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January
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Compromise and the
environment: A tale of two agreements
Portland
Oregonian
January 25,
2010
By Regna Merritt
Over the years, Oregon has seen its fair share of natural
resource conflicts. From efforts to clean up the Willamette
River and stop urban sprawl, to the timber wars and clashes
over endangered salmon. These debates have often highlighted
fundamental disagreements over how best to safeguard this
land we call Oregon.
For more than 35 years, Oregon Wild has been in the thick of
many of these fights, and we have never shied away from
taking unpopular positions or opposing politically powerful
special interests. But we are also open to compromise and
always seek to find lasting solutions to Oregon's
environmental challenges. The Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement isn't such a solution. A recent editorial in The
Oregonian labeled environmental groups opposed to the
agreement as "hard line." But the agreement is a deeply
flawed deal for the Klamath Basin.
This isn't the first time we've been criticized for taking a
strong position. In the late 1980s, when the federal
government was encouraging the clear-cutting of our last
old-growth forests (a staggering 1.6 million logging trucks
worth of trees were taken from Oregon's forests in 1989
alone), scientists were warning of dire consequences for
salmon and wildlife. When Oregon Wild and other
conservationists went to court to halt old-growth logging,
we were called names a lot worse than "hard line" by
everyone from local politicians to Rush Limbaugh.
Today, Oregonians treasure our remaining old-growth forests,
and the clean drinking water, wildlife habitat and
world-class recreational opportunities they provide. Science
is now increasingly showing that protecting and restoring
old-growth forests is one of the single biggest steps we can
take in Oregon to combat global warming.
Furthermore, we have been able to find common ground with
the timber industry. In December, after months of
negotiations, Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden introduced legislation
that would enact a carefully negotiated agreement between
environmentalists and timber industry leaders. Oregon Wild
was a prime mover in the talks that led to this historic
deal, and we are proud of our role in crafting a compromise
that protects old growth while promoting restoration
projects that create jobs and sustain rural communities.
These two recent "agreements" -- one on dams, the other on
forests -- stand in stark contrast. The difference? In the
eastern Oregon forest negotiations, long-time foes came
together to seek consensus and to craft solutions that
protect important natural resource values while preserving
sustainable jobs. We wanted a focused, balanced agreement.
Things were different in the Klamath Basin. In exchange for
supporting dam removal, politically powerful agribusiness
interests demanded other participants support unrelated
policies. Over the last few weeks many Oregonians have asked
themselves what dam removal has to do with continued
agricultural development on national wildlife refuge lands,
or generous water guarantees for irrigation without similar
commitments for threatened salmon runs.
Had similar unrelated "trades" had been proposed in the
eastern Oregon forest negotiations (like securing old-growth
protection by giving away rights to build a destination
resort along the Metolius River) Oregon Wild would have
rejected them. No doubt, that would have earned us another
"hard line" label.
In exceedingly complex situations like the Klamath, it takes
a careful eye to discern the difference between balanced
compromise and dangerous backroom deal-making. Until
unnecessary sacrifices for salmon, migratory birds, and
national wildlife refuges are eliminated from the Klamath
deal, we can't support it. In the meantime, we'll be proud
to be considered hard line.
Regna Merritt is executive director of Oregon Wild.
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