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Half-measures in the Klamath Valley
The Libertarian ^ | October 8, 2001 | Vin Suprynowicz

Posted on 10/08/2001 8:51:37 AM PDT by MadameAxe

Hundreds of thousands of acres of the Klamath Valley in southwest Oregon have gone without irrigation water this summer; most of the 1,500 affected farm families have suffered total crop loss and those losses may total $250 million -- dwarfing a $20 million emergency federal aid package.

But the problem isn't drought -- there's plenty of water behind the dam which the federal government built in 1909, thereafter holding "land lotteries" for veterans of both the First and Second World Wars, encouraging the winners to settle the valley and set up farms by signing contracts which promised irrigation water would always be provided.

"It was a beautiful trade-off until a month ago, when the Bureau of Reclamation broke the contract, leaving 90 percent of the farms -- some 200,000 acres of land -- without water," the Wall Street Journal editorialized last May.

"What caused the U.S. government to condemn 1,500 farms, a $250 million industry, to oblivion? To save sucker fish, a bottom-feeding scavenger that got on the Endangered Species Act in 1988. ...

"The Bureau of Reclamation is hiding behind biological opinions issued in April ... that say the sucker needs more water," the Journal continued. "But the Bureau's maddening folly is that it abides by science already proven an abject failure in that other great Northwest fish story: salmon."

Although "Environmentalists ... saw this was a perfect way to pursue their broader antigrowth agenda -- to force farmers off the land, blow up dams, get rid of barges," attempts to restore salmon runs by increasing water flows past the region's many dams have been an abject failure, the Journal reports.

But if this isn't really about saving fish, who would want to see these farmers driven off the land? The Oregon Natural Resources Council, for one. That group has drafted a plan under which the federal government would buy much of the basin's farmland and set it aside as a "desert preserve."

Environmentalists like Andy Kerr of the ONRC hate the region's very lushness because it's artificial -- what had once been a high desert was transformed into a garden spot by the the intervention of mankind, you see, damming and diverting the Klamath River in a massive public works project completed in 1909. In direct opposition to the ancient biblical notion that it's man's proper role to make the earth fruitful, eco-extremists hate such interventions as "unnatural."

"Environmentalists often say their use of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) is for the benefit of humanity," points out Glenn Woiceshyn of the Ayn Rand Institute. But "whenever man's needs conflict with the 'interests of nature,' as they now do in Klamath Basin, environmentalist always take the side of nature.

"The environmentalist subscribe to an 'intrinsic value' ethic, which means that nature must be valued -- not for any benefit it brings to man, but because nature is somehow a value in and of itself," Mr. Woiceshyn continues. "Hence, nature must be kept pristine despite the harm this causes man. We must halt activities beneficial to us, such as farming, forestry, and the treatment of disease, in order to safeguard fish, birds, trees, and rats. We are being told to sacrifice our lives to nature. ..."

In a wave of civil disobedience, hundreds of local farmers seized the headgates of Klamath Lake, using saws or blowtorches to open the valves to feed irrigation water into their canal on at least three occasions in June and July. Bureau of Reclamation officials closed them again, turning to federal marshals and the FBI to help them keep the gates closed after the local sheriff refused to intervene.

"Already, in towns like Klamath Falls, population 17,000, and Tulelake, Calif., population 1,000, businesses have begun to close and school populations have plunged by as much as 30 percent, reflecting an exodus of farm workers," The New York Times was reporting by June.

Actually, the Endangered Species Act offers opt-out provisions designed to get around such travesties as what's been happening in the Klamath Valley. The Endangered Species Committee -- a panel made up of seven cabinet-level officials and informally known as the God Squad -- is charged with weighing economics against the risks of extinction and has the power to override provisions of the law that promise primacy to the protection of listed plants and animals. But Interior Secretary Gale Norton has resisted pressure to convene the "God Squad."

Instead, on Tuesday, the Interior Department agreed to an independent review of the scientific findings that led to the virtual shutdown of water to farmers in the Klamath Basin. Interior Secretary Norton said the National Academy of Sciences will review scientific and technical information regarding the two types of endangered sucker fish in Upper Klamath Lake, as well as the coho salmon downstream.

"It's good news, but it's not going to be in time for next year's growing season," points out Mike Byrne, who farms alfalfa and barley in Tulelake. "People are already trying to figure out what to do next year. They have to deal with their bankers."

The findings of credible scientists hired by the Klamath irrigators suggest the suckers are doing far better than federal biologists have suggested. Their populations, which numbered about 5,000 in the lake when the species were listed as endangered more than a decade ago, have swelled to at least 100,000, and might actually be harmed by excess water behind the dam, according to those reports -- which federal courts have so far refused to consider.

