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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
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Congressman passed over for post
Interior
secretary to be named by Obama this week
By LEE JUILLERAT
H&N Regional Editor
December 16, 2008
A California Congressman who
gained national media
attention by dumping 500 pounds of dead salmon
on the steps of the Bureau of Reclamation in
Washington, D. C., was on the short list for
Interior Secretary.
Rep. Mike Thompson represents
California’s 1st Congressional District, a
region that includes Del Norte County, where the
Klamath River reaches the Pacific Ocean, and was
the choice of many Klamath River Basin
stakeholders for the seat.
But a transition official
with President-elect Barack Obama said Monday
that Sen. Ken Salazar of Colorado, a former
environmental lawyer, will be named Interior
Secretary later this week, rounding out Obama’s
environment and energy team.
Secretary duties
The Interior secretary is
responsible for several natural resource
agencies, including the Bureau of Reclamation,
Bureau of Land Management , National Park
Service and U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service.
Spokesmen for Thompson had no comment
Monday night.
Thompson’s dumping of the dead salmon in 2002
focused national attention on the Klamath River
and took place after about 70,000 salmon died
near the river’s mouth.
Policies criticized
He also criticized Bush
policies benefiting farmers, supported removal
of Klamath River dams, and led efforts to get
disaster relief funds to Pacific Coast
commercial fisherman and related businesses
affected by fishing closures on the Klamath.
Thompson had support of Native
American tribes, Klamath Basin farmers and var
ious environmental and conservation groups,
several California congressmen, and sportsmen’s
organizations.
Steve Kandra, a Malin area
farmer, said Thompson was the
one candidate who had enough background
regarding the proposed Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement and the potential dam removal
agreement with PacifiCorp to act in a prompt
and favorable manner.
Greg Addington, Klamath Water
Users Association executive director, had
endorsed Thompson despite some reservations.
Understanding issues
“KWUA has certainly had our
share of significant disagreements and political
battles with him over the years,” he said. “That
said, he and his staff have always communicated
with us and have actually solicited our input on
several occasions … Of the names being
considered, nobody knows or understands Klamath
issues better.”
Thompson, 57, won re-election
in November
and will start his sixth term in January. He
serves on the Ways and Means and Intelligence
committees and co-founded the Wine Caucus when
he arrived in Congress in 1999.
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