942-8730 484-1927 GOLF 9 HOLES $10 | Students Only. Must show ID. (Monday - Friday) AUTHENTIC MEXICAN C 0 541 Blair Blvd. Eugene • 338-0807 1 We Accept Credit Cards Slesmvtce Cxwsesaiatuw Jnfmmatum fax Students, and Staff Ten Things You Can Do To Reduce UO’s Environmental Impact Report Wasted Energy and Water Contact Facilities Services at 346-2293 to report any drips or lights left on. Reduce Paper Use Do not print large quantities of web pages, report drafts, or class notes. Reuse bags, envelopes, and scrap paper. Make double sided copies, use route slips, and electric communication when possible. Turn Off Lights When Not In Use Buy fluorescent desk lamps and replacement bulbs instead of incandescent or halogen ones. Turn Off Monitor When Not In Office Or Room Turn off computer when not in use. Buy energy efficient computer equipment with the Energy Star label (available at http://www.energystar.gov). Buy Products Containing Recycled Material So we can recycle the products we buy! Bike, Walk, Carpool, Or Take The Bus Remember, LTD is FREE to the UO Community... Just show your UO I.D. Conserve Water When washing your hands, use only enough water to wet your hands and rinse off the soap. Turn off the faucet in between these times. Every drop counts! Regulate Your Own Temperature Dress appropriately for the season. Wear sweaters during winter instead of turning up thermostats and using space heaters. Use energy wisely! Avoid Disposable Products Use a refillable mug (available at Campus Recycling). Reuse shopping bags (or buy a canvas one). Select products with reduced and recyclable packaging. Recycle Your Used Materials Paper, cardboard, and beverage containers can be recycled in designated sites around the UO campus. 0128591 JAanfl you fox con&exuing xeoowiceo and xecydiny at the ‘Unwox&ity of Vxegon! Sponsored by the UO Campus Environmental Issues Committee Courtesy Dan Masi water rights... and wrongs ■ Ranchers and tribes need the Klamath Basin’s resources, but ‘poor’ management may harm both groups’ lifestyles By Nicole Hill for the Emerald A stretch of sodden Southern Oregon flatlands, speckled with ripening pines and as pens, curves into the algae blooming pools of the Klamath Basin. Several streams and rivers collect icy run-off from surround ing mountains and ripple down into the Upper Klamath Lake, pro viding a vital water source for com munities and wildlife — a water source that is also strangled in poli tics and pollution. An American Indian tribal myth says that during spawning and mi gration, people could walk across the backs of the fish without get ting their feet wet, Carl “Bud” Ull man of Klamath Tribes said. How ever, this anecdote of the plenitude of years past has melted into a different story today. The Upper Klamath Lake, which flows south to the Klamath River and down to California, is now a lay of dams, dikes and drainage ditches rerouting water for irrigation and hydroelectricity. Some species of salmon have been killed off, bald eagles and coho salmon are threatened, and two lesser-known fish species, the Lost River sucker and the shortnose sucker, are endangered. Water storage in the basin has also shrunk, increasing the difficulty of draining large amounts of water for irrigation while also providing clean water for fish and habitats. “We’ve made this system more vulnerable; it’s just sort of living on the edge now,” University ge ography Professor Patricia Mc Dowell said. McDowell, who teaches classes on watershed poli cy, said that both tribes and ranch ers have valid needs for resources, but poor management strategies have left both interests wondering whether they will be able to con tinue with their lifestyles. In the 1920s , the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation came to the Klamath Basin, converted marshlands into an agricultural area and invited farmers to buy that land, McDow ell said. In the beginning, the bu reau primarily managed water for irrigation, but in the past 20 years, because of pressure from environ mental groups, the bureau has de veloped more sustainable plans. “Now, different tribal and envi ronmental values are being stirred into the management mix,” said Ullman, lawyer for Klamath Tribes. Klamath tribes have water and fishing and gathering rights under an 1864 United States-im posed treaty, Ullman explained. Last summer, one of Oregon’s worst droughts brought a clash of values when the government cut off the water supply to about 1,000 farmers in order to protect endan gered species and meet obligations to the tribes. McDowell said the drought stirred up sentiments among farmers that the govern ment was breaking their contract by not giving them water. “The government didn’t think about the consequences of setting up an economy based only on agriculture,” said Monika Bilka, an environmental science major. “It’s just not sustainable.” Bilka grew up in Klamath Falls and often finds herself caught be tween the strong opinions of fam ily and friends whose businesses have suffered and those of the en vironmental community, she said. “Farmers there are also trying to hold onto a long family history,” she said. The Yanceys are among those trying to salvage their family livelihood. “Our business is directly affect ed by agriculture,” Monty Yancey said. His family runs Super. Spray, a crop dusting business in Kla math Falls. Yancey said he thinks environmentalists are trying to stop the progress of farmers alto gether. “It’s like they are just living in a different world,” he said. He said his concerns are also centered around the profits rolling into energy companies during times of crisis and drought. “They are the ones who are really profiting from all of this,” he said. Monika Bilka watched last sum mer’s debate pit farmers against environmentalists. “Environmentalists and farmers are both trying to manipulate the government to do what they want,” she said. She sees the com munication barrier between envi ronmentalists and farmers as a fu tile cycle of stratified views. Often left out of the discussion are the Klamath and Yurok tribes, who work with environmental ists, they say, to bring balance back to the ecosystem. They be lieve the Creator has put them here to take care of all that has been provided for them. Ullman explained the grief they carry, feeling as if they have failed while watching their world fall to the brink of extinction. However, Ullman is confident the resiliency of Mother Nature makes some restoration possible. Earlier this month, a Bush ad ministration “working group” stepped into the scene. James Con naughton, chairman of the White House Council for Environmental Quality, introduced two proposals by conservationists. The idea is to convert delta areas that are used for cattle grazing back to natural wetlands. Wetlands serve as fil ters, trapping sediment from agri cultural run-off and preventing it from entering lakes and polluting native plant and sucker habitat, McDowell explained. “Water quality controls how wa ter is used,” McDowell said. And if the water quality is im proved, more water can he re leased to downstream farmers, ac cording to Steven Anderson of the Nature Conservancy, an environ mental agency, which buys land for wetland restoration. The government has recently in stituted further action to resolve the situation. Commissioner John Keyes of the Bureau of Reclama tion told Klamath Falls residents Sunday that the administration has already begun establishing “water banks,” or buying water from private sellers and landown ers in the Klamath Basin to pro vide an alternative supply. Gov ernment officials have requested biological opinions from the De partment of Fish and Wildlife to determine whether the bureau’s operations are a threat to habitat. The opinions are due next week. “We intend to meet both endan gered species acts and tribal com mitments,” said Jeff McCracken of the Bureau of Reclamation. “Our mandate by Congress is to provide irrigation water for farm ers,” he added. In a region where water means different things to different peo ple, all sides seem hopeful that new federal proposals will, as Mc Dowell said, “take the basin off the edge.” Ullman thinks there’s another option. “The other alternative is that they just abandon what’s going on here, which is undesirable to everyone.” Nicole Hill is a freelance reporter for the Emerald.