
Drifting
on the Klamath
A
Register-Guard Editorial
August 14, 2007
The
problem with Sen. Gordon Smith's defense of the Bush administration's
2002 decision to divert
Klamath
Lake
water for irrigation isn't
that the Oregon Republican is wobbly on the facts. It's that he's
willing to bend and selectively omit the facts to justify ideologically
driven political positions.
In an interview last week
with The Register-Guard editorial board, Smith insisted there is no
evidence that a massive fish kill on the
Klamath River
that same year was caused by the administration's decision to
release water to farmers. Smith also defended the role that Vice
President Dick Cheney played in intervening with federal officials to
resume flows to farmers in the
Klamath
Basin
.
The issue of the Klamath
diversion arose because the House Natural Resources Committee is
investigating Cheney's role in Klamath water management decisions that
many believe led to the deaths five years ago of 75,000 fish in the
Klamath
Basin
. Three dozen House
Democrats from
Oregon
and
California
requested the hearings
after The Washington Post reported details of Cheney's extensive
intervention, which was intended, in part, to win votes for Smith's
re-election. Smith had been pushing the administration to help get water
for farmers whose crops were threatened by the shut-off amid drought
conditions.
Smith insisted the water
diversion was intended to help threatened sucker fish and that "the
focus at the time was not on salmon," and said the die-off occurred
18 months later near the mouth of the
Klamath River
. He said the fish "died of some gill disease, which is not
uncommon and happens periodically," and that it was unrelated to
the decision to the irrigation diversions and the lower water levels
they produced.
Smith's version of
Klamath
Basin
history conveniently
omitted some key facts. They include a California Department of Fish and
Game report that said a number of factors - including warm temperatures,
low flows and crowding - caused conditions conducive to gill disease and
other bacterial infections. "River flow and the volume of water in
the fish kill area were atypically low," the report said, noting
that river flow was the sole factor controlled by humans.
In a Saturday story by
The Register-Guard's David Steves, commercial fishing advocate Glenn
Spain aptly observed that Smith's simplistic attribution of the dead
fish to gill disease "is sort of like saying lung cancer kills
smokers, not smoking."
Smith's assertion that
the fish kill happened 18 months after the diversion is also off base.
The die-off occurred between Sept. 19 and Oct. 1 - five months after the
March 29 reopening of the headgates.
Smith's characterization
of the diversion decision as a choice between sucker fish and irrigation
for farmers also was off the mark. A 2001 biological opinion by federal
scientists prohibited the release of Klamath water for irrigation for
the protection of sucker fish and coho, both of which are protected
under the federal Endangered Species Act.
In a subsequent interview
with The Oregonian, Smith also said he doubts there was a connection
between the salmon die-off and last year's near-shutdown of commercial
fishing off the
Oregon
Coast
. While there were certainly
other factors involved, fishery officials have cited the 2002 fish kill
as one of the problems that contributed to the depletion of
Klamath River
runs.
Smith has shown a
willingness to overlook inconvenient facts before. Last year, he and
Rep. Greg Walden,
R-Hood
River
, promoted a bill that would
have accelerated salvage logging and reforestation after fires,
dismissing a study by
Oregon
State
University
researchers that raised
serious questions about the practice.
With Smith facing what
could be a tough re-election race next year, he should pay more
attention to the facts when discussing environmental issues, including
Klamath
Basin
water policy.
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Source:
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2007/08/14/ed.edit.smith.0814.p1.php?section=opinion
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