
People for the
USA
!
People for
the
USA
! Grange #835
P.O. Box 3574
,
Ashland
,
Oregon
97520
April 2, 2008
Dear Fellow
PFUSA! Granger:
It’s time
for an update and for a change; I hope you will hear me out and read
through this letter.
Most of you
have been following the news, discussions and analyses of the proposed
Klamath River Basin Restoration Plan (KRBRP). I hope you mailed the
comments cards we sent you for your elected federal representatives and
state governor. Whether you live in the
Upper
Klamath
Basin
or elsewhere in the State of
Jefferson
, this agreement will forever change your
lives…for the worse. If there’s a prayer of getting this stopped you
will be to be aggressively proactive. My letter is long, but in it I
hope to do two things - 1) provide you with enough information to
convince you to read the proposed KRBRP and therefore comprehend all
that is in store for you, and 2) provide you with information, however
limited, that will allow you to immediately become more involved in
stopping this disastrous agreement.
This
so-called “settlement agreement,” if approved and implemented, will
foundationally change our governance throughout the Klamath River
Watershed. The agreement implements an extra-Constitutional (read
UN-Constitutional) governance commission of unelected people who will be
largely, if not wholly, unaccountable to you the taxpayers who will fund
them and their control over you.
There are
many, many very dangerous provisions contained within the proposed
agreement. I’ll only touch on some of the ones I hope will shake you
loose. I would encourage you to read the document for yourself. You
should always reach your own informed conclusions and not rely on
others. The current draft (#11) is available online at http://www.edsheets.com/Proposed%20Klamath%20Basin%20
Restoration%20Agreement%20%20January%2015,%202008%20(Draft%2011).pdf.
The agreement
makes Fish Managers responsible for setting policy, instead of
implementing policy.
The agreement
seeks federal instream water rights, and seeks to “dedicate
Environmental Water to instream use in
California
waters for the purpose of preserving or
enhancing wetlands habitat, (and) fish and wildlife resources.” This
contravenes existing
California
riparian water law and permitted water
use for beneficial uses.
If the Mazama
Tree Farm is gifted to the Klamath Tribes (paid for by non-tribal
taxpayers), the Klamath Tribes will gain ~ 90,000 acres of forested
lands amounting to about 167 million board feet of timber, the land’s
associated water rights, and extension of tribal influence outside the
Klamath watershed providing the option of yet another revenue stream.
The agreement
requires legislative re-writes of existing Oregon, California and
federal statutes and regulations to eliminate inconvenient truths such
as Tom Paul’s (Deputy Director, OWRD) public admission that, if the
agreement is read literally, many of its provisions do
violate Oregon Water Law.
The agreement
would contravene Adair 3 where
the court ruled the Klamath Tribes’ claims to water rights (rights
affirmed by an earlier Adair decision,
even though the Klamath Tribes had no reservation) in the Upper Basin
must be adjudicated according to Oregon state law. The agreement
“settles” the Klamath Tribes’ water claims, giving them not only
rights to more water than the Basin normally produces each year, but
does so with the “time immemorial” priority date also found for the
Klamath Tribes by the Adair court.
The agreement
prioritizes water use for fish “restoration” in an effort “to
provide the Tribes with both sustainable natural resources and
sustainable communities.” It also calls for sustainable tribal
agriculture, so water use by tribal irrigators can trump that of
non-tribal irrigators.
By
“settling” the Klamath Tribes’ water claims (to more water than
even exists in the Upper Basin in most years), the tribal water right
will not be appurtenant to deeded land (there is no Klamath Tribes
reservation), as is required of other Oregonians.
If you live
“off-project” in the lower Basin, or in the Scott and
Shasta
Valleys
, you will likely face diminished flows,
at best, in most years. The Klamath Tribes will have the right to place
a “call” for the water you use. The Klamath Tribes will be in charge
of all restoration projects, and will be given priority consideration
for all grant monies for those projects. Scott and
Shasta
Valley
residents won’t even be able to earn
money working on these projects without permission from the Klamath
Tribes.
If you live
in the Rogue Valley and obtain your water through the Talent Irrigation
District you face the outright cut-off of your irrigation flows within
one year from implementation of the agreement, unless TID can find
another ~ 30,000 acre feet of water. No big deal, right? We all know how
much un-appropriated water is available, especially in the West. This
cut-off of water will remove ~ 25% of all irrigation water in the
Rogue
Valley
, with profound effects.
