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Kilham leads the Klamath River Compact Commission. |
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Stakeholders aim to fashion
their own Klamath plan
Tam Moore
Oregon Staff Writer
Capital Press - October 28, 2005
It’s a collection of farmers, commercial
fishermen, environmental activists, regional federal officials and
representatives of American Indian tribes tied to the Klamath River.
They call themselves “stakeholders.”
Next week those stakeholders after nearly three years of meetings held
in several locations of the 10 million acre Klamath Basin shared by
California and Oregon will gather in Yreka to define something that
has eluded several levels of government: a structure for basin-wide
decision making.
“I find it interesting that when we spent time getting to know the
issues and one another, people were impatient and wanted action. Now
that we are talking about action, people seem afraid that a few people
will make decisions for them,” Alice Kilham, chairwoman of the
Klamath River Compact Commission said in an invitation urging wide
participation in the Nov. 1-3 meetings at Yreka’s Miners Inn
convention center.
Kilham’s compact commission is betting this homegrown process, which
it launched with consultant Bob Chadwick in 2003, will do something
two much-publicized government efforts haven’t: produce results.
President George W. Bush in 2002 directed four Cabinet secretaries to
give him a plan for the federal part of the basin. They’ve yet to
publicly report.
Last fall, the governors of California and Oregon joined with Interior
Secretary Gale Norton in a promised Klamath task force. It has yet to
hold a public meeting within the basin.
Competing demands for the Klamath’s water and fish resources are
more than a quarter-century old. However, it wasn’t until 2001 –
when about 90 percent of the acreage in the Klamath Reclamation
Project didn’t get irrigation water – that national attention
turned to Klamath policy. There was a drought, three fish species
under protection of the Endangered Species Act, and what the
government calls “prudent alternatives” to assure fish habitat,
all in play.
Next week’s Yreka meetings will attempt to focus on which issues
that need addressing in the Klamath’s subbasins, then set a process
for integrating the many Klamath resource plans now in existence.
Kilham said there’s one other part to success: “We need to tell
the federal, state and county governments that we want a process for
receiving funding, streamlining regulation and implementing projects
that we will initiate.”
The Klamath River Compact Commission was established as law by both
states in 1957 and ratified by Congress the same year. At its most
recent meeting, the commission again endorsed the grass-roots effort.
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