Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 Monday • May 24, 2021 Dead in the water: Serious fish kill consumes the Klamath River By aLEX SCHWaRTZ Herald & News (Klamath Falls)/Report for America WEITCHPEC, Calif. — As it enters the Yurok Reservation, the Lower Klam- ath River is as picturesque as it gets. Clear water rushes over gentle rapids, framed by verdant hills and a cerulean sky. An untrained eye would never notice the devastation beneath the surface — save for the tiny fish floating lifeless in the wa- ter. Over the past several weeks, an outbreak of the parasite Ceratonova shasta has ripped through young salmon through- out the lower reaches of the Klamath wa- tershed. Driven by high temperatures and low flows out of Iron Gate Dam, the dis- ease is resulting in what the Yurok Tribe is calling a “catastrophic” fish kill. Last week, nearly every single juvenile salmon trapped by researchers and fisher- ies staff was infected with C. shasta, and a majority of them were dead. “This feels like failure,” said Yurok Vice Chairman Frankie Myers. “It feels like some real, deep failure.” The alarm began sounding around the beginning of April, when spore con- centrations of C. shasta measured at six monitoring sites along the river between Iron Gate Dam and Tully Creek, in the heart of the Yurok Reservation, began to climb. The number of spores per liter of water (considered concerning once it reaches between five and 10) went above 70 at the Beaver Creek site, in the heart of the infectious zone downstream of Iron Gate Dam. See Fish / A11 Alex Schwartz/Herald & News The yurok Tribe is enduring what it calls a “catastrophic” die-off of ju- venile salmon on the Klamath River. Unlike other fish kills, this one is occurring throughout the lower watershed, not just in the hotspot for fish parasite C. shasta downstream of Iron Gate dam. NEIGHBORHOOD JOYRIDE Photo by Ryan BREnnECKE • The Bulletin With a snack in her hand, 16-month-old Georgia Freeman sits back and takes in the sights as her father, Chad Freeman, uses a remote control to drive her battery-operated car through a grassy area while exploring their Bend neighborhood Saturday. The pair took advantage of a lull in the rain showers to get some fresh air. Rain and a chance of thunderstorms are forecast through Monday with a high of 65 degrees. Forestry board moves quickly to find a state forester — and prove its own effectiveness to lawmakers 800,000+ The number of acres of state forestlands that are managed by the Oregon Department of Forestry TODAY’S WEATHER The state Board of Forestry met Thursday to discuss hiring both an interim and permanent leader for the troubled Oregon Department of For- estry, even as legislators discuss taking that authority away from the board because of its ineffective oversight of the agency. State Forester Peter Daugherty submitted his resignation two weeks earlier, after years of financial and management problems at the forestry Mostly cloudy High 65, Low 41 Page a10 INDEX Comics Dear Abby Horoscope department, tensions on the board, and deep frustration at the Legislature and the governor’s office over their in- ability to force changes. Sens. Kathleen Taylor, D-Portland; Jeff Golden, D-Ashland; and Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, have intro- duced a bill that would strip the au- thority to hire and fire the state for- ester from the seven-person volunteer board and give it to the governor’s office, subject to Senate confirmation. Senate Bill 868 would also give the state forester the authority to appoint A7-8 A4 A4 Kid Scoop Local/State Nation/World A9 A2-4 A10,12 Puzzles Sports Weather a deputy and assistant state foresters subject to the board’s approval. Forestry policy is some of the most controversial in Oregon, and whom- ever is hired as interim and perma- nent leader of the agency will have a full plate. The agency has faced con- sistent cash flow problems since at least 2015 due to its mushrooming wildfire costs and inability to quickly invoice and collect hundreds of mil- lions of dollars in receivables, mostly from federal agencies. The agency’s management of more A8 A5-6 A10 than 800,000 acres in state forestland has also been the subject of consistent controversy, with an ongoing tug of war over harvest levels and conserva- tion commitments. A slow-moving, and in the eyes of critics, ineffectual re- vision of the agency’s state forest man- agement plan has laid those conflicts bare, as did a Linn County jury’s award of $1 billion to rural counties’ that re- ceive harvest revenues from state for- ests because the agency failed to maxi- mize timber harvests since 2001. See Forestry / A3 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Monday E-Edition, 12 pages, 1 section DAILY By TEd SICKInGER The Oregonian U|xaIICGHy02329lz[