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Petition to Stop Removal of Klamath River Dams 

by Katherine Lehman, President

People for the USA ! Grange

January 22, 2008 

On Tuesday, January 22, the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors (BOS) held
their first public hearing on whether they should vote to allow removal of
the four hydropower dams on the
Klamath River , as suggested by the proposed
Klamath River Basin Restoration Agreement announced on January 15. PFUSA
Grange strongly opposes removal of the
Klamath River dams, so I attended
last week's meeting on behalf of our members that reside in
Siskiyou County
and submitted comments to that effect.

The BOS must do all possible to stop the removal of the dams. They have the
authority and the ability, through their coordinated land use planning, to
exert their critical responsibilities to protect the local tax base, the
value of private property, the economic stability of our towns, the
well-being of our school system, county jurisdiction over groundwater, and
in general, the well-being of the local community.

We support the County's positions, as previously communicated, acknowledging
fish and river health are important. No community in
Northern California has
done more to lead in Coho recovery than
Siskiyou County . We are the home to
two pilot projects that the Department of Fish and Game believes will be a
model for the state in working collaboratively and with a minimum of
bureaucracy to promote Coho recovery. But there are reasonable alternatives
to dam removal which would improve fish and river health but would not
significantly impact the
County of Siskiyou and its residents. Some of these
alternatives have already been identified; still more may not have yet been
considered. But it is imperative the consideration and selection process of
whatever alternative is ultimately adopted MUST involve all those in the
human dimension impacted by dam removal.

Among the many, significant public detriments of dam removal are the
following:

*         Lost production of 151 megawatts (mw) of abundant, clean,
renewable, sustainable, greenhouse gas free electricity for about 70,000
customers. This power brings $750,000 in annual tax revenues to the county.

*         Lost river-based tourism, business opportunities, tax revenue and
aesthetic values if the
Klamath River no longer flows 365 days a year.

*         Loss of ~6 million king salmon yearlings annually from
Iron Gate
Fish Hatchery, which will be closed.

*    Serious, unanswered, questions remain as to impact of unleashing the
estimated 20 million cu. yds.
(http://www.klamathbasincrisis.org/Poweranddamstoc/nodams/letters/fercMarcia
Armstrng111806.htm) of fine sediment lodged behind these dams will have on
downstream water quality.

*    The
Klamath River is severely infested with a myxozoan parasite
Ceratomyxa Shasta (C. shasta), resulting in mortality rates in the infected
out-migrating Coho smolts (an ESA listed species) as high as 50%, and
out-migrating Chinook smolts as high as 45%.

C. shasta infection results in mortality of returning adults as high as 20%.
The researchers found C. shasta infection is a systemic problem in open
reaches of the river, but not behind the dams. Dam removal would likely thus
infect the entire main stem and significantly increase the loss of both
smolts and returning adults from this controllable disease.

*    Approximately 1,600 privately owned parcels could suffer
depreciation in value due to loss of shorefront property, loss of water
access, loss of lake views, loss of recreational opportunity, impacts of the
deconstruction process;, and impacts of muck and mire until the area is
rehabbed and re-vegetated. This would then adversely impact tax revenues
received by the County.

Siskiyou County residents and other people downstream MUST NOT bear the
brunt of reckless acts that will definitely hurt the human population just
because they are purported, but not proved, to benefit fish! Totally apart
from the environmental considerations, dam removal will, among other things,
further harm our tax base, reduce property values, dramatically curtail
world class white water rafting recreational opportunities, and, unless
fully mitigated, negatively impact the quality of life in our community.
Siskiyou County 's general unemployment now stands at 11 percent, and it
stands at 18.8 percent on the
Klamath River corridor.

Senator Dianne Feinstein has called the price tag for
Klamath River dam
removal "indefensible"
(http://www.businessandmedia.org/specialreports/2007/mediamyth/BigDam/BigDam
Problem.asp) and warned taking the dams out would leave the state vulnerable
to "drought and blackout."

The dams started shutting off fish habitat almost 100 years ago, decades
before fish production fell. No compelling data or studies demonstrate that
dam removal is the best answer to assist in the recovery of fish.
Information from PacifiCorp indicates that water quality would actually be
decreased by dam removal. Scientists admit there is a distinct shortage of
scientific analysis of the consequences of removing the hydropower dams
along the
Klamath River . Lacking that scientific knowledge, predictions of
the full economic and environmental impacts would be pure guesswork.

A robust dam removal impact assessment MUST be completed and publicly
disseminated, studied and analyzed BEFORE any decision is made to remove or
decommission the dams, ensuring ALL THE IMPACTS to the interests of Siskiyou
County and its residents are identified, understood, fully funded and
satisfied prior to removal.

California suffers from serious, and increasing, shortages in both water and
power; to take out four dams which help alleviate BOTH problems is beyond
stupid. And for Siskiyou County to lose Siskiyou County will lose its
current aesthetic enjoyment of the river, the economic potential of related
business, tax revenues from businesses and valuable real estate, and control
over County groundwater, forever, for a paltry $20 million is irresponsible,
if not criminal!

At the first public hearing, BOS Chairman Bill Overman made it clear the
Board will hold as many public meetings as are necessary to hear the input
of every interested party. However, my concern is that no matter how many
public hearings are held, the vast majority of county residents will not be
able to attend due to work or other conflicts. So PFUSA developed and is
distributing a petition you can print here (http://www.grange-pfusa.org),
sign and submit to voice your opposition to dam removal. This is a serious
issue; please take immediate action!

The next public hearing (and the only other one required by law) is
scheduled for Tuesday, February 19th. This one will start at
1:30pm , at a
location to be announced; the BOS are considering a larger venue to
accommodate an anticipated larger crowd. Please watch the BOS's website
(http://www.co.siskiyou.ca.us/bos/) for further details. Please do not sit
back and let someone else speak for you!
 

Petition to Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors available for free copy and
distribution at www.grange-pfusa.org or
www.grange-pfusa.com.

 

(Permission to post from the author.)

 

 

 

 

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