The Endangered Species Act is one
of the worst scams ever perpetrated on the American
people and should be repealed. Once listed, a species is
seldom delisted and other species are continually added.
It is controlled by
biological opinion (not fact), that usually favors the
agency paying for the opinion. While the Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement may offer help several years down
the road, it will be too little too late for many local
farmers.
Last year’s iffy water start
and disastrous commodity prices left local farmers in a
tenuous position. Now with another poor water season
looming, and produce prices still low, it will break
many of them.
Farm equipment dealers are
loaded with unsold new, used and repossessed implements.
Fertilizer and other farm-related businesses will also
take big losses if much of our land goes without water.
Basin farm production
normally exceeds $300 million annually. Virtually
everyone locally is affected when any or all of that
money is not forthcoming.
Bureau of Reclamation
officials tell us that they are modifying the biological
opinion to allow 30 to 40 percent of the water we need
to farm. If they had done that last October, the lake
would be full and irrigation guaranteed.
It is well recognized that the
two biggest problems facing the world today are
overpopulation and starvation. It insults our
intelligence to put trash fish and algae-bloated salmon
ahead of good healthy farm produce. Neither the fish nor
any other federal programs supporting the Endangered
Species Act will offset millions lost when local farming
is not at full production.
America is fast becoming a
third-world country and the idiocies we see here, in
California and in other irrigation projects throughout
the northwest, only speeds up the process.
Warren
Haught
Klamath Falls