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Report
from Omaha: Tribes and Fishermen Call On Warren Buffett to Remove
Klamath Dams
by Dan
Bacher
May 2nd, 2008
2:57 PM
An
unprecedented coalition of Klamath River Indian Tribes, commercial and
recreational fishermen and conservationists is in
Omaha
,
Nebraska
this weekend to demand that
Warren Buffett sign an agreement to remove his four fish-killing dams.
Klamath
River Tribes and Fishermen Go to Omaha to Confront Warren Buffett Over
Dams
Yesterday afternoon I arrived in Omaha, Nebraska to join with Klamath
River Basin tribal leaders, commercial fishermen and conservation groups
to confront billionaire Warren Buffett over his refusal to remove his
four dams.
A group of over 27 people will be attending the annual general meeting
of Buffett's Berkshire-Hathaway tomorrow, either inside the meeting as
shareholders or outside as protesters. Representatives of the alliance
held a press conference at the Marriott Hotel this morning at
10 a.m.
providing further evidence
that the Buffett-owned dams on the Klamath have created an economic and
environmental disaster zone on the river.
The weather here has been typical of the
Midwest
in the spring - 85 degrees
yesterday, heavy thunderstorms this morning, and sunny and much cooler
this afternoon.
The speakers panel at the press conference included Richard Myers, Yurok
Tribal Council Member, Leaf Hillman, Vice-Chair of the Karuk Tribe,
Regina Chichizola, executive director of the Klamath Riverkeeper and
myself, speaking on behalf of recreational anglers. Dave Bitts, a
commercial troller, was also scheduled to speak, but he and commercial
troller Bob Kemp from
Oregon
had their plane flight
connection from
Denver
cancelled until this
afternoon because of a big snow storm over the
Rocky Mountains
.
An elder from the
Omaha
tribe, Eugene Pappan, gave a blessing and a brief talk to
open the press conference, while Craig Tucker, spokesman for the Karuk
Tribe, moderated the event. Time Magazine, the Associated Press,
National Geographic Magazine, the local FOX TV News affiliate and
several local newspapers covered the event. Steven Most, an independent
filmmaker and author from
Berkeley
, is also covering the
meeting here as part of a documentary on battle to restore the Klamath.
Women from the Yurok, Karuk and
Hoopa
Valley
tribes dressed in
traditional regalia for the conference and served smoked
Klamath River
salmon to the media and people gathered in the audience.
Behind the podium and the panelists organizers put up some dramatic
photos on poster boards documenting the fish kill on the Klamath in
2002.
The press conference was a big success in getting the word out about
Warren Buffett's refusal to support dam removal. This evening a crew of
young American Indian activists will leafet and hold signs outside of an
event sponsored by Buffett. Tomorrow members of the alliance will attend
the Berkshire-Hathaway meeting, both inside and out, in an effort to
convince Buffett to remove his dams.
The unprecedented alliance of tribes, businesses, conservation groups
and commercial and recreational fishermen has tried over the past two
years to reach an agreement with Buffett-owned PacifiCorp to agree to
dam removal. After negotiations stalled, some members of the alliance
decided more action was required to convince Buffett and PacifCorp to
agree to dam removal.
"As long as there is no business as usual on the
Klamath River
, there will be no business
as usual for Berkshire Hathaway and Mid-American Energy," said
Karuk Vice-Chair Leaf Hillman.
Yesterday's declaration of a commercial fisheries failure by U.S.
Secretary of Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez underscores the urgency of dam
removal. Although the Central Valley salmon population crash this year
is the immediate cause of the fishery failure that has resulted in the
closure of recreational and commercial fishing along the California and
Oregon coast, two years ago it was the decline of Klamath River salmon
that resulted in severe restrictions on ocean commercial fishing, along
with big cuts in salmon catch quotas for tribal and recreational
fishermen on the Klamath itself.
The California Department of Fish and Game (DFG) assesses the potential
loss from the closure of the 2008 salmon season to be $255 million and
2,263 California jobs, including both commercial and recreational
fishing jobs.
The group today released a report based on toxicological analyses
performed by the Department of Fish Game. Lab results show that yellow
perch and freshwater mussels from Klamath reservoirs contain dangeroulsy
high levels of the algael toxin microsystin. The toxin is released from
massive blooms of the algae Microystsis aeruginosa that flourishes in
Buffett's reservoirs during the summer months.
"Warren Buffett's philanthropy works to end poverty and disease
around the world while his dams are creating those conditions right here
in
America
," said Regina
Chichizola of the Klamath Riverkeeper, as she displayed two bottles
filled with toxic algae from the Klamath. "It is time for that to
change. Cleaning up the river by removing the dams is the right thing to
do."
Dam removal is the best option not just for the people who depend on the
Klamath River
, but it is also the
cheapest option for PacifiCorp and Warren Buffett. Economic studies from
state and federal agencies agree that dam removal is cheaper than
removing the dams. For example, a California Energy Commission economic
analysis concludes that dam removal, compared with the cost of
installing fish ladders, would save PacifiCorp over $100 million.
"Buffett and his shareholders can actually save money by doing the
right thing," said Richard Myers of the Yurok Tribe.
Myers pointed out the irony that many members of the Yurok Tribe have no
electricity while Warren Buffett's dams make electricity from the
river's water.
Leaf Hillman from the Karuk Tribe gave a historical perspective on the
Klamath River dams.
"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 acted in bad faith."
The alliance is demanding that Warren Buffett do what is best for the
salmon, best for the environment, best for the Klamath River Indian
Tribes, best for the ratepayers and shareholders, and best for the
thousands of those employed in the fishing industry.
"Warren Buffett is part of the problem now - we demand that he
become a part of the solution," concluded Richard Myers.
"Warren, sign the dam removal agreement and bring our salmon
home!"
For more information, go to http://www.klamathriver.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/2008/05/02/18496324.php
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