By Phil Hayworth
Pioneer Press
Fort Jones, CA
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
page E8, column 4
Things are heating up regarding the Klamath Restoration
Agreement - that lengthy tome of a document hammered out
behind the scenes by a handful of political, Indian,
farming and conservation entities over the last two
years.
Specifically, a group calling itself the Klamath Basin
Alliance, Inc. placed an
advertisement in last Sunday's Herald and News daily
newspaper. The ad gets right to the point: "Don't be
fooled by the proposed $1 billion Klamath Basin
Restoration Agreement."
The ad argues that the Klamath Tribes sold their former
reservation as "willing sellers" and that they'll get,
under the agreement, 92,000 acres of land bought with
"taxpayers' money."
"Land for water is nothing less than
blackmail," the ad reads. "This agreement was hammered
out 'in secret' behind closed doors. This is not just
about The Tribes, the land or the water; it's about you
and your rights to have a voice in this decision."
The ad, however, doesn't list the groups or people who
make up the "Alliance." But the group lists its address
at 3255 Washburn Way in Klamath Falls. They're asking
that readers fill out a small form and that they
agreement should be "shelved."
How much affect the ad will actually have on the process
is difficult to tell. But it's obviously an attempt to
harness the energies of folks already opposed to the
restoration agreement, many of whom include off-project
farmers, ranchers and Indian tribes such as the Hoopa
who have long been against the agreement.