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Klamath Tribes to vote Aug. 29
Tribal leaders
meeting with members now
By TY BEAVER
H&N Staff
Writer
Klamath Tribes leaders
are meeting with tribal members in preparation for a tribal
vote Aug. 29 on whether to support the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement and removal of four hydroelectric dams
on the Klamath River.
Those working on an
agreement to remove the dams are supposed to finish by Sept.
1. Jeff Mitchell, Klamath Tribes council member, said the
upcoming deadline for a final document coincided well with a
general tribal meeting usually held in late August.
“It’s always part of our
internal process to inform membership,” he said.
Participants in the dam
removal discussions said it’s possible they will miss the
Sept. 1 deadline. They say they are at a crossroads and will
either release a final agreement or halt negotiations.
Dam owner PacifiCorp,
the governments of Oregon and California and federal
representatives and others have met since November 2008 to
finalize the agreement, which proponents say would improve
water quality, habitat and strengthen salmon run in the
Klamath River.
The Tribes have already
had meetings in Portland, Eugene, Beatty and Klamath Falls
for its members on the issue. A final informational meeting
will be at the Klamath Tribes’ auditorium in Chiloquin
today.
Greg Addington,
executive director of Klamath Water Users Association, said
his organization would hold similar meetings for its
membership, but is waiting until a final document is ready.
Discussions about dam removal are in their final stages
but, he added, “final
stages could mean a lot of things.”
Siskiyou County
Supervisor Jim Cook said he understands the Tribes’ actions,
noting that discussions can’t continue forever.
Though he and the rest
of the Siskiyou supervisors still don’t want dam removal, he
said he is heartened from recent assurances that the proper
studies would be conducted to evaluate removal, and that
there’ll be appropriate mitigation and responsibility for
it.
“They certainly seem to be trying to satisfy our concerns,”
he said.
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