According
to the agreement
announced Thursday,
the Tribes will pay
$21 million for the
acreage, also called
the Mazama Tree
Farm. That amount is
written into the
Klamath Basin
Restoration
Agreement, which
addresses water
issues in the Basin.
The Tribes hope to
secure federal
funding through the
agreement.
Tribal
chairman Joe Kirk
said the agreement
is primarily to make
sure the Tribes can
obtain the property
should the
restoration
agreement be
implemented.
“ We’re
just trying to swing
a deal,” he said.
The Mazama
Tree Farm, owned by
Cascade Timberlands,
is within the heart
of the former
Klamath Reservation
that spanned 2.5
million acres. The
land is forested and
is bisected by
Highway 97.
Termination
The land
was sold off in
pieces following
termination of the
Klamath Tribes’
recognition by the
federal government
in the 1950s. The
Mazama Tree Farm
went through several
owners before ending
up with Cascade
Timberlands.
Tribal
leaders have long
pursued
re-establishment of
a land base for the
Tribes, saying it is
key to their members
becoming
economically stable
in the long term.
Specifically,
the Tribes seek to
manage the
property’s timber
and use it to revive
the region’s timber
industry.
Funding
Tribal
council member Jeff
Mitchell said the
Tribes plan to pay
for the property
with federal funds
in the restoration
agreement.
However,
should the
restoration
agreement not be
implemented, there
is language included
in the purchase
agreement to give
the Tribes another
way to pay. It was
unclear how long the
Tribes have to
produce
the
money for the
purchase before
Cascade Timberlands
can pull out of the
agreement and seek
other buyers.