
Everglades
of the West?
Environmentalists'
vision for the
Klamath
Basin
could spell
economic ruin
By Lance Waldren
Pioneer
Press Staff Writer
Pioneer
Press
Fort Jones
,
CA
530-468-5355
mailto:pioneerp@sisqtel.net
Wednesday, September 12,
2007
Page
E 10
KLAMATH BASIN - It's no secret that radical environmental groups have an
agenda to remove irrigated agriculture in the
Klamath
Basin
and turn it into federally owned wetlands.
But their actions have been incremental and, like watching a car rust,
you might hardly notice its impact until it's too late. Now, it's time
that folks in the Basin paid attention to the collective efforts of the
environmentalists.
According to Andy Kerr, an environmentalist and self-proclaimed senior
counsel for Portland-based Oregon Wild, formerly the Oregon Natural
Resource Council, some 100,000 to 150,000 acres are now being targeted
by the group. Essentially, they feel the demand on the water in the
Klamath River System is too great, that irrigation in the Basin has
demanded the bulk of the water and that the demand has menaced wildlife,
coastal communities and Indian tribes.
They
figure that if the acres are turned into wetlands, there will be more
water available down river.
It's an argument that has raged for years, only now, the group is
ramping up efforts to support continued federal buyouts of farms and
ranches in the area, along with all water rights.
Kerr said the group will petition to list as endangered and threatened
many more fish and wildlife. They hope that those listings will result
in litigation. Lawsuits over logging, grazing, water and dams already
stymie further agricultural growth in the Basin.
But some scientists argue it isn't agriculture at all that menaces
wildlife and contributes to the bulk of water loss in the Basin, but
poorly managed wetlands.
According to Ken Rykbost, former head of
Oregon
State
University
's Klamath Research Station,
water loss from wetland evaporation alone far exceeds the amount of
water used by irrigated crops. The result of every acre turned into
permanent wetland would actually reduce the amount of water going to the
river, he said.
He
said the problem with long-term, stable and stagnant wetlands is that
decomposition of bulrush, tulles and other vegetation cause massive
nutrient loading in the water. But that problem has historically been
blamed on the farmer. It's likely only to get worse for farmers if they
don't speak out.
Consider what has already happened north of
Klamath
Lake
. Barnes Ranch was sold to
the Bureau of Reclamation with the intention of converting the
productive pasture land to shallow water storage, i.e., wetlands. Wood
River Ranch sold to the Bureau of Land Management. The Williamson River
Ranch sold to the Nature Conservancy. And the list of farmers and
ranchers selling out is growing.
The impact of these sales could devastate the Basin economy. Reg LeQuieu,
Klamath County Tax Assessor, said that over 60 percent of the county is
now owned by the federal government. And that means that land which once
produced jobs and money now produces nothing. It goes untaxed.
"The Federal Government is buying farm land a piece at a
time," he said. "There is no comprehensive plan and the
county loses out."
For example, the Wood River Ranch was sold to the Bureau of Land
Management. The Bureau agreed to sell enough of its land back to private
ownership to make up for the loss of revenue. There were several
environmental groups who also signed off on the agreement. But since the
sale in 2000, the Bureau has attempted to sell several pieces of prime
property and have been blocked by the same environmental groups who
signed off on the original deal. The only sales able to go through are
for "Class 7" rangeland, which is typically sagebrush
and scab rock -- hardly prime land and so undesirable that it
brings to the county just $25 per acre.
Before it sold, Barnes Ranch was taxed at a rate of approximately $500
per acre. It generated some $8,000 a year for the county. But now, the
scrub ground sold brings approximately $400 total. That's a net loss to
the county of $7,600. In the grand scheme of things, $7,600 is not a lot
of money, but it was money that would have gone to schools or public
safety and it was the only one sale.
The Bureau has since argued that they've sold an equal acreage of land
and that they've fulfilled their obligation. And equal acreage, sure,
but not even close to equal quality.
"The BLM would have had to have sold about 200,000 acres of Class 7
Rangeland in order to make up for the lost revenue," LeQuieu said.
Willy Riggs, an agriculture economist with OSU's Research and Extension
Service, said that $205 million is generated by
Klamath
County
agriculture. Every dollar
is turned over at least twice in the community. That's $410 million. But
that money will dwindle for every acre sold to the Bureau and left
untaxed. And then there's what Riggs calls the "intrinsic
value" of agriculture to the social fabric of the Basin community.
Studies have shown that a large majority of volunteers in the community
come from the agricultural community, volunteers such as medical
emergency technicians, fire fighters, Little League coaches and Boy
Scout leaders. If the environmentalist continue to get their way,
the Basin could not only loose its income, but its very soul. Kerr
argues that the
Klamath
Basin
is the largest fresh water
wetland west of the
Mississippi
. He calls it the
Everglades
of the West. But if Kerr
and his kind get their way, it might be a wetland, but it'll become an
economic wasteland.
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