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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Council
takes on river permit issue Sisters
is a ways away from the Deschutes River, but a controversy over access to
the river came to town at the city council meeting Thursday, September 25.
The president of Sun Country
Tours presented a resolution before the Sisters City Council which demands
the public have open access to the Lower Deschutes River.
Dennis Oliphant asked the
city council to join the cities of Maupin, Madras and The Dalles in signing
a resolution which states, "It is hereby resolved the Bureau of Land Management
shall not implement any system that will limit the public's right to access
the Lower Deschutes River without an environmental or social conflict
documented that doing so will solve and only then as a last resort."
Mayor David Elliott told Oliphant
the city would carefully consider his request and give him an answer at
a later date.
The resolution opposes plans
by the Federal Bureau of Land Management to implement a permit system
which would limit public access to rafting and recreational activities
on the river between the Warm Springs Reservation and the river's mouth
at the Columbia River.
If the permit system is implemented,
it would only be in effect on 10 peak-use days of the year, according
to a report from Oliphant. The plan would displace a total of 3,220 boaters
or 2.2 percent in 2003, according to the report.
Oliphant said the permit system
is extremely strict and requires advance notice up to six months in some
circumstances.
Councilor John Rahm pointed
out the permit system could also penalize no-show appointments by the
loss of access to the river for up to two years.
He said such a penalty could
hurt boaters who are scheduled on a rainy day.
Jeff Perin, owner of The Fly
Fisher's Place in Sisters, told the city council the limited entry system
on the river could seriously deter his business.
"I've owned the fly fishing
shop for 12 years and I employ four guides in the summers," Perin said.
"They come back and say they are only one of two to three boats on the
water. In the early '90s, there were a lot of problems with drinking and
partying on the river in Maupin so that lead to this permit system, but
it has been cleaned up and there is no reason to regulate 100 miles of
river for such a short space."
The Mayor of Maupin, Dennis
Ross, told the council that those who sign the resolution express their
intention to achieve the goals of the Federal Bureau's Lower Deschutes
River Management Plan without implementing major restrictions.
"We have improved social conditions
around the river and improved riparian habitat. We feel the objective
of the plan has been met," Ross said. |
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