Myth:
“Lease land farming pollutes the refuge with toxic chemicals.”
FACT:
After years of study, there has not been one shred of evidence to
suggest pesticide use on the lease lands is detrimental to wildlife.
Myth:
“Removing crops creates additional water for the refuges".
FACT:
First, consider that the
Myth:
“The Fish and Wildlife Service has to decide whether to manage
these lands for geese, herons and eagles or for potatoes, onions and
alfalfa."
FACT:
Agriculture and wildlife management is not an either-or proposition.
In fact, the opposite is true. Migrating
waterfowl depend upon the cereal grains that are planted on 75% of the
acreage of the lease lands, as required by federal law, for food and
habitat. The row crops – the “potatoes, onions and alfalfa” of which
environmental activists speak – can be planted on not more than 25%
of the total lease land acreage. This
is not a conflict, but a mutually beneficial relationship.
FACT:
According to the California Waterfowl Association, “[f]or nearly
100 years, farmers and ranchers of the Klamath Basin have coexisted with
immense populations of wildlife. Many
wildlife species, especially waterfowl, are familiar visitors to their
highly productive farms and ranches. Klamath
Basin agriculture provides a veritable nursery for wildlife.”
Myth:
"The lease land program is inconsistent with the National
Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act."
FACT:
A coalition of environmental groups raised similar arguments several
years ago in Federal District Court, arguing that crops grown, pesticide
use, extensive water use and poor water quality make this program
incompatible with waterfowl purposes. The
court rejected those arguments outright, upholding the Fish and Wildlife
Service’s determination that the lease land program is entirely consistent
and compatible with waterfowl management.
What is true is that if the ONRC recommendations were to be implemented, they would cause further economic hardship to Klamath Basin farmers, who are still struggling in the wake of the 2001 water shut off.
Source:
Klamath Water Users Association