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©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Permit
system will be used on river Sisters
businesses and sportsmen who ply the Deschutes River for fishing and rafting
will likely have to get used to new limits on using the river.
The Bureau of Land Management
consented on Tuesday, November 4, to implement a limited entry permit
system on Segment 1 (Pelton Re-regulating Dam to Harpham Flat) of the
Lower Deschutes in 2005. By 2008 boaters will be required to have permits
from Warm Springs to the river's mouth.
Northwest Rafters Association
and National Organization for Rivers filed a complaint against the BLM
on July 11, 2003, for failure to implement the permit system agreed to
in the Lower Deschutes River Management Plan (LDRMP).
The Confederated Tribes of
Warm Springs later joined the lawsuit on the side of the plaintiffs.
After 15 hours of mediation
by a Ninth Circuit federal judge, the "defendant interveners (City of
Maupin, Wasco County, Sherman County and Sun Country Tours) declined to
sign onto the settlement.
The agreement favored the
plaintiffs because "the agency knew they were going to lose the lawsuit
so they settled, according to Jim Noteboom, attorney for the Warm Springs
Tribes.
"All three studies that were
conducted to measure use on the river exceeded the target levels set in
the LDRMP, he said. "The last study done by Oregon State University has
high statistical levels of confidence, 99.9 percent in fact. Almost perfect.
Exceeding these target levels
would trigger the implementation of the permits.
Scott Horgren, attorney for
the defendant interveners, contends that the target levels established
in the LDRMP are 41 percent projection and 59 percent actual boaters from
1990. Last season the boater number was 11 people over the target level.
Under this system, "all permits
will be allocated from a common pool on a first-come, first-served basis.
Guided and non-guided boaters will compete equally for access to the river,
according to the Supplement to the LDRMP.
There will be a limited number
of these permits issued, none of which will be reserved for commercