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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
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Letter
from Mid-Basin citizens to be presented at State Water Resources Board
meeting today in Sacramento, California
We are here representing the citizens of Siskiyou
county and residents of Southern Oregon that have responded to an
opinion poll we have circulated over the past three months; the
businesses, residents and property owners of Iron Gate Lake Estates,
Copco Lake, the Klamath Basin. KRCE, R-Ranch, Klamath Ranch Resort,
the PFUSA Grange, the Hornbrook and Greenhorn Granges and the SOSS.
We would like to state our side of the water quality
issues of the Klamath River Basin, Iron Gate Lake and Copco Lake
Reservoirs. As citizens of Siskiyou County we’ve asked the County
Health Dept. for information on the Algae problems that have become
a headline in our area over the past few years. We have
read all the information and news articles connected to water
quality issues, namely the Blue Green Algae problem that is so very
present in the summer months of July and August in Siskiyou County
as well as every other water body in the world.
The environmentalists and Native Americans feel the
solution is removal of Iron Gate, Copco 1 and 2 and the JC
Boyle Dams all located on the Klamath River. Removal of theses Dams
will not solve the algae issues nor will it change them. The
Klamath River contains high levels of Phosphorus which the algae
thrives on. This is a natural occurrence starting with the artesian
wells, springs and rivers that feed the Klamath river in Oregon and
Upper Klamath Lake. This is all documented facts, and have
been studied by many groups. Two of these groups are the
Klamath Tribes and OSUKES ( Oregon State University, Klamath
experiment station).
There has never been a fish kill from the algae nor
has there been an illness or death recorded from exposure to the
blue green algae in Siskiyou County or the State of California. The
location and presence of the algae and toxins from the algae is very
unpredictable, location and presence can vary by the minute.
There is no approved testing methods for toxin analysis, it takes
approximately six weeks to get results after sampling a noted
problem area and by then the area has now blown across the lake and
is somewhere else. Blue green algae in lakes used for
recreation are a common occurrence throughout the world. There is
very little research on human health effects from the algae and
their toxins. Blue green algae in lakes used for recreation is a
common occurrence through out the world. Documents currently do not
accurately reflect the current state of science, i.e.: Human risk
assessment cannot be performed due to insufficient data. There has
been only a thirteen week study done on mice. On county and state
levels much more scientific data must be taken on the effects of the
algae and it’s toxins with consideration given to the
ramifications on property owners, business owners and communities
that may be dependent on these recreational water bodies.
The power produced by the Hydroelectric Plants on the
Klamath River is a clean, safe, non greenhouse-gas-generating
energy. The removal of these would be devastating to citizens
and the State who benefit from power produced and recreation
provided. The revenue loss alone would hurt every tax payer, home
owner, business owner in Siskiyou county.
Copco Dam was built in 1917, 89 years ago, there is
an eco-system thriving in our river, and lakes, do we just kill it?
This eco-system includes but is not limited to several species of
fish, water fowl, herons, eagles, osprey, turtles as well as many
species of mammals, deer, cougar, bear, and so on.
We believe there are answers and solutions to all the
water quality issues and the survival of the salmon, but there needs
to be much more information gathered and research done to come to a
solution that can benefit all. Removal of the Algae before it
blooms is a less drastic solution than removal of the dams, the
Bureau of Reclamation is now working on this very issue.
Let us all use good and sound science in the water
quality issues before us. Save our dams, lakes, salmon and our
way of life in Siskiyou county.
Thank you.
Permission to post from the
authors.
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