The Klamath Basin
has been held hostage by the Endangered Species Act for more
than 20 years. The timber industry will never recover, and
farmers and ranchers are in dire straights.
As you may remember, last February, National Marine Fisheries
Services demanded huge additional flows down river to flush
parasites off the coho salmon and back out into the sea.
As hard-strapped taxpayers, we will never know the weird
science behind that rationale, but it ranks right in there with
increasing flows down the Rio Grande river to wash disease and
pestilence off the millions of illegals who come across that
well-known creek.
When the U.S. government is not manipulating the ESA to exert
more control, they have proposed listings like the chinook
salmon to pick up the slack. We can only hope that Congress,
with control of the purse strings, will drastically reduce
funding for the ESA.
With our great country and the rest of the world in deep
financial trouble, you would think that ESA listings, most of
which are a drag on the economy, would be high on the list for
cost cutting. Our local 11.8 percent unemployment rate is in
large part due to the ESA.
The sucker fish is currently under five-year review, but like
the spotted owl, I see little hope for delisting. All local
irrigation entities and public officials are of like mind to
modify the ESA, so lets keep the pressure on.
Warren W. Haught
Klamath Falls