Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Amara,
A friend forwarded me the article dealing
chiefly with the Prebles Jumping Mouse and the
possible harm that may have been done on private
land to habitat for the mouse. I really have no
difficulty in believing that this did happen. In
fact I will wager that if you were to look, that
the same thing has likely happened to any listed
species on any private property in about the same
proportions discussed in the context of the
Prebles Jumping Mouse.
There is a statement in the article that I
have to say simply astounds me nearly beyond the
limits of my recently expanded disdain for modern
conservation and environmental movements. I'll get
to the statement in a minute, so bear with me
until then.
I am a farmer and I have a Masters Degree in
Biology. My Masters work was done with the Deer
Mice Peromyscus maniculatus, and P.
truei. I do not intend to tout my education
to show that I am somehow a superior sort of
biologist. I simply state it as means to show I
am not ignorant in the field of field biology, and
that I have at least some small degree of an
ability to recognize science, nothing more.
I find it ever difficult to even tell people
I have an advanced Biology Degree. There are two
reasons for this, both of which relate to my above
mentioned disdain, so they are germane here. The
first is that I find it increasingly difficult to
stomach shenanigans of people, mainly in federal
employment, who pass themselves off as
Biologists. The second reason is the disdain that
is apparent from people when they find out that I
might be one of "those damned biologists." This
last feature really angers me and it should anger
anyone with a degree.
At this point I get to the "astounding
statement." Actually there are two statements,
quoted verbatim from the text of the article.
The first statement first. This is the one
that astounds me and is, quite frankly the one
that points directly at the problem we have in
this country with the growing urban-rural
disconnect. The problem here is the implied
belief that private property owners 1) do not
value nature or that 2) they needed information
from conservation organizations.
I guess the real problem I have here is that
if this really has to be explained, that it
probably cannot be explained. I personally know
of no one who values nature or the piece of nature
that exists on our farm more than I, or the other
members of my family do. This is true of everyone
I know who farms as a primary means of economic
survival.
I realize that there is a certain segment of
private property development that likely does not
share that sentiment and I would not care to argue
with you over that point. However you make a
serious mistake when disdain for private property
ownership in general paints all of the landowners
in the former circumstance with the same can of
paint that fits those in the latter.
Actually we all have gotten so much
"information" (read misinformation if you
will) from conservation organizations that we are
all literally sick to death from it. More
information will not help. It will not help
unless and until conservation organizations start
being truthful and begin to rely on solid
information based on sound science. We may
disagree here, but overall the science being
touted in the ESA circus we are living out here in
rural America, is pretty flimsy.
It sure is here in the Klamath Basin. We
have that view backed in large measure by the
National Academy of Science.
It will not help unless and until
conservation organizations acquire some people
skills and cease on burdening judges with making
decisions that they are not qualified to make.
Natural resource management that is run by Judges
and Lawyers and the Conservationists who use them
will ultimately fail. That to me is a self
evident truth.
Second statement. I will not argue the point
that those habitats that occur on property owned
by individuals involved directly in agriculture
have likely suffered a disproportionate degree of
damage. There is a vicious circle here.
As constraints on agriculture increase and as
prices deteriorate, more and more land has to be
put into production, or production has to be
improved. When economic failure occurs the once
profitable farm or ranch is up for development and
that parcel has passed into development. While I
said that I and everyone I know value nature on
their farms, many are faced with the cold hard
reality (which in my experience with them,
Conservation groups neither share nor even
understand) of economic fact. We have to survive
economically. We have to pay taxes (nobody
withholds from our checks for us), pay the
mortgage, pay the bills, send the kids to school,
etc. (Yes, I realize you have to do that too, but
you don't have to do it from what you can produce
on your land like we do.)
The single utmost over riding DISASTER that
can occur on private property today is for either
the USFWS or NOAA Fisheries to show up on your
place and designate it, or part of it, as critical
habitat for some critter or another. Keep in mind
that they may well show up at my door because some
conservation/environmental organization sued for
protection. To that end I would not willing allow
any biologists on our property, unless they had a
court order served by the sheriff, to do any
surveys for endangered species.
If left to my self, I would apply for some
grant money to do some conservation work.
However, if it were successful, and some
threatened or endangers critter showed up, it
would be disastrous for me. This is where Shoot,
Shovel and Shut up comes from.
Biologists and conservation organizations, as
well as government bureaucracies, have done a
remarkably efficient job of making enemies of the
people they need to befriend in order for
significant conservation work to proceed. Keep in
mind that a farmer or rancher who is in a
profitable economic situation will be far better
able to spend some money on conservation and apply
for some grant money if critical habitat
designations were not so onerous. Get one of
those and the property really isn't yours. You
can't use it for production, but you still have to
pay taxes and mortgage etc.
I really don't know for sure where you fit in
the disconnect we see, but if you choose to
involve yourself in Natural Resource Management,
my advice to make a serious effort to befriend
some actual landowners and begin to try and
understand where they come from.
Steve Cheyne
Klamath Falls, OR 978603
|
Home
Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:15 AM Pacific
Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2001, All Rights Reserved