
Sparks
fly in wake of talks
Off-Project
irrigators point fingers about negotiation process
By
TY BEAVER
H&N
Staff Writer
January 26, 2008
Klamath
Basin Restoration Agreement opponents are accusing another off-Project
irrigator of negotiating portions of the agreement without their
knowledge; that irrigator says those accusations are false.
The
controversy concerns the water settlement deal released Jan. 15 that
allocates water among irrigators, fishermen, tribes and conservationists
in the
Klamath River
watershed. It also supports
purchase of 90,000 acres for the Klamath Tribes and advocates for
removal of four PacifiCorp dams.
During
a meeting with Herald and News editorial board, off-Project irrigators
Edward Bartell, Roger Nicholson and Garrett Roseberry claimed Becky
Hyde, an off-Project irrigator in Beatty, undermined the settlement by
negotiating with the the Klamath Tribes while working for conservation
group Sustainable Northwest. Sustainable Northwest was working for the
Tribes as consultants, they said.
Hyde denied the accusations. She said she was
associated with Sustainable Northwest, but she and the group do not work
and have not worked for the Tribes. She also denied that she negotiated
part of the settlement.
“How could I be negotiating at the settlement table
when I didn’t have a seat at the settlement table?” she said.
Nothing
unusual
Klamath Water Users Association members Steve Kandra
and Greg Addington defended Hyde, saying she, like other irrigators, was
seeking information on how the settlement would affect her and, they
added, there is nothing unusual about working with neighbors.
They and Klamath tribal council member Jeff Mitchell
criticized Bartell, Nicholson and Roseberry for defecting blame because
they didn’t get what they wanted in settlement talks.
“I think we were very successful until the Tribes
decided they didn’t want to honor the agreement,” Bartell said. He
is president of the Klamath Off-Project Water Users, and took part in
settlement talks.
Hyde said she and her family have a good relationship
with the Tribes, and negotiated the water right for family property on
the upper
Williamson
River
.
Mitchell said Hyde was not employed by the Tribes, but
has worked with them for years. He denied the accusation that Hyde was
acting as a “double agent” in settlement discussions.
“If the job didn’t get done, they should accept
some responsibility for that,” Mitchell said. “Let’s stop pointing
fingers at the neighbors.”
Waiting
outside
Bartell said Hyde waited outside the meeting room
during two settlement talks in Redding, and would talk with stakeholders
as they came out, undermining his efforts.
He said a member of the Tribes’ negotiation team
told him during a settlement meeting that the Tribes spoke with Hyde and
a few on-Project irrigators about negotiating parts of the agreement.
“They were essentially negotiating with
themselves,” Bartell said.
Hyde said she was in
Redding
for a December settlement
group meeting, and she was bound under the settlement’s
confidentiality agreement through Sustainable Northwest. Sustainable
Northwest is not among those listed as participants in settlement
discussions but Bartell said they participated in discussions.
Seeking
information
Hyde said she was not at the negotiation table and was
in
Redding
because she was concerned
about the settlement’s progress and was seeking information.
She said she knew many people involved in settlement
talks before those discussions began, and she saw no reason not to
continue speaking with them. She also asked that Bartell provide
documentation of her and Sustainable Northwest’s association with the
Tribes.
“I welcome an honest conversation with him,” she
said.
Bartell said Friday he was working to provide
documentation of his accusations.
Settlement representatives dismissed the idea that
Hyde was undermining Bartell’s efforts, and they said she had the same
right to information about the agreement as any other irrigator.
Kandra said Bartell’s accusations are a way to
distract attention from his inability to keep his constituents informed
and not answer their questions.
Side Bar
Sustainable
Northwest
According
to its Web site, www.sustain ablenorthwest.org
Sustainable Northwest is a nonpartisan entity created by political
leaders from
Oregon
and
Idaho
to help find solutions for
environmental, economic and social issues in the Northwest.
The
Portland-based organization conducts and participates in projects and
provides education and partnership opportunities.
Past
projects include a small-diameter lumber mill in the Wallowas in
Northeast Oregon
and a role in bringing a
biomass energy facility to
Lake
County
.
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