Living Downstream: The Klamath Water Wars

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  • Опубліковано 12 тра 2024

  • This is the story of a 15-year conflict over what would be the biggest dam removal ever, a modern cowboys and Indians tale that shows how victories for Native American rights still come with fits of racism and armed conflict, and how rural folks learned to make peace (and collaborate on an 1800-page Congressional bill).
    It’s a complex story about a fight over shared (and limited) water, with both sides fearing the disappearance of traditional lifestyles.
    Written and produced by Emrys Eller and his brother Greg Eller (norcalpublicmedia.org/reporte...) .
    Language alert: some salty language courtesy of real folks who lived this story.
    Read more about the Klamath River Dam removal. (norcalpublicmedia.org/resourc...)
    (Image: John C. Boyle Dam on the Klamath River in southern Oregon. This is one of the dams scheduled for demolition within the next few years. Credit: Wikipedia/Bobjgalindo (commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Us...) )
    Editor's Note: This story was completed in 2018, before Gavin Newson took over as governor from Jerry Brown. The timeline for removal of the Klamath River dams is evolving. The most recent estimates are that the California dams may start being "deconstructed" in 2021.Comments are now open (until Feb. 26, 2019) on the California Environmental Impact Report.
    From the Klamath Falls Oregon Herald and News (www.heraldandnews.com/news/lo...) :
    The Notice of Availability and Draft EIR are available at: bit.ly/2TcxefF. Additional information related to the Lower Klamath Project water quality certification and California Environmental Quality Act process can be found at: bit.ly/2jwgIcL.
    Comments on the draft EIR are due by noon, Feb. 26, and can be sent to wr401program@waterboards.ca.gov (mailto:wr401program@waterboards.ca.gov) , or Ms. Michelle Siebal, State Water Resources Control Board, Division of Water Rights - Water Quality Certification Program, P.O. Box 2000, Sacramento, CA 95812-2000
    A mural in Happy Camp, a small indian town in the Klamath National Forest.
    The Iron Gate Dam is the biggest and only earthen dam on the Klamath River.
    Emrys Eller on Copco 1, one of four dams slated for removal along the California-Oregon border.
    Iron Gate Dam.
    Emrys Eller interviews Klamath Tribal leader Don Gentry near an elementary school in Chiloquin, Oregon. In 2003, two men shot up the signage of this native school amid tensions over whether to remove dams on the Klamath River.
    Emrys Eller speaks with Karuk tribal leader Leaf Hillman on the banks of the Klamath River.
    Emrys Eller speaks with Karuk tribal leader Leaf Hillman on the banks of the Klamath River.
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