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No Feud between Cowboys,
Indians
Shasta Indian, County Republicans
unite against dam removal
By Phil Hayworth
Pioneer Press
Fort Jones, CA 96032
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
page 1, col 2
How does a small county such as Siskiyou fight overwhelming,
goliath-like population centers in places like San Francisco
and Portland, often represented by lobbyists, big money
lawyers and rabid environmentalists?
They unite.
Last week, the Shasta Nation - not to be confused with the
Shasta Indian Nation -- and the South Siskiyou Republican
Women signed onto a resolution written by Siskiyou's
Republican Central Committee opposing dam removal.
Other groups are expected to soon sign onto the resolution
which will be sent to the California's Republican leadership
with the hope that the presentation of a unified front will
convince state Republican leaders to fight against dam
removal in the halls of the state Assembly and Senate - and
all the way up to the halls of Congress. Ultimately,
resolution authors hope Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will see
the light and come to Siskiyou County and learn about how
important the dams are to area farmers, ranchers and
landowners.
"We've already gotten some great feedback from state
Republican party delegates," said Brandon Criss, chairman of
the Siskiyou Republican Central Committee who authored the
resolution.
And now, with the support of the Shasta Nation,
the dam issue might no longer be viewed as an Indian-Cowboy war,
he said - a picture that has been used very effectively by
Indian groups and others to tug on the heartstrings of urban
voters who have little clue about the importance of the dams to
rural Oregon and California counties.
"Let it be duly noted that the Shasta Nation recognizes
green-energy, and supports hydro-power currently in place within
Shasta Nation territory," reads a letter signed by Shasta Nation
chairman Roy Hall, Jr. and vice chairman Gary Lake. "The Shasta
Nation respects water required to sustain farms and
communities."
The Shasta support is exactly opposite the vociferous and often
ferocious attacks by the Karuk, Hoopa and Yurok tribes, who have
waged an all-out public relations war against Klamath Basin and
Siskiyou farmers, ranchers and - lately - gold miners.
Fish, Indians, Cowboys, Farmers and dams can co-exist, say
opponents of dam removal. Specifically, reads the resolution:
"Construction of the Long Lake Project in Klamath County,
Oregon; proposed Clear Creek to Deer Creek (Hart) Bypass for
fish passage around Irongate, Copco I and II; implementation of
wild fish propagation through ARED program; study of C. Shasta
parasite disease effecting 90 percent mortality of juvenile
salmonoid migration to the Pacific Ocean; initiate study of
ocean habitat conditions."
Criss said the goal of the resolution is to prompt the governor
to physically come to Siskiyou County and witness the
hydroelectric dams - and, perhaps by doing so, get a better
appreciation of the clean energy produced. Even more, he'll
understand what Herculean tasks lay ahead if the dams come down.
"We want him to see this issue in terms of clean energy,
understand what floating a $250 million bond in our tough
economy means and practice the concept that the government that
is closest to the people governs best," Criss said.
To comment, email:
presscomment@yahoo.com.
The publisher grants permission for the
article to be reprinted or distributed.
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