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County leaders headed to D.C.
Klamath
commissioners to meet with congressional delegation
By TY BEAVER
H&N
Staff Writer
March
2, 2010
Klamath County’s
three commissioners and its county treasurer will head
to Washington, D.C., Wednesday to meet with the Oregon’s
congressional delegation and attend an annual
legislative conference.
Commissioners will
spend the week meeting with federal lawmakers and their
staff to discuss issues in the Klamath Basin. Topics
will include federal timber payments that help pay for
schools and roads, and the recently signed Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement.
“This is always
something that is both worthwhile for the county and for
us professionally,” said Commissioner John Elliott.
The exact cost of
the D.C. trip for the four officials can’t be determined
until after expense reports are filed. But estimated
costs are about $1,885 per person, not including meals.
County Treasurer
Mike Long said roundtrip airfare averages to about $450
per person, with hotel accommodations costing about $205
per night per person.
Commissioners
regularly attend the National
Association of
Counties’ annual legislative conference. The three
commissioners — Al Switzer, Elliott and Cheryl Hukill —
and Long sit on committees within the organization.
Commissioners have
meetings set up with U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., and
U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both D-Ore. They
will also meet with the staffs of the lawmakers sitting
on the House Subcommittee on Water and Power, part of
the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Hukill said the
reauthorization of federal timber payments, provided by
the Secure Rural Schools and Communities Self
Determination Act, and the situation facing
the red zone, a part
of the Fremont-Winema National Forests devastated by
pine bark beetles, would be among top issues for
commissioners.
Elliott said that
the restoration agreement, which seeks to resolve
disputes over water in the region, also would be a
priority, and he also expected discussions on air
quality.
Hukill added that
commissioners would touch upon a request for $220,000 to
$640,000 to develop plans for a joint mental
health-public health center on Washburn Way. The
structure would complement a recently constructed mental
health facility and also create jobs, she said.
“Every thing we’re doing is geared to
Klamath County,” she said.
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