Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Oklahoma
Modoc Tribal attorney Blake Follis states his tribe's
intentions of land, airport and water acquisitions in the
Tulelake Basin and beyond
"Airport Update…11/28/17
On Nov 6 was a small airport meeting at our (Newell) airport
with Blake Follis, housing director Ron, rancher/farmer Mike
Byrne, TID manager Brad Kirby, me, Nick Macy, farmer John
Prosser, and an airport employee
Blake Follis, attorney, and grandson of the chief of Modoc
Tribe from Oklahoma told how their tribe has 300 members and
has 300 employees. Their tribe pays for members’ education
including college, so are well educated. He said they are
involved in many businesses: industry, finance and
construction unlike our local tribes.
Blake attended the year-long FAA stakeholder meetings,
facilitated by Udall Foundation, with a few Tulelake
community members, FAA, government agencies and their
historical and environmental branches, Klamath Tribes, Modoc
and Siskiyou Counties, and the Tule Lake Committee. The
meetings were intended to find some compromise because The
Tule Lake Committee has been suing the city, Modoc County
and the airport to stop a security fence because they claim
it is their “sacred ground.” They want our airport gone so
they can manage the land.
He said the government has long pitted tribes against the
community, and they want to work with us.
Blake said the Oklahoma Modoc Tribe wants to buy the
airport, and showed a diagram of how they will build
hangers, and they will build a security fence. He said it
will continue as an airport. They recently bought 800 acres
of private land near the Lava Beds National Monument that is
surrounded mostly by National Forest. He also said that the
county wants the airport.
He said they want to work with the entire community and not
displace the current residents. They are buying the vacated
Newell School, near the Tulelake Airport, from the Tulelake
Fire Department, and the Fire Department will use the funds
to build a new fire hall. Blake said that the tribe could
build a travel center, house pharmaceutical companies,
insurance agencies, and they would employ local people.
In response to questions, Blake
responded:
We will be buying public land and are not interested in
private land.
Farmers will lose their water rights, we will have the water
rights, and we will lease water to you.
We will have a Water Authority: there will be 3 tribal
members, 1 representative from Modoc and 1 from Siskiyou
County. You will have input and we will listen to your
concerns.
We are stakeholders in water issues now that we own land
here
We will be able to have our land “sovereign” and you will be
able to save money buying gas from us (sovereign land does
not have to pay taxes)
I mentioned it might reassure our region if they would sign
a “Restrictive Covenant.” According to a tribal expert and
former city administrator of Hobart, Wisconsin where tribes
had sovereign land that did not pay taxes, Elaine Willman
wrote: “Restrictive covenants can be used for a variety of
purposes. The two that come to mind for the (Tulelake)
airport property would be: 1) to preserve the property for
airport use only, in perpetuity; and 2) to preserve the
property to remain in the City of Tulelake, county and state
property tax base in perpetuity.” To the question of signing
a Restrictive Covenant, Blake responded essentially no,
because the tribe would bring so much business to our
community, and hire our people, that they would be good to
the whole community.
Since our “whole community” serviced by the airport is
200x200 miles, or 40,000 sq miles, and is already pitted
against each other over water rights, when asked how he’d
bring all them together, he responded that their tribe would
work with anyone who wants to work with them.
Blake has spent time with Siskiyou County Supervisors, City
of Tulelake who owns the airport, and spoke at an event at
Klamath County Museum. He’s spoken with Lava Beds National
Monument Superintendent and Tulelake National Wildlife
Refuge. He said he wants to partner with Lava Beds in
managing the Peninsula because there are tribal areas there
to preserve. He has no plans for a public meeting in
Tulelake.
Attached is a map of land Blake said was in their treaty.
Blake said their treaty line goes to Modoc Point, Warners,
Cascades, Sprague River…
Jacqui Krizo "
(HERE is a recent article: Modoc
Nation purchases ranches near Sheepy Ridge, H&N,
posted to KBC 2/6/21. "With
the Modoc Nation’s recent purchase of an overgrazed ranch
near Sheepy Ridge, bison may be headed to the Klamath Basin
— along with, tribal leadership hopes, cultural
healing...Recently, the tribe has purchased several
properties in the Tulelake area, intending to develop a
presence on lands they were forcibly removed from..." KBC
NOTE: they also bought the Tulelake Airport and
land north of that.
http://klamathbasincrisis.org/.../ModocNationPurchasesShe...)
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