
Senator
slams water proposal
Those
involved in negotiations say people should keep an open mind
Herald and News
by Steve Kadel
January 13, 2008
The Klamath Basin water
settlement agreement will cost $1 billion to implement over 10 years and
contains no provision for add water storage, state Senator Doug Whitsett
of Klamath Falls said Saturday.
"It doesn't sound
like a very good deal to me," he said of the settlement, due to be
released any day.
But Greg Addington, who
has represented Klamath Project irrigators at the negotiating table,
said it's too early to form opinions.
"I know our elected
officials will not pass judgment until they have studied the document
and heard all points of view from their constituents," he said.
"At this point, the community should keep an open mind."
Commissioner John
Elliott, who represented
Klamath
County
at the settlement talks,
was critical of Whitsett's comments.
"I'm very surprised
and disappointed that the senator chose to pre-empt public comment, and
even pre-empt the final draft," Elliott said. "It's even more
surprising considering that he wasn't at the table.
"If the senator
believes that the status quo is acceptable, and it must be since he is
against the change that is represented by this document, then he has not
written many checks to an attorney to protect his water, ranching or
farming interests."
Addington and Elliott
declined to comment further, citing a confidentiality agreement
stakeholders agreed to.
Speaking during a
legislative town hall session at he
Klamath
Basin
Senior
Center
, Whitsett acknowledged he
hasn't seen the final document.
However, information he's
gathered from those involved indicate problems for local farmers and
ranchers, he said.
The agreement would
retire about 30,000 acre feet of water rights in the upper Basin,
Whitsett said, adding that could severely damage the area's cattle
industry. The document will supersede
Oregon
water rights, he said.
"We are
incrementally losing our right to use water," he said.
Another provision gives
about 80,000 acres of land along the
Cascade Range
to the Klamath Tribes, Whitsett said. The "Mazama
Project," which runs from
Sun
Mountain
to the Chemult area, will
become sovereign Indian property.
Community dissent
One of the 30 citizens
who attended the town hall meeting asked how the settlement could be
blocked.
"Loud, vociferous
community dissent," Whitsett replied. "From what I've heard
about it, I have huge concerns."
The senator said that
off-Project irrigators and the Hoopa Valley Tribe of California are not
endorsing the settlement.
Other issues
State Reps. Bill Garrard
of
Klamath Falls
and George Gilman of
Medford
also appeared at the
meeting. The three Republican legislators discussed issues ranging from
Oregon State Police staffing levels to partisan politics and funding for
Oregon Institute of Technology.
Garrard warned that
funding to complete construction of the second phase of OIT's
Martha
Anne
Dow
Center
for Health Professions is
not a sure thing.
"Don't count on
it," he said, adding that lawmakers won't know the budget forecast
until Feb. 15. Whether the money will be available will become
clearer than, Garrard said.
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