy McCovey were denied access to the microphones
despite being next in the cue to speak.
Bitts, who had to navigate around a snowstorm in Denver to make the
meeting, was clearly disappointed and angry.
“I traveled over 3000 miles to be here and woke up at two o’clock in
the morning to speak - then I was told I couldn’t speak,” said
Bitts. “The story I have to tell is that of an out of work commercial
fishermen. Buffett spent a lot of time today explaining what he
couldn’t do for us. I wanted to ask the richest man on the planet what
he could do for us.”
Yurok Tribal Council member Richard Myers said, “Everyone has had a
chance to sit at the table and work with the tribes towards a
resolution. There is one empty chair left. We are waiting for PacifiCorp
to take a seat."
Outside the meeting, members of the Chippewa, Omaha, Lakota Sioux,
Rosebud Sioux, Cheyenne and other Indian Tribes stood in solidarity with
members of the Klamath River Tribes and fishermen, holding banners and
signs demanding that Warren Buffett agree to dam removal.
Barbara Beauvasi, a Rosebud Sioux member from Omaha, Nebraska, responded
to Bufffett’s claims that dam removal was a complex issue and that his
hands were “tied” in resolving the Klamath dams problem. “The
solution is simple – dam removal – and Warren Buffett has the power
to do it,” she said.
During the meeting, Berkshire Hathaway security detained Karuk Vice
Chair Leaf Hillman for 10 minutes. "They can arrest me if they
want, but if they do, there are 4,000 other Karuk ready to fill my
shoes," said Hillman.
On the night before, a group of women from the Klamath River Basin
Tribes, dressed in traditional jewelry and regalia, staged a protest
over the fish-killing dams during a cocktail party at Buffett's local
diamond retail store Borsheims.
The group unfurled a huge banner demanding, "Warren, Un-Dam the
Klamath! Sign the Agreement Now!" They also passed out leaflets to
the shareholders as they walked into and out of the event.
"Wealthy women come here to shop for their jewelry,” said Yurok
Tribal member Georgiana Myers. “Wealthy women from the Klamath River
make our jewelry from the plants that grow along the river banks and the
shells of mussel and abalone. Now the river is so polluted from
Buffett's dams we are worried about harvesting the plants we need for
our jewelry and regalia.”
The two protests were preceded on Friday morning by a press conference
featuring Leaf Hillman, Richard Myers, Regina Chichizola, and myself,
representing recreational fishermen. Hillman gave a historical
perspective on the Klamath River dams – PacifiCorp’s history of
breaking its promises to Klamath Basin residents.
"The first of the PacifiCorp dams was built on the river in
1916," said Hillman. "This stopped the migration of salmon to
the upper basin that the Klamath Tribes depended upon for thousands of
years. PacifiCorp told their first lie - that they would provide access
over the dam to migratory fish - when they applied for their first
license. Since that time, the company has constantly acted in bad
faith."
After the group returned home to northern California, tribal members and
fishermen declared the trip as a “mission accomplished.”
“Now we return home having accomplished our mission,” said Karuk
Tribal Member Jess Mcloughlin who was involved in erecting the banners.
“We sent a clear message to Buffett, Sokol and every other executive
involved that as long as there is no justice on the Klamath, there will
be no peace for them.”
One distinct difference between this year's and last's years protests
was the increasing awareness by the shareholders of the Klamath River
dams issue. A number of shareholders expressed support for dam removal
advocates.
"I want to thank the people who spoke at the meeting for educating
the shareholders about the problems with the Klamath River dams,"
said Joan Mersch, a shareholder from Menlo Park, California. "I
think more people need to be educated about this issue. I appreciate
what you're doing."
The group vows to disrupt Berkshire-Hathaway meetings around the country
until Buffett agrees to remove the Klamath dams. "We came here last
year and we will keep coming back to Omaha every year until Buffett
signs a dam removal agreement," concluded Molli White, a Karuk
Tribal member from Orleans, CA.
PacifiCorp, one of 60 Berkshire subsidiaries throughout the world,
serves 1.7 million customers in six Western states. Berkshire
subsidiaries include GEICO Insurance, Wesco Financial Corporation, See's
Candies and Fruit of the Loom. Berkshire also has major investments in
Coca-Cola Co., Anheuser-Busch, and Wells Fargo & Co. and other
corporations.
For more information, got to: http://www.klamathriver.org, http://www.berkshireshareholders.com,
http://www.salmonforsavings.org.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/05/06/18497443.php
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