The agreement
is predicated on removal of the four
lower Klamath
River
hydropower dams, all of which are
located on Shasta aboriginal lands. If you read the agreement, you’ll
see the Shasta were not participants. Dam removal is promoted as being
necessary to “restore” salmonids in the
Upper
Basin
, with no scientific proof. But the
Shasta do not favor dam removal. Many have told me Coho salmon were
never indigenous to the
Klamath River
; and that historically the few salmon that made it
to the
Upper
Basin
were of such poor quality as to be
inedible. They also told me
Upper
Basin
tribes did not catch their own salmon,
but received them in trade with the Shasta.
The agreement
introduces tribal involvement in governance in the Basin. Will the
Klamath Tribes act as “federal dependents” … under the BIA’s
jurisdiction, members of “sovereign” nations … under the BIA’s
jurisdiction, or as fellow
U.S.
citizens? Since the courts, and federal
and state legislatures, have given tribal people a sort-of multiple
personality … to borrow from a famous expression about “a box of
chocolates” ….how will you know what you’ll get in any agreement?
However, since the BIA was “at the table” participating in the
“settlement talks” the Klamath Tribes will likely never act as your
fellow citizens, because the first two statuses give them rights that
are un-equal and superior to yours. And as “sovereigns” they are
immune from federal and state statutes and regulations, while retaining
authority to direct your actions within their jurisdiction.
If it seems
to you the KRBRP is all about the Klamath Tribes, I concur. In fact,
I’ve been told by a senior congressional staffer this agreement is all
about “risk management.” It appears Congress believes the challenges
and controversies of the
Klamath
Basin
, and Tribal Trust claims and theories,
are best resolved by putting the Basin’s water in the hands of the
Klamath Tribes, managed, of course, by the federal government. And the
states are going along with this usurpation of their lawful, sovereign
authority.
But this
Tribal Trust interpretation by the court begs many questions. What seems
obvious to me from the Adair court
decisions is this:
The Adair court
has ruled that the Klamath Tribes retain their fishing, hunting, and
gathering rights over all their aboriginal territory. The Adair court further ruled that since the Klamath Tribes retain their
fishing rights, they must be given a water right…seemingly appurtenant
to their fishing rights. The agreement will give the Klamath Tribes
virtually every other existing private water right in the
Upper
Basin
, so they can raise the number of fish
they want to harvest. This reasoning leads me to a question…will the
court next rule that the Klamath Tribes have the right to raise
wildlife, and maybe even food crops, on the private lands of others
(since they have no reservation) to fulfill their “right” to hunt
and gather on their aboriginal lands?
The agreement
runs roughshod over the Klamath Basin Compact. The Compact was ratified
over fifty years ago as the controlling agreement between the states of
California
and
Oregon
and Congress over the “development,
use, conservation and control (of the water resources of the
Klamath
River Basin
).” The Compact controls water use in
the nine counties and two states which contain land within the Klamath
River Watershed.
Article III
of the Compact, Distribution and Use of Water, directs that, subject to
existing rights, “In granting permits to appropriate waters…as among
conflicting applications to appropriate when there is insufficient water
to satisfy all such applications, each
state shall give preference to applications for a higher use over
applications for a lower use in accordance with the following order
of uses:
(a)
Domestic use,
(b)
Irrigation
use,
(c)
Recreational
use, including use for fish and wildlife,
(d)
Industrial
use,
(e)
Generation of
hydroelectric power,
(f)
Such other
uses as are recognized under the laws of the state involved.”
The Compact
further states, in Article III(3)(1), “All rights, acquired by
appropriation after the effective date of this compact, to use water
originating within the Upper Klamath River Basin for use (a) or (b) in
the Upper Klamath River Basin in either state shall be superior to any
rights, acquired after the effective date of this compact, to use such
waters (i) for any purpose outside the Klamath River Basin by diversion
in California or (ii) for use (c), (d), (e) or (f) anywhere in the
Klamath River Basin (in other words, water use in the Upper Basin for
domestic and irrigations uses trump uses for fish). Such superior
rights shall exist regardless of their priority in time…”
It seems
obvious that the apparent designs of the federal and state agencies,
tribal representatives, and fish and wildlife advocates participating in
the settlement talks required the Compact be ignored until new statutory
language can be drafted to eliminate your protection by this very
inconvenient document.
I could go on
and on with what’s wrong with the settlement agreement, but have spent
more than enough time on it.
I’ve told
you about the coordinated land use planning conference we held for
Stewards of the Range last year. Some of you attended, and some of you
have been aware of our attempts to get the Jackson County Board of
Commissioners, and the Siskiyou Board of Supervisors to adopt
coordinated planning so they can assert a great deal of control over
federal land use planning and actions, especially within their own
counties. We’ve made no appreciable progress.
