Tomorrow Siskiyou County supervisors will vote on a
resolution to oppose the removal of hydroelectric dams
on the Klamath River. The county may also decide to
opt out of the Klamath settlement agreement
altogether. Representatives from Siskiyou County have
been involved in the talks over the past two years —
although, at first they weren’t invited to the table —
and have consistently voiced concern about what could
happen if the dams are taken down: Property values for
houses located on reservoirs created by the dams
(three out of the four dams on the Klamath are in
Siskiyou County) could drop in value by as much as 50
percent, according to reports by the county assessor
and the Karuk Tribe cited in
a recent article in the Siskiyou Daily News.
Reached on his cellphone on Friday afternoon, Siskiyou
County Counsel Frank DeMarco said that Siskiyou
County’s concerns over dam removal have been on the
table since day one. He described the county as
“ground zero” in terms of feeling the effects of dam
removal. Not only would property values decrease, but
there would also be a “huge reduction of tax
revenues,” he said. “That document,” he said,
referring to the Restoration Agreement, which has been
hailed as nothing short of historical in the national
press in that it brings together diverse interests
including fisherman, tribes and farmers, “is no place
close to what I would have liked to have seen.”
DeMarco described opposition to dam removal in
Siskiyou County as overwhelming. “It isn’t even like
60/40 … it’s probably 90/10,” he said.
But Humboldt County Supervisor Jill Geist, who has
played an active role in the settlement talks, is non-plussed.
Reached last week, she described the county’s
announcement as “not surprising.”
“We realize that for Siskiyou County this
represents a pretty significant change in their
landscape and politically it would be pretty difficult
for them to agree with,” she said. Nonetheless, it’s
not catastrophic as far as the future of the agreement
is concerned, according to Geist. “Does it stop
things? No,” she said.
In fact, it could even end up backfiring on
Siskiyou County. According to Geist all of the
settlement groups agreed to a condition early on that
stipulates that not signing onto the final agreement
means you don’t get your slice of the funding pie. In
short, there will be no restoration aid for Siskiyou
County from the almost $1 billion funding stream
created by the agreement.
Still, if the situation for the county is as dire
as they say it is, they might not need the restoration
agreement funds — they’ll need disaster relief
instead.