Pacific News Service, Commentary, Tim Holt, Aug 09, 2005
Editor's Note: Native Americans across the nation are
restoring land and waterways, but they face a dominant culture whose agencies
are often charged with simultaneously protecting and exploiting nature.
DUNSMUIR, Calif.--They are gradually emerging from the deep shadows of the
dominant culture. Across the Great Plains, Indians are bringing back the
buffalo, the wild mustang and the wolf. In my own region of Northern
California the 2,200-member Hoopa tribe is making headway in their effort to
restore a river and a fishery that had sustained them for 10,000 years.
The Indians bring a kind of practical environmentalism to the ongoing debate
over our relationship to the land and its resources. It is an environmentalism
tied to a particular place, one that's been their home for thousands of years.
They have learned to live within the limits of its resources.
But native peoples must contend with powerful, rapacious forces in the larger
society that view rivers as irrigation ditches, and water as nothing more than
a commodity to be bought and sold.
The Hoopas and a neighboring tribe, the Yuroks, struggled for 40 years to
restore their river after it was drained by dams and diversions. The farmers
of the San Joaquin Valley, 300 miles to the south, began siphoning water from
the Trinity after they'd depleted their groundwater and tapped out the rivers
in their own region.
Last May, after a protracted legal struggle with those farmers, the Hoopas
finally saw flows restored to their decimated river -- at a level only about
half the Trinity's historic flows but sufficient to bring salmon populations
back to sustainable levels, according to government biologists.
But even this minimal restoration is far from assured. The Hoopas' legal
victory didn't put an end to the mentality that drained their river in the
first place. The federal Bureau of Reclamation, the agency that built the
Trinity's dams and diversions, recently promised its water customers to the
south an additional million acre-feet of water over the next 20 years, a 15
percent increase over the current level of deliveries.
To achieve this, the Bureau will need to tap more deeply into the Trinity's
two reservoirs. In dry years, the river's drained reservoirs won't be able to
provide the cool water required for spawning salmon and steelhead, so any
gains in the fishery made in previous years could easily be wiped out.
To give itself more flexibility, the Bureau has dropped strict guidelines that
previously regulated flows from Northern California dams to protect salmon.
This move has raised cries of alarm from state officials who fear efforts to
restore endangered fish will be jeopardized, not only in the Trinity but in
the state's main river system, the Sacramento.
The Bureau currently finds itself on both sides of this issue. On the one
hand, it is charged with carrying out the physical restoration of the Trinity,
reshaping it from the straight channel of the post-dam era to a meandering
stream with the quiet side pools necessary for spawning and nurturing young
salmon. Ironically, the benefits from this painstaking work are now
jeopardized by this same Bureau's plans to ship more water down south. What we
are witnessing here is a full-blown case of bureaucratic schizophrenia, an
agency trying to practice resource stewardship and resource exploitation at
the same time, in the same river.
And it gets even crazier. Some of the Bureau's water customers down south
won't even be able to use the additional water the Bureau plans to ship them.
In part this is due to reduced planting because of falling commodity prices.
There are other problems: The Bureau's biggest agricultural customer, the San
Joaquin valley's sprawling Westlands Water District, has started reducing its
planted acreage due to chronically poor drainage and the accumulation of toxic
chemicals and salt in its soils.
But the additional water the Bureau's customers are getting definitely won't
go to waste. The extra, taxpayer-subsidized water can be sold in the
increasingly lucrative open market, where agricultural districts can get at
least double what they pay the federal government for it.
It took the Hoopas and their allies 40 years to halt the draining of their
river and begin the restoration of its fishery. But the system that drained
the river in the first place, the system hijacked long ago by corporate
farming interests, remains firmly in place, poised to exploit the increasingly
valuable commodity it receives at taxpayer expense. From that bottom-line
perspective, the use of water to grow crops is just one more
"option," and its use to improve the health of rivers and their
fisheries makes no sense at all.
PNS contributor Tim Holt is an environmental writer living in the Mt.
Shasta region of Northern California. He is author of "Songs of the
Simple Life," a collection of essays.
Source: http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=8b9973723