I raised the
alarm about the KRBRP with the Jackson County Board of Commissioners,
with no noticeable effect. I raised the alarm with the Talent Irrigation
District, and with many TID customers I personally know, with no
noticeable effect.
Before the
April 1 Siskiyou County BOS meeting, at which Chairman Overman had
previously stated they would vote their position on the KRBRP and its
required dam removal, I sent the Board a letter addressing various
concerns they’d expressed with coordination. Even though four of them
attended our conference last year, I believed they really just didn’t
understand the process. I wrapped up that letter asking they assert
themselves over the settlement agreement. This is the sure way
to stop this agreement in its tracks.
I attended
the Board’s vote, along with a few friends who’ve been working to
educate the general public on this agreement. The Board voted to oppose
dam removal. This will be well received among the general populace, but
is a meaningless gesture; without coordination the Board cannot bring
any muscle to bear on this issue. The Board also voted to oppose the current
settlement agreement. This will also probably be well received
among the general populace, but again, means little without coordination
to back up their position with muscle.
The Board
took both positions with the expressed intent of continuing
participation in formation of the KRBRP, and only after assurances from
County
Counsel
that they could take these positions and
continue to participate in the settlement talks, as they expressed
their desire to “protect” county citizens.
I wrote each
Supervisor this morning asking for clarification on whether they’d be
asserting coordination protocols. Supervisor Cook replied asking me to
call him. When I did I received his voicemail. I left a message but did
not hear back from him that afternoon or the next day. Supervisor
Armstrong also replied stating, “This has not been discussed as an
option by the Board of Supervisors.”
The best
shield the Board can wield is coordinated planning, unless their
non-support kills the agreement, which they clearly do not want. Please
pray with me that their non-support does kill the agreement!
Lawsuits against this agreement are expected to be filed immediately
upon approval, by many different parties. The Board, as participants,
will be required to defend the agreement in such suits. This
alone could be economically devastating to the County.
Rumor control
says the agreement will be signed on April 14th. There’s no
reason to believe the other participants will significantly alter those
provisions the Board’s doesn’t like within the next two weeks when
they’ve been unwilling to do so the last several years.
What was most
frustrating for me, and the final straw for me, was the general
consensus among “our people” that the Board gave us what we wanted. NO,
they did not; not even close! They passed resolutions detailing how
they feel about the
settlement agreement and dam removal. Resolutions have no teeth.
Siskiyou
County
adopted a coordination ordinance back in
1999, yet the Board is not acting on it. They clearly demurred from
taking a leadership position and offering real solutions, as was
proposed by Supervisor Kobseff. And they have been unwilling, for over a
year now, to take a strong stand in support of, and protecting the
health and welfare of, the people of
Siskiyou
County
. They could stop this agreement dead in
its tracks, but have not.
As I earlier
told those of you in Jackson County….I submitted a written inquiry to
the Jackson County Board of Commissioners many, many weeks ago, asking
several questions…….such as what the Board’s involvement was with
the agreement, what it was doing to protect our irrigation water, if
they would hold any public hearings on the agreement, etc. To date they
have not answered any of my questions except to tell me they knew
nothing about the agreement, hadn’t participated, and they thanked me
for the heads-up. Apparently, end of sentence!
We are at the
point……..actually, we are well past
the point…….where we can use our family, our business, and our
other personal obligations to keep us from raising the roof over these
issues. The participants in the settlement agreement have one hand
trying to jack your power rates, one hand trying to turn your water off,
while trying to put a boot on your neck, yet you have responded with
little more than polite statements and questions.
Each of us,
and each member of all the affected groups, should have not only filled
the Board’s chambers April 1, but overflowed out into the hall, down
the steps, out the front door of the courthouse, down the steps and
around the block…..but most were apparently too busy.
We no longer
have the luxury of making excuses. We face many very dangerous threats -
to our civil liberties, to our economic well-being, to our rights to own
and control the use of our own property, to our use and enjoyment of
government owned or managed lands, to name just a few.
I cannot
pretend our government, at any level, is working to protect our
freedoms. I cannot rely on someone else………some other group or
individual, will preserve my freedoms for me. I am seeking the company
of like-minded people who will aggressively
working to turn the tide and return
America
to the
nation of our birth. I hope you
are such an individual because PFUSA! needs immediate reinforcements if
we are to stop this agreement and prevent future assaults in our
communities!
Please
immediately contact me at (541) 482-4096 if you want to learn more about
coordinated land use planning, and especially if you want to receive
training on this very powerful tool.
PFUSA’s
next meeting is April 12th, at Hornbrook grange, starting at
10
am
.
You can read our memo to the Siskiyou BOS at www.grange-pfusa.org.
Kathy Lehman
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