The Siskiyou County
Supervisors have a reputation in government circles;
discussion of their antics usually provokes laughter and the
shaking of heads. That was the case recently when a
newspaper report on the Siskiyou Supervisors
March 10th meeting
revealed the supervisors' attitudes toward salmon and the
fishermen’s group Cal Trout.
Siskiyou County
Supervisors never miss an opportunity to posture and rant
about how this or that environmental protection is
destroying the county economy. The latest opportunity was a
report by the firm of McBain and Trush on a Shasta River flow study. Marcia Armstrong, who
represents western Siskiyou
County, including the Scott River Valley, complained that “everything is
for fish, and everything else is going to the john!” She
then proclaimed that fishing is no longer a vital activity
in the county.
Supervisor Armstrong was expressing her
hope rather than describing reality. Numerous economic
studies document the benefits that steelhead and salmon
continue to contribute to Klamath River Communities. Those
economic benefits could be much larger however. A report
from the United States Geological Survey estimated the
economic benefits of restored Klamath River fisheries to local and regional communities in
the billions of dollars.
http://www.klamathbasin.info/USGSReport.pdf.
While even the current depressed fisheries bring significant
revenue to Klamath River
communities, Armstrong only recognizes mining, logging and
agriculture as contributing to local well being.
Supervisor Jim Cook agreed with Armstrong.
He also expressed his opinion of Cal Trout: “This is the
first time I’ve seen anything that Cal Trout has been
involved with that wasn’t a piece of crap,” he concluded.
He was referring to the flow study which the Department of
Fish and Game contracted with Cal Trout to complete. The
fishing organization hired McBain and Trush to do the work.
The ideological
positions adopted by the Siskiyou Supervisors have sometimes
harmed the interest of their citizens. The
March 18th edition
of the Siskiyou Daily News, for example, reported the
purchase of Big Springs Ranch by The Nature Conservancy,
including this statement: The conservancy hopes to
alleviate regulatory pressures on ranchers along the rest of
the river system…..She explained that this can hopefully be
achieved with the improvements on the land now owned by the
conservancy.
This is not the first
time that the Big Springs Area was targeted for restoration.
The BLM tried to purchase the wetlands and springs in the
area a decade ago for the same purposes and was blocked by
the Siskiyou County Supervisors. The Supervisors are
ideologically opposed to new public ownership. The private
entity that subsequently purchased the land diverted more
water from Big Springs – harming Coho, other fisheries and
downstream irrigators. Had the BLM been allowed to purchase
Big Springs Ranch in exchange for selling more acreage
elsewhere in the county, the Coho would likely not be as
imperiled as they now are in the Shasta River. The current burden on landowners to
provide for fish and water quality would also likely be
lower if the Supervisors' opposition had not blocked the
project.
As in the
case with the BLM and Big Springs wetlands, the Siskiyou
Supervisors’ ideological stances have consistently and
persistently delayed restoration and encouraged degradation
of salmon habitat. Ignored problems don’t go away, they just
get bigger and require bigger changes and dislocations when
they are finally faced. By refusing to recognize problems
and to support real solutions, the Siskiyou Supervisors
contribute to conditions which result in ESA designations,
Clean Water Act impairment listings and environmental
litigation.
There is an
old saying that some folks would rather curse the darkness
than light a light. To KlamBlog that adage describes the
Siskiyou Supervisors to a tee.