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NEWS FROM KLAMATH FALLS
 


                 The new KWUA Weekly Updates are here again! 

Here is the July 1,  KWUA "Weekly Update"

 

Mari Gill
Administrative Assistant
Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, OR  97603
Phone: (541) 883-6100
Fax: (541) 883-8893
E-mail: kwua@cvcwireless.net

 



KWUA Announces New Executive Director

 
The Klamath Water Users Association today named Greg Addington as their new Executive Director.  “We are excited to have Greg as a part of the Klamath Water Users Association team,” announces KWUA President Steve Kandra. “Greg brings talent and energy to an association whose mission is ‘to preserve, protect and defend the water and power rights of the landowners of the Klamath Basin while promoting wise management of ecosystem resources.’”
                   
 “I am looking forward to working with the members and the board of this organization to help find solutions and some level of certainty for the farm families who are the foundation of this community” said Greg Addington.
 
Greg has spent the last three years in the Governmental Affairs Division of the Farm Bureau. His areas of responsibility included public affairs, fish & wildlife, wetlands, livestock, and national affairs/congressional relations.  Prior to moving to Salem, he served for six years as a Regional Manager for the organization, covering southern Oregon.  He is a native of Eagle Point, in Jackson County.
 
“This is an exciting opportunity for my family and me,” said Addington. “It’s a kind of homecoming for me. I have family in the area and have spent a lot of time in Klamath County. It will be nice to be back in Southern Oregon”.
 
Addington will be wrapping up some of his legislative work in Salem through the end of March and is scheduled to start with the Water Users the first week of April. 
 
He and his wife Monica have a six-year old daughter, Sarah and a two-year old son Reese

 


Klamath Water Users Association "Weekly Update"
 


Endangered Humans

Tue Jan 18, 7:00 PM ET

Environment: A judge has ruled that coho salmon have been illegally listed as an endangered species, a victory that comes too late for the farmers of the Klamath River Basin and the families of four young firefighters.

In the spring of 2001, the government ordered irrigation water cut off to 1,400 farms in southern Oregon and northern California to save suckerfish and salmon said to be threatened by low water levels in Oregon's Upper Klamath Lake and Klamath River.

The Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service called for water to be diverted from these farms to increase the flow through the habitats of coho salmon, the Lost River sucker and the shortnose sucker.

The suckers were placed on the Endangered Species Act in 1998; the coho -- a favorite catch of sport fishermen -- was listed as threatened in 1997.

Last week, federal judge Michael Hogan agreed with the Pacific Legal Foundation that the government violated the ESA when it failed to include hatchery fish in its assessment of the coho's status.

But, as Pacific Legal Foundation attorney Russ Brooks noted: "This victory comes too late for the farmers who were pushed into bankruptcy and the businesses that were forced to close to protect fish that were never endangered. Our rivers and streams are teeming with salmon, yet the Klamath community was practically destroyed because of environmentalism run amok."

Two years ago, the National Academy of Sciences (news - web sites) found "no sound scientific basis" for the government action and that higher water would not protect suckerfish and salmon, whose exact numbers were unknown.

Salmon protection could justifiably be listed as the cause of death for four firefighters who perished July 10, 2001, fighting what started as a 25-acre fire near Washington's Chewuch River.

The fire seemed to be under control at 5:30 a.m. when the firefighters requested a water drop to finish off the blaze. For the next 8 1/2 hours, authorities dithered and debated as to whether scooping up water from the Chewuch would also scoop up fish from what had been designated as the protected habitat of salmon and trout.

By the time the first water arrived at 3 p.m., the fire had reached the point where it would explode into a 2,500-acre inferno. By 5:25 p.m., all four firefighters -- two men, two women -- were dead. No word on how many endangered fish were lost.

When the Endangered Species Act was passed, few of us saw it for what it has become: a stealth constitutional amendment that could deprive us of our property rights, our livelihoods and even our lives.


For more information on the Klamath Region, visit their website at:      
www.kwua.org
or, for other news on the Klamath Falls crisis visit:
www.klamathbasincrisis.org
 


CONTACT INFORMATION


Klamath Water Users Association

2455 Patterson Street, Suite #3
Klamath Falls, OR  97603


(541) 883-6100
Fax (541) 883-8893


http://www.kwua.org



"Weekly Updates"
2005 Archives

June 17
June 3
April 1
March 18
March 11

 


 

 

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