The issue: Should county governments
participate in the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement?
Why voters should care: Klamath County
has signed the agreement and continues to participate in its
coordinating committees, but county officials have said they
will likely withdraw from the agreement if voters tell them to.
Voters are being asked to decide Nov. 2 by voting on
Measure 18-80, an advisory
measure.
What opponents say: By signing the KBRA,
Klamath County forfeited its right to oppose major provisions in
the agreement. County residents should have had the opportunity
to vote on the KBRA before the county signed the agreement.
What proponents say: Many of the KBRA’s
details and its implementation, which will affect county
residents, still need to be determined by the agreement’s
coordinating committees. To be able to participate in and vote
on those committees, county officials had to sign the agreement.
To have a say in the Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement and its implementation, counties had
to commit to supporting the overall agreement.
Two of the four counties
involved, including Klamath County, signed the KBRA and continue
to participate in meetings that will shape the final agreement.
The other two counties
opposed the agreement and, by not signing it, relinquished their
right to participate in KBRA discussions.
The KBRA aims to resolve
water disputes in the Klamath River watershed and
advocates removal of four
dams on the river. Klamath County voters will vote Nov. 2 on
Measure 18-80, which asks whether the county should remove
itself from discussions.
Humboldt county also signed
the agreement, and can vote on KBRA coordinating committees,
which continue to flesh out the agreement’s details.
Siskiyou County supervisors
did not sign the agreement , but have continued to attend KBRA
meetings as non-voting mem bers of the public. Del Norte County,
where the Klamath River empties
into the Pacific Ocean, has
not been involved in the crafting of the agreement.
Klamath County officials say
it is important to stay involved so they can have a say in
issues that will affect their constituents.
“The settlement agreement
sets out some pretty broad ideas,” said Dave Groff, Klamath
County counsel, who has attended the KBRA’s past three Klamath
Basin Coordinating Committee meetings. “There are a lot of
details in the broad parameters that have not been worked out.”
But local KBRA opponents
argue that the county already surrendered to the KBRA’s major
provisions by signing the agreement.
“They lost all their
political clout by signing on,” said Frank Goodson, a leader of
the Klamath Conservative Voters Political Action Committee,
which has campaigned against the agreement.
Goodson added he thinks the
county residents should have had an opportunity to vote on the
KBRA before county officials signed it.
Humboldt County Supervisor
Mark Lovelace said there are advantages for and against signing
the agreement. When his county signed the KBRA it forfeited its
right to oppose the overall agreement, but by signing gained the
ability to vote on issues and shape the final agreement, he
said.
Del Norte County Supervisor
Gerry Hemmingsen said his county was cut out of KBRA discussions
altogether.
“We weren’t
invited to the meetings,” he said. “We were never involved from
start to finish.”