By Joyce Morrison
OPINION - In the summer of 2001, we all gasped as we saw pictures of
dead animals bloated and deteriorating in the parched, drought ruined fields of
the
These poor animals were victims of dehydration and starvation when the
irrigation water was shut off to the farms and the wildlife refuge. The reason
for the water shortage was to provide an abundance of water for certain fish
listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act.
As gross as this sounds, seeing the pictures was nothing compared to the
trauma experienced by the folks who lived through this ordeal. They were forced
to be helpless bystanders watching this devastation when their badly needed
irrigation water was shut off in the midst of a drought.
Environmentalists claimed the Klamath River ESU coho salmon, the Lost River
Sucker fish and the Shortnosed Sucker needed the water more than the farmers and
the animals.
Farmers knew that even if they could survive that summer with only the water
they could haul in or pump from their wells, they would have no winter feed. In
fact, there was no pasture for the animals to graze that summer so many had to
be shipped to other parts of the state to be sold at a loss.
"Farming looks mighty easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a
thousand miles from the cornfield," said former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
And that is exactly the way these policy decisions are made. In
Finally, after it was too late, a portion of the water needed was released.
Four years later, residents of that area are still struggling and their water
needs have not been met.
“The Bush administration has freed more water for crops in recent years,
but federal managers say some farmers could be shorted up to 40 percent of their
usual supply this summer,” according to an article on the Klamath Bucket
Brigade website.
Farmers are being pushed to the brink. Can they hold on? Are they given just
enough water to give them a sense of false hope or will life finally get back to
normal? Will they be made "willing sellers" by what appears to be
fate?
As the folks from Klamath have said, “when the last salmon is gone, there
will be no more salmon. But when the last farmer is gone, there will be no more
food.”
Everyone worries about “farmland preservation” and fear mongers spread
the tale that urban sprawl is taking all the farmland.
At the same time, there is a major move to turn farmland into wetlands, place
conservation easements on property, take land out of food production and to take
the control of the land away from the farmer. Government and environmental
organizations are buying up land at record speed leaving less and less for
farming.
Potatoes and all the other food that is raised in this basin is what has
actually become endangered. The fact these fish are really endangered has been
questioned.
It is ironic that a recent article by Liz Bowen, Assistant Editor of the Pioneer
Press, tells of an 1851 journal stating the "
Bowen writes, “Roy Hall Jr., who is chairman of the present-day Shasta
Nation, has stated repeatedly that the coho salmon are not indigenous to the
Residents in the Klamath area tend to believe there is much more to this
whole thing than fish. In fact, they think this ordeal smells “fishy”. For
one thing, the coho salmon is what is used for canned salmon and for years the
sucker fish was considered a nuisance fish.
Could the push to move the
In case you don’t believe there is a Wildland’s Project, perhaps you
should attend the following conference to learn just how advanced this project
has grown and how the Federal Government is involved. Note it is a global plan.
A
The theme for the 8th WWC is Wilderness, Wildlands and People: A Partnership
for the Planet. It will generate the most up-to-date and accurate information on
the benefits of wilderness and wildlands to contemporary and traditional
societies, and will review the best models for balancing wilderness and
wildlands conservation with human needs.”
If you who are in education, you no doubt remember how
There has been a recent citizen uprising over their land use policies in
In November 2004, a statewide property rights referendum entitled Measure 37
was passed. Saviak said it “sent shockwaves throughout the nation’s planning
community and signaled a new era in the national property rights movement.”
Saviak said
You may not find this information significant because you don’t live in
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Joyce Morrison She has become a nationally-recognized advocate for property rights. |
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