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| H&N photo by Elon Glucklich - Bill Garrard, right, details his opposition to the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement as Karl Scronce looks on. Scronce is looking to unseat the incumbent Garrard in the May 18 primary election for 56th District Representative in the Oregon Legislature. |
The two
are vying for the Republican nomination to
represent the 56th District in the state
Legislature. They spoke Tuesday at a Klamath
County Republican Women’s forum, where
candidates for a number of local, state and
federal offices spoke to a crowd of about 30
in advance of the May 18 primary election.
Garrard, who has represented the district since 2000, opposes the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement and its related dam removal settlement, which aims to resolve water disputes in the Klamath River Basin and advocates removal of four dams.
But
Scronce, past president of the National
Association of Wheat Growers and a board
member of
“It is time for a change. It is time to start fresh. It is time to get true representation for our citizenry,” Scronce said.
Garrard said Scronce was running as “payback” for his position on the KBRA.
Garrard said his experience working with political blocs from around the state makes him best-suited to bring state resources to the Klamath Basin.
“Never in the history of this state have we ever needed legislative experience more than we will in 2011,” he said. “My opponent in this primary has never run for public office, never held a public or political seat, yet he wants to go to Salem and make a lot of changes. The next Legislature is no place to send a rookie.”
County commissioner
Also at the forum were Klamath County Commissioner John Elliott and challenger Dennis Linthicum.
An opponent of the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, Linthicum called it a “glaring example of misrepresentation” by the state Legislature.
“The vast majority of the community would rather not suffer the economic burden of removing the dams,” Linthicum said.
Elliott said community efforts, such as the push for a long-term veterans care facility and the approval of an independent tax base for the county library system, are evidence of the current commissioners’ work to increase Klamath County’s standing throughout Oregon.
“I am privileged to be part
of a dynamic team, looking to the future and
dealing with current challenges,” Elliott
said.