
House
committee wades into Klamath water dispute
Influence
- The panel is looking into charges that political pressure trumped
scientific data
August 01, 2007
JEFF
KOSSEFF
The
Oregonian
WASHINGTON
A congressional committee
on Tuesday questioned whether the Bush administration exercised improper
political influence in the 2001 dispute over water in the
Klamath
Basin
.
The House Natural
Resources Committee hearing focused on the decision to divert water to
farmers, despite federal scientists' concerns that the move would kill
protected salmon and more broadly at whether the Bush administration has
placed politics over science in its environmental decisions.
"This administration
has a pattern and practice of suppressing science on a whole host of
issues," said Rep. Jay Inslee, D-Wash.
In 2001, the Bureau of
Reclamation cut off irrigation water to Klamath-area farmers because
scientists from the Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine
Fisheries Service said a drought threatened protected fish.
The move devastated
farms. Members of Congress who represent them, including Rep. Greg
Walden and Sen. Gordon Smith, both Republicans, argued the farmers' case
to the administration.
Walden said he and his
colleagues asked "everyone from the president on down to do
whatever was within the scope of the law to help the farmers in the
Klamath
Basin
."
The National Research
Council reviewed the scientific determinations and, in 2002, the Bureau
of Reclamation used the new review to justify giving farmers more water.
Environmentalists and
fishermen say that decision led to the death of 70,000 salmon. But
Republicans cite a 2003 federal study that says the water diversion
can't be shown to be solely responsible for the fish kill.
The hearing was prompted
by a June article in The Washington Post. According to the article, Vice
President Dick Cheney asked an Interior Department staffer to request
the study from the National Research Council.
Cheney was invited to
testify at the hearing, but declined.
The Republicans cite a
2004 letter from the Interior Department Inspector General stating that
the inspector's department "found no evidence of political
influence" in the project.
But Mary L. Kendall, the
Interior Department's deputy inspector general, told the committee that
the investigation only examined whether White House adviser Karl Rove
influenced the decision. Investigators did not have any reason to
question Cheney's involvement then, she said. "In the end, we don't
know what we don't know."
Walden said he read the
document more broadly.
"I guess I'm just a
little perplexed by this notion that maybe Dick Cheney in the background
did something you wouldn't have spotted," Walden said.
Republicans and Democrats
debated the role elected officials should play in environmental matters.
"If you were
representing a group that had all of its water shut off and it was done
supposedly in the name of science would you not be requesting that at
least we look this science over, to investigate that it was at least
good science that we used in destroying the entire economy?" Rep.
Wally Herger, R-Calif., asked Rep. George Miller, D-Calif.
"I'd say to the
gentleman that was a different request than the vice president made,
which is to get the science on the side of the farmers," Miller
responded.
Although the dispute is
more than five years old, the renewed interest could have political
consequences for Smith, who is up for re-election next year.
In a statement Monday,
Meredith Wood Smith, chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Oregon,
called for Smith to apologize for his involvement in the Klamath.
"If Gordon Smith can
open an irrigation system to release thousands of gallons of
water," she said, "surely he can open his mouth and apologize
to Oregonians."
In a statement in
response to the committee hearing, Smith spokesman R.C. Hammond said the
Klamath decisions were based on sound science.
"The senator
believes leadership, not partisanship will solve the problems facing the
Klamath
Basin
,"
Hammond
said. "Any federal
policy that completely cuts off any group -- farmers, fishermen or
Native Americans -- is wrong, and he will fight it every time."
Jeff Kosseff:
503-294-7605; jeff.kosseff@newhouse.com
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Source:
http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/11859351361970
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