
In
Klamath
Basin
, politics trump science
By
Steve Pedery
July 5, 2007
As Americans we
expect our government to make decisions about the survival of fish and
wildlife based on science. But in the drought-plagued
Klamath
Basin
, science has long taken a
back seat to sweetheart deals and political favoritism. Under the Bush
administration, fish and wildlife ended up high and dry, while powerful
special interest groups ended up with the water.
Those days may be coming
to an end. This week, U.S. Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., chairman of the
House Natural Resources Committee, announced he would hold hearings to
investigate charges that Vice President Dick Cheney personally
intervened to overturn fish restoration efforts in the Klamath, sending
scarce water to irrigation interests instead of fish, despite objections
from scientists.
That action led to 2002's
massive adult fish kill that claimed over 70,000
Klamath River
salmon. The catastrophe,
together with ongoing kills of water-starved baby salmon each spring,
led to fishing restrictions that devastated
Oregon
and
California
's commercial salmon fishing
industry.
A Washington Post
investigation uncovered Cheney's role in this tragedy. Among other
things, the report alleges Cheney personally called natural resources
managers to demand that they cut water for salmon during a drought year
to favor powerful agribusiness interests. According to the Post, Cheney
wanted to reward political allies and win re-election votes for U.S.
Sen. Gordon Smith.
This isn't the first time
politicians have sacrificed the Klamath's fish and wildlife values to
achieve political goals. In 2003, The Wall Street Journal alleged that
the political motives of White House adviser Karl Rove, not science, had
driven federal decisions in the
Klamath
Basin
. And in 2002, U.S. Rep. Greg Walden killed a $175 million
restoration bill for the Klamath - legislation that would have benefited
both salmon and farmers.
Unfortunately, they
haven't stopped exploiting the Klamath yet. As detailed in the Los
Angeles Times, the administration and its agribusiness allies have
hijacked closed-door talks over the removal of four Klamath River dams,
demanding that conservation groups, tribes and fishermen support
permanent commercial agricultural development on the Klamath's
spectacular national wildlife refuges. In addition, the administration
has insisted that all participants agree to guaranteed water deliveries
for Klamath agribusiness and support significantly weakened protections
for Klamath salmon, bull trout and other endangered fish. That's not how
most Americans want our government to operate.
The good news is there
are fair and cost-effective solutions. Phasing out commercial farming on
the
Tule
Lake
and
Lower Klamath
national wildlife refuges
would improve habitat for wildlife, cut pollution entering the
Klamath River
, and reduce the demand for
water. Removing the lower four
Klamath River
dams - a move favored by California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger -
would boost salmon numbers by opening 300 miles of former habitat. A
voluntary program to compensate farmers who permanently reduce water use
in the Klamath and restore rivers and streams would not only help the
environment, but also ensure a more stable water supply for irrigation.
Today, the
Klamath
Basin
stands at a crossroads.
This latest scandal and the coming investigations into Cheney's actions
are yet another example of why Congress needs to act to resolve the
environmental crisis facing the
Klamath
Basin
. Continuing to leave the
Klamath's fish and wildlife at the mercy of the Bush administration is a
recipe for disaster.
It is appalling that the
vice president used his influence to recklessly overturn science-based
decisions and set off the largest fish kill in Northwest history. But it
is even more appalling that five years after the fish kill, little has
been done to prevent a repeat.
Steve Pedery is
conservation director of
Oregon
Wild.
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Source:
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2007/07/05/ed.col.Klamath.0705.p1.php?section=opinion
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