By TY BEAVER
H&N Staff
Writer
August 20,
2008
DORRIS
— The
potential
impact of
removing
four Klamath
River
hydroelectric
dams. The
water supply
needs of
irrigators.
The future
of salmon in
the upper
Klamath
Basin.
The
boards of
Klamath
County
commissioners
and Siskiyou
County
supervisors
met Tuesday
in Dorris to
discuss
portions of
the Klamath
Basin
Restoration
Agreement
and consider
future
collaboration
on issues of
mutual
concern.
Though
the boards
made no
decisions,
members said
the meeting
opened an
important
dialogue,
and they
plan to meet
regularly.
“It
was a
positive
endeavor,”
said Klamath
County
Commissioner
John
Elliott.
Siskiyou
County
supervisor
Jim Cook
said the
meeting’s
purpose was
to open
dialogue
between the
two county
governments.
Many
California
county
governments
collaborate
with each
other and
the Siskiyou
supervisors
wanted to do
the same
with their
Oregon
neighbors.
The
restoration
agreement is
a 256-page
document
developed by
fishing,
farming,
tribal,
environmental
and
governmental
stakeholders.
Along with
removal of
four
hydroelectric
dams on the
Klamath
River, it
seeks
stabilized
water
supplies and
power rates
for
irrigators
and use of
public funds
to buy
private land
for the
Klamath
Tribes.
Siskiyou
County
supervisors
voted
against the
agreement
because they
don’t want
the dams
removed.
Klamath
County
commissioners
haven’t
voted yet.
The
meeting
opened with
public
comment.
Differing
views
Proponents
of the water
settlement
proposal
described it
as a
watershed
agreement
that
provides a
road map to
a stable
future.
Opponents
said the
agreement
doesn’t
address real
problems
within the
watershed
and is
cultural
genocide.
The
Siskiyou
supervisors
restated
their
unanimous
position
against the
agreement,
saying there
are
unanswered
questions
about dam
removal and
salmon in
the upper
reaches of
the river.
Those
questions
prompted
supervisors
Jim Cook and
Michael
Kobseff to
visit
lawmakers in
Washington,
D.C., and
explain the
county’s
position.
“There’s
too much not
on the table
for us that
we want
addressed,”
Kobseff
said.
Klamath
County
commissioners
stated their
individual
opinions
about the
agreement.
Commissioner
Bill Brown
said
everyone
wants a
water
settlement,
but it’s
important
how it is
done. The
stance of
the Siskiyou
supervisors
and other
groups
opposed to
the
agreement
indicates
not everyone
sees it as
being in
their best
interest, he
said.
Elliott
spoke toward
historic
landmarks
the
restoration
agreement
marked with
the
cooperation
of former
opponents in
the Basin,
but he said
he was open
a discussion
of logical
alternatives.
Klamath
County
Commissioner
Al Switzer
expressed
his
opposition
to dam
removal and
desire to
see
agriculture
remain
viable, but
also said he
didn’t see
the two
counties
impacting
the future
of the
dams.
“We
don’t own
them,” he
said.