Kerry is the ranking minority member on the Senate Commerce, Science and
Transportation Committee that has jurisdiction over fishery issues. He also
is a recently declared presidential candidate.
The requests were spurred by a Wall Street Journal article on July 30 that
detailed how Karl Rove, White House political advisor, engineered a change
in water policy favoring Klamath Basin farmers over fish to assist the
re-election campaign of U.S. Senator Gordon Smith (R-OR). Rove apparently
began his efforts with a presentation to Interior Department officials
connecting regulatory actions - including the Klamath issue - to Republican
prospects in the coming elections.
When Norton opened the irrigation system head gates that increased the water
supply to Klamath Basin farmers in 2001, Senator Gordon Smith stood beside
her for a well orchestrated photo opportunity.
Mark Pfeifle, DOI spokesman, defended the controversial decision by the
National Academy of Sciences - that resulted in lower flows below Iron Gate
Dam - as based on the "best available science." He blasted the Kerry
Campaign for "partisan sniping."
"We are entering a campaign where people are more interested in partisan
sniping than making progress," said Pfeifle. "The DOI is focused on
providing water for fish , tribes, fishermen and farmers. We have the
resources to inspire both a dynamic economy and a health ecosystem in the
Klamath Basin. What has Kerry ever done for people and fish in the Klamath
Basin? While Kerry snipes, we work."
Both Kerry and the Yurok Tribe applauded the decision by the Inspector
General to investigate the charges.
"The agreement by the Interior Department's Inspector General to investigate
this matter to see if political pressure from the White House intimidated
staff and influenced policy is a positive development and the appropriate
first step," said Kerry. "I anxiously await their decision."
Troy Fletcher, executive director of the Yurok Tribe, said he was
"cautiously optimistic" regarding the investigation. However, he said he
hoped that the investigation was not narrowly limited to issues around the
Endangered Species Act - coho salmon on the Klamath River and endangered
suckers in the Klamath Basin.
"We hope that the Inspector General does an analysis of other issues, not
just endangered coho salmon," he said. "They also have a tribal trust
responsibility here to protect all species for the benefit of the Yuroks and
everybody else. We can't just ignore the king salmon, steelhead, sturgeon,
lamprey eel and other non-listed species."
In a letter to Kerry, Earl E. Devaney, Interior Department' Inspector
General, said that it will investigate:
- What would be the normal regulatory process in a matter such as this,
assuming that this was an Administrative Procedures Act governed regulatory
matters.
- What actually happened in the administrative process in the Klamath Basin
matter.
- How the Klamath Basin matter deviated from the norm (if at all) with
special attention paid to "the science," "any suppressed information," and
"any evidence of political interference."
Kerry was joined in his request for the investigation by Congressman Mike
Thompson (D-California), whose North Coast district was impacted hardest by
the fish kill. Thompson is the author of salmon recovery legislation that
passed through the House Resources Committee in June. The bill would
allocate $600 million over three years for salmon conservation and habitat
recovery projects in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska.
The bill is supported by a broad, bi-partisan coalition of organizations,
including the National Association of Homebuilders, the California Farm
Bureau and American Rivers. Even Resources Committee Chairman Richard Pombo,
a vocal critic of the Endangered Species Act and other environmental laws,
has praised the legislation. "This legislation is exactly what's needed for
species recovery - it is targeted conservation and habitat restoration that
will recover salmon," Pombo said.
In related development, fishing, conservation and government watch groups,
including the Pacific Coast Federation of Fisheries Associations, on August
6 filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for a copy of
Rove's presentation made to federal fish and wildlife managers in January
2002, when he advised them to make sure their agency decisions supported
increased Republican voter political polling numbers.
Hopefully, the Inspector General's probe will get to the bottom of the "Iron
Gate Scandal." I applaud the Klamath River tribes, recreational anglers,
commercial fishermen, environmental groups and the offices of Senator Kerry
and Congressmen Thompson for applying the political pressure needed to prod
the investigation.
"The probe will be a step in the right direction if proves to be a real
investigation and not a whitewash," summed up Steve Evans, conservation
director of Friends of the River.
More Editorials by Dan