Students study Basin
By Pat Ratliff
Klamath Courier staff writer
May 17, 2006
KLAMATH FALLS - Last Tuesday, thirteen Colorado State students
and their instructors Mark Smith and Libby Earthman were in Klamath Falls to
study the Klamath Basin.
The students were first given a presentation by Christine
Karas, from the Bureau of Reclamation office in Klamath Falls.
Later that day, the students heard two presentations by Barb
Hall of the Klamath Bucket Brigade at the Winema Lodge near Tulelake.
Halls' first presentation concerned the economic impacts of the
2001 water shut off, followed by a second presentation on Klamath Project
water rights and the adjudication process. Information used was also
distributed to the students in handouts. The students were also given
copies of the Range Magazine special on Western Water Wars and a newspaper
supplement on the water crisis from 2001.
The presentations, which were scheduled to last about one and
one half hours turned into a three hour meeting, with many questions from
students after the presentation.
"I really enjoyed doing this presentation." Barb Hall
told the Klamath Courier, "It was a chance to tell outsiders about what
happened here in 2001, the Project, and how it affected my neighbors.
The college kids were nice and very interested. They asked some
very good and very tough questions."
In late 2003, the Klamath Bucket Brigade turned its attention
to education rather than farm and ranch relief from the 2001 Water Shut Off.
The nonprofit organization started a website, www.klamathbucketbrigade.org
which allows the visitor a 'one-stop' site for links to historic, scientific,
water quality issues, instream water supply data, plus much more. Hall
reports that the site received its 1 millionth hit this previous March;
something unheard of for other educational sites. She also reports that
the Bucket Brigade receives numerous requests for additional information about
the Klamath River Basin from college students around the nation.
Permission to post from the publisher.