FROM THE ARCHIVE
Klamath River makes group's most endangered list
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THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2003 The Klamath River has been named one of the nation's most endangered rivers by American Rivers, a conservation group. The river has been the subject of high-profile water wars. Tribes in northern California and southern Oregon depend in the Klamath Basin for subsistence but the Department of Interior has given more water to non-Indian farmers in recent years. Last year, more than 30,000 salmon died in the Klamath in northern California. Tribes blamed Interior's poor water management policies. Also named to the list is the Snake River in the Pacific Northwest. Tribes and environmentalist have called for four dams on the river to be removed in order to help salmon recovery. Get the Story:
Group: Water Overuse Endangers Rivers (AP 4/10)
Username: indianzcom, Password: indianzcom
Snake River on watchdogs' sick list (The Seattle Post-Intelligencer 4/10)
Group adds Platte to endangered list (The Lincoln Journal Star 4/10) Relevant Links:
American Rivers - http://www.amrivers.org Related Stories:
Klamath Basin named endangered place in Calif. (03/05)
Fishkill blamed on Norton water policy (01/07)
Klamath report contradicts economic impact (12/19)
Bush's Klamath review criticized (11/14)
DOI report backs Klamath for fish (11/1)
Klamath suit targets farmers (10/30)
Pressure cited in Klamath water decision (10/29)
Tribes would receive $20M in Klamath aid (10/25)
Yurok Tribe files Klamath lawsuit (10/23)
Norton blamed for Klamath fishkill (10/16)
Tribe protest Klamath water cut-off (10/14)
Yurok Tribe declares fish emergency (10/11)
'Not enough water to go around' (10/7)
DOI takes no blame for Klamath fish kill (10/3)
Time to count dead fish at Klamath (10/1)
Norton reverses decision on Klamath water (9/30)
Tribes estimate 30,000 dead salmon (9/27)
Salmon dying in Klamath River (9/25)
Water woes affect Calif. tribes (8/26)
Calif. tribes still waiting for water (8/22)
Interior sued over river plan (1/10)
Plan would help restore salmon to river (12/20)
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