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Water deal the topic of
panel talk
A panel discussion about the
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement will be one of the key
events at the 2009 Watershed Council Gathering at Running Y
Ranch this coming week.
More than 200 people from
watershed organizations across the state, all part of the
Network of Oregon Watershed Councils, are expected to attend the
conference during its four days of discussions, workshops and
field trips.
An official with the network
said holding the event in the Klamath Basin will allow those
from around the state to experience another unique watershed.
Terry Morton, a facilitator
who formerly headed up the Klamath Watershed Partnership, said
the gathering would be a chance to highlight work done on the
KBRA, a settlement agreement that allocates water among Klamath
River stakeholders, including the tribes, irrigators, fisheries
and conservationists.
“I’m feeling very proud of
what the KBRA has accomplished and looking forward to sharing
that with other watershed councils,” she said.
The gathering, which occurs
every two years, starts Tuesday with comments from Klamath
County Commissioner John Elliott and U.S. Rep. Greg Walden,
R-Ore, who will appear by live video feed from Washington, D.C.
Most of the event’s
workshops and other featured speakers will be Wednesday and
Thursday. Attendees will have the opportunity to visit the
Sprague River area and a fish hatchery near Upper Klamath Lake.
The KBRA panel discussion
will include up to eight people representing irrigators on and
off the Klamath Reclamation Project, the Klamath Tribes,
environmentalists and fishermen.
John Moriarty, executive
director of the network, said the gathering provides a
combination of opportunities in education, networking and
hands-on experience of watershed activities in the Basin.
Morton
said those from Klamath and Lake counties began pushing to have
the gathering in the Basin a year ago because of the KBRA and
other watershed restoration activities going on in the region.
While the KBRA is not yet
complete and some
groups, such as off-Project irrigators, still have concerns, the
process the document resulted from is a model for other
watersheds to look to when resolving conflicts between the needs
of communities and the environment, she said.
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