Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Back to tour Table of Contents #1 Chiloquin
tribal building,
Alan Foreman, Tribal Chairman: We are
going to start this meeting as we do all our
tribal meetings, and I would like to ask Joe Hobbs
to do an invocation for us to start.
Joe Hobbs, Tribal Member: Okay, first of
all, I would just like to welcome you all in the
name of the tribes and thank you for being here.
Lets bow our heads to the Lord in prayer. "Dear
Lord, we just come before you this day with
thanksgiving in our hearts Lord, and Lord, we look
to you this day to lead and guide us throughout
this tour that we go upon, Lord God, and we pray
that you would just bring us together Lord, more
and more Lord, as we need to come together in this
basin to be able to fulfill all the needs that
need to be met. Lord, you told us in your word
that the threefold cord is not easily broken. I
pray that you would bind us together such as that,
we ask it all in that precious son by the name of
Jesus. Amen."
Foreman: People are still signing in; it
will be just a second. Going to open it and have
some opening remarks by other folks, but I'll go
ahead and start it, and then we'll have Dan and
Becky do their opening remarks, and I need the
commissioners if they like to, and anyone else
that would like to. On behalf of the Klamath
Tribes, I want to sincerely thank each and
everyone of you for coming today. I know that it
is a busy time of year for a lot of you folks and
everything, and you're taking time out of your
schedules to come, so I certainly appreciate
that. What we have got planned for you today is
kind of an over view of who we are as the Klamath
People, and what we're about. We hope to give you
a glimpse into our world, so that each and
everyone of you might understand the tribes and
the tribal people better. But, I think more
importantly, we really hope, or at least I do,
anybody to reconnect the broken lines between us.
We have a
lot of older tribal members in here, and like many
of the older tribal members, we remember back in
the '60s and "70s that we had a lot of friends
that lived in Tulelake and Merrill and Malin area,
and we did a lot of things together and did a lot
of things just like the recent Grand Marshall of
the Tulelake Fair. She was a very personal and
close friend and likewise with her husband, and we
had a lot of friends down in that area that we did
a lot of things with. I remember particularly
attending their children's wedding down there.
And, there are others throughout the area. There
was a connection between the tribal members and
non-tribal members, and there certainly was a
connection the upper basin and the lower basin.
It is my hope that these series of tours that we
are taking and the interaction that accompanies
them will help bring that connection back
together. Again, it is my hope that we can bring
the view of the world together as a community, not
just upper basin and lower basin, tribe and
non-tribe. I think that is real important. All
of this really doesn't mean, you know, that we'll
be able to solve all our problems, but it means
that we will be able to gain a better
understanding of those problems and see things
from each other's viewpoint. What we hope that
you all will see today during our presentation and
our tour, is that we, like each of you, are
concerned about the future here in the basin and
concerned about the future for our children. Our
way of life that we cherish so dearly, just like
yours, is threatened. We also hope that you see
that we truly care about the land and our
resources, just as we have seen and know that you
do as well. Those of you who have moved to the
Klamath Basin within , lets say, the last 3
decades must understand that when you arrived in
the Basin, and particular the Basin above the lake
and the Upper Basin, you arrived in a condition
that wasn't fully the way it should be. You
arrived as an already degraded condition above the
lake here. Those of you who have been here
longer, I think understand and know really what I
am talking about, and you know that there can be
some serious improvements in this area here, and
so with that, I would like Dan or Becky or Steve,
if you would like to make some opening remarks.
Steve West,
Klamath County Commissioner:
I just want to thank the Tribe and Chairman
Foreman, thanks so much for inviting us here to
this wonderful facility, and I am greatly
encouraged. I think that as a community we are
starting to concentrate more and more on the
things that we agree on and less and less on the
things that we have disagreement on. I am pretty
simple minded. I think that as we concentrate on
those ones that we agree on, that the points that
we disagree on will become smaller and less
important. So, I just greatly appreciate the
opportunity to visit today and learn some new
things and just really appreciate what I see as a
real improvement in communication between
everybody here in the Basin, and I think that
comes from leadership. I think that comes from
leadership of the ag community. I think it comes
from leadership of the tribal community, and I
look forward to the day that we are 1 community,
and I think that we are getting closer and closer
to that. So, thanks so much for hosting us today.
Dan Keppen,
Klamath Water Users Executive Director: I am
Dan Keppen from the Klamath Water User's
Association, and I want to thank you all for
hosting us today, and I am really looking forward
to this. I guess what I see is to try and keep us
all together here, what drives our involvement
right now, is we are a community. I think there
are a lot of myths out there that somehow the Bush
Administration or the political types are going to
take care of our problem, but the solution is
going to have to come from our community. This is
our community, and frankly I'm tired of outside
interests splitting us up, and I think what I
would like to see as far as our involvement from
the water user's standpoint, is our community to
remain intact. Not to just remain intact but
actually get healthier. We want to see young
farmers wanting to stay in the Basin. There are
not enough young folks out there, and what we are
looking for is certainty, and that is what we need
to keep our community whole, and I really think
we've got a much more common ground working
together than we have differences, and that is why
we are spending the time that we are and the
discussions that we have been having. I know that
Allen and
Jeff and myself and other people that have been
involved in these discussions, we are taking some
hits. Some people don't want us to be talking but
that is just ridiculous. I think we just have to
try to take the high road and work together
because there is no way around it. We are the
ones who are going to have to come up with a
solution, and to get there, we have to have a
better understanding of each other's issues, and
that is why I think today is really important. I
really appreciated the participation we had from
the tribes on the tour that we gave a couple of
weeks ago, and I am pleased to see this great
turnout by the irrigation community here today
too. So, lets just continue to do what we are
trying to do and remember this is all our
community, and it is going to have to be a
solution that comes from us. Thanks.
Becky
Hyde, Upper Basin family: I just want
to welcome everybody here today as well. I think
if we keep meeting like this, I am going to have
to start smoking and drinking a lot just to handle
the stress. I think that there is 1 thing that
this whole room can agree on and that is that the
ONRC is not going to run our communities.
Applause. I think we need to make a real
effort. Today, I see we get tribal people sitting
over here and irrigators sitting over here and you
know, when we get going today, let's try to mix it
up a little bit. Let's try to hear each other
out. I mean, we are talking about serious stuff
here, and I think about how I knock my little
kid's heads together all the time and tell them to
share. Maybe we ought to model that in this
community. I think everybody who is doing this,
like Dan said, we're taking a big risk. I know
I'm personally taking a big risk in my community,
but I think we need to be careful about people
threatening us not to meet with each other and try
to work this out. So we either work it out now in
this process, or we work it out 5 years from now
by us trying to work it out, or we work it out 10
years from now. Unless we try to work it out
together, it is just going to keep lingering on,
and we can keep throwing these lawsuits at each
other until we all go broke. Anyway, here we go.
Foreman: Thank you Becky, and I certainly
do appreciate the remarks. What we have got laid
out basically for you this morning, we have got a
presentation in here, and then we will go on the
tour, and we have got a real good lunch set up for
you at Beatty. So, anyway, we will go ahead and
get into our presentation, and if somebody could
at least turn the back lights out, and we will try
to use some of this modern technology that we all
struggle with. What I want to do, and some of you
may be aware of this information that I am going
to go through, but I think it is important to make
sure that at least everybody is aware of it and is
on the same page, so I am going to go through some
just brief historical information, and then we'll
have presentations by our forester and wildlife
biologist and fishery biologist afterwards.
Again, there is coffee and donuts available. The
restrooms are around the corner and down the hall
if you need them.
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