After reading Matt Jenkins' article, I looked
back at HCN's tag line: "For people who care about the West,"
and wondered what this means in the context of the so-called
"ceasefire" in the Klamath
(HCN, 6/23/08).
Turns out caring for the West and the invaluable ecosystems in
the Klamath is tough, especially if your cares include egrets,
river flows or wetland restoration.
Jenkins characterizes the recent events in the Klamath as a
ceasefire, but ongoing dialogue among interest groups in the
basin hardly reflects a ceasefire. In fact, some might argue
that the settlement agreement has caused nothing but unnecessary
fractures between communities that have had long relationships
on the Klamath.
The Klamath experience as the product of
"perpetual negotiation" is entirely misleading. The settlement
is the result of sweetheart deals and Bush administration
propaganda, with a hope for fisheries restoration. Furthermore,
it is the product of playground politics -- if you disagree,
there's no room for negotiation, you're simply kicked off the
team.
Though Jenkins acknowledges the settlement is
nowhere near done, what he neglects to mention are the potential
pitfalls, those concerns raised by groups like Oregon Wild and
WaterWatch of Oregon (kicked off the team), and even some groups
still in the room (Northcoast Environmental Center). Sadly, this
peaceful settlement allows for continued chemical-intensive
commercial agriculture on over 22,000 acres of National Wildlife
Refuge land for at least 50 years, does not provide river flows
for fish that meet the basin's best available science, lacks a
comprehensive drought plan, and eliminates opportunities for
water quality improvement by constraining upper basin wetland
restoration.
The Klamath Basin battle for water requires
compromise from all to create a holistic solution that manages
for fish and wildlife success while bringing water demand back
into balance with what the basin can naturally provide.
Ani Kame'enui
Klamath Campaign Coordinator, Oregon Wild
Portland, Oregon
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