But that's not even the main point. Congress was duped in 1973 into passing the Endangered Species Act by assurances it would be used primarily to make sure the continent's last grizzly bear, last bison, or last bald eagle wasn't shot as a pest and sold for dog food.

Instead, the ESA has been widely used by the green extreme to identify a "marker" subspecies in virtually any eco-system, like the "threatened" bull trout of the Jarbidge Canyon, the "threatened" Mojave Desert Tortoise (now so plentiful in government shelters that they have to be euthanized) -- even threatened maggots or invisible blue butterflies that "might" someday visit the coastal grasslands of Southern California -- thus using the Act to block virtually any kind of proposed new progress or development.

"In the dry years we always shared our water with the fish and the Indians. I don't think any fish died," local horseradish farmer Paul Christy (who came to the Klamath Basin after serving in World War II, attracted by the federal government's offers of land and water) told Pat Taylor of CNS News in May. "The people who passed the Endangered Species Act had a good idea, but now it's being used as a club against the farmers."

The ESA was due for renewal by the Congress in 1990, but revisiting the Act has been blocked by the very eco-Luddites who originally sponsored it, out of understandable concern that common-sense legislators -- now aware of the extremists' real agenda -- would take the opportunity to moderate its most bizarre and anti-human impacts.

"Rather than spending tax dollars to mitigate the damaging effects of one of its own laws, Congress should amend the ESA to add protection for endangered farmers and ranchers," suggested Gretchen Randall of the National Center for Public Policy Research in a recent position paper. "It could prohibit any government agency from taking action that diminishes the value of private property or require that compensation for damages be paid. Congress could also require an independent scientific review of all proposed listings of threatened and endangered species. ..."

Indeed, that's the kind of radical reform the Bush administration ought to be pursuing.

In the Klamath Basin "The damage is done," concludes Anne Hayes, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, which represented water users in an attempt to get the governors of California and Oregon to petition for the "God Squad" to be convened this summer.

For Secretary Norton to order an Academy of Sciences review at this late date is really "a cop-out," attorney Hayes said Wednesday. "The God Squad is the only method for people to sit down and solve a resources allocation problem -- 'How do we do this in a way that doesn't harm the farmers, that doesn't harm the fish?' ...

"When it comes to protecting species it does so in an extremely costly and ineffective way and people don't matter. But for the environmentalists it's an extremely useful tool towards achieving their real goal, which is stopping the resource industries: farming, mining, lumber. We call it 'toad-throwing.' If you want to stop your neighbor from doing something you just call Fish & Wildlife and throw down a toad on their property ..."

All that's really being decided in the ongoing arbitration in the Klamath Basin is "how much land will go to the Indians, how much will go into the reserve ... and that was the whole purpose in the first place," attorney Hayes explains. "As one of the farmers put it, 'Rural Cleansing,' to take some of the farmland out of production. ...

"What happened up there got a lot of attention from the American public, they're finally seeing just how harsh the Endangered Species Act can be ... And you're going to have results like that repeated over and over and over again, as long as we have the Endangered Species Act. It's just a bad law."

The kind of law the American people elected a new Republican administration to radically reform or repeal.

They're still waiting.


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To: AuntB
BUMP!!!!!!

redrock

21 posted on 10/09/2001 7:46:32 PM PDT by redrock
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To: redrock
Good to see you around.
22 posted on 10/09/2001 8:26:49 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: nunya bidness, AuntB
Not over ... far from it.

I hope the government does what it right. If they don't, it will happen just the same. Might be a harder path getting there, but it will happen just the same.

You would think, that in these times particularly, the best interests of the nation and its people (which people are the nation) would be satisfied ... you would think.

Let us hope.

BTW, you guys might be interested in this little project of mine. This is an "unlaunched site" where we are testing everything, getting ready for a launch in a few days. But, I'd be interested in your comments.

BREATH OF FIRE

I will have it up on its own domain in a few days.

Regards.

23 posted on 10/09/2001 10:16:22 PM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: Jeff Head
Good to see you, Jeff! I'm seldom online anymore, but will check in once in a while. I still have 3 pages of signatures to enter! Did I hear something about you becoming a Grandpa???? I thought nothing could ever top being a Mom, but being a grandparent is TOO kewl! Why don't you get away from that machine more often and play with those young ones. There's nothing greater to be accomplished out there. Nothing. Stay well.
24 posted on 10/09/2001 10:36:44 PM PDT by AuntB
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To: AuntB
Agreed, that's why Jared is my traveling compadre about anywhere I go. It's also why I am at every football game Jeff Jr. plays and involved with them both in scouts.

My wife is visiting the new baby and the new mom (our daughter) and dad as we speak. I'm watching these two boys, but wishing we caould have all gone. I may get over there (Indiana) in November to see this new critter ... and they are coming out to Idaho at Christmas with him ... BTW, born a baby boy at a whopping 9 lbs 14 oz!

I haven't been on too much lately either.

That "project" has had me pretty involved.

Take care. When the bypass goes in .... I'm there.

25 posted on 10/09/2001 10:49:16 PM PDT by Jeff Head
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To: Jeff Head-all
The USFWS and BOR have been having conference calls to make policy as they go along; and On Oct 5 decided to sent more down the river where its not needed.Lake was coming up to fast for them. They are getting rid of the water real good.Won't be enough for farmers they can tell the court in the spring.A ripoff. They could get rid of bin laden if they put their mind to it.The 1000 cfs that was going down over Irongate Dam(through turbines) was doing the river fine, Now it is up to 1350 cfs. On the Klamath basin talk forum we caught someone from a BOR computer trolling, the discussion forum using a name similiar to another poster. It shows the slime that Osama KERR Looney has working with him-ED Hubel
26 posted on 10/10/2001 9:54:13 AM PDT by hubel458
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To: Jeff Head
Congratulations on the baby and the books! Let me know when I can pick up a copy.
27 posted on 10/10/2001 6:10:42 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: shotabug; harpo11; JustAmy; Snow Bunny; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
FYI
28 posted on 10/13/2001 7:20:08 PM PDT by G-Rated
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To: Jeff Head
"My wife is visiting the new baby and the new mom (our daughter)"

Congratulations!
29 posted on 10/13/2001 7:26:57 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: AuntB
hey you!
*HUG*
30 posted on 10/13/2001 7:27:41 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: marsh2; dixiechick2000; Helen; Mama_Bear; poet; Grampa Dave; Doug; WolfsView; Issaquahking; amom...
ping
Click Here to pull up all Klamath Threads
31 posted on 10/13/2001 7:32:51 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: Jeff Head
Congradulations Granpa Jeff, Another little Conservative Freeper, our numbers are growing.
32 posted on 10/13/2001 7:50:43 PM PDT by F.J. Mitchell
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Thanks, fella. This has been my biggest Bush disappointment. It's time for him to stand up to these loonies; if he can call the Taliban terrorists evil with no compunction; why can't he see the evil intent of these malcontents?
33 posted on 10/13/2001 8:05:41 PM PDT by DLfromthedesert
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Bump...for later reading and grousing!

Thanks for the flag!

34 posted on 10/13/2001 8:06:04 PM PDT by dixiechick2000
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To: G-Rated
Bump for the Klamath Valley.
35 posted on 10/13/2001 8:11:28 PM PDT by JustAmy
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To: Grampa Dave
The farmers will get their water when Congress realizes that this nation
needs farmers, ranchers, loggers and other working Americans....

Sorry to rain on your parade BUT, The Internationalists, The NWO crowd, The Ted Turner Useful Idiots and
The Morally Ambiguous Media have convinced or co-opted much of America and our Congress into the false ideas that:

America DOES NOT need American farmers------
World prices are cheaper,

America DOES NOT need America ranchers,-------
World prices are cheaper

Argentina,Australia??

America DOES NOT need America limber or those Eco-Unfriendly Loggers-----
World prices are cheaper,

America DOES NOT need uppity working Americans for most manufacturing------
World labor prices are cheaper,

and we are being betrayed by these people all in the name of some NWO Utopia
that promises prosperity but will bring ruin upon America.

In other words, they ARE NOT getting THEIR water.

Evil has shown it's face and will get bolder in its crimes.

Could the Klamath Basin Land GRAB have anything to do with securing the National Debt??

You take care,
CATO

36 posted on 10/13/2001 8:33:32 PM PDT by Cato
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
thanks my friend. interesting that *homeland security* doesn't actually include all enemies of the people; ie, the communists amongst us!
37 posted on 10/13/2001 8:37:12 PM PDT by Anonymous2
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Nice! (I think...I still feel ???empty?? getting a ping and NOT seeing my name. :(

However, the search takes me directly to your ping # and that's pretty cool.

38 posted on 10/13/2001 9:00:59 PM PDT by Libertina
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To: Cato
Could the Klamath Basin Land GRAB have anything to do with securing the National Debt??

It is much more than that. It involves creating currency transfers that will be taxed by the UN. It involves creating a means for LDCs to pay their loans to the IMF. It involves carbon credits through the World Bank. It involves creating urban food, energy, and water dependency for purposes of blackmail.

As for the ESA, it is enforced under treaty, the supreme law of the land, particularly the Convention on Nature Protection. ANY Congressional reform will run afoul of that treaty. These Public Policy gurus don't know what they are talking about and neither does Mr. Suprynowicz.

39 posted on 10/13/2001 9:02:54 PM PDT by Carry_Okie
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To: Libertina
"getting a ping and NOT seeing my name. :( "

BUT I see you when I post it!
feel better now???
40 posted on 10/13/2001 9:03:48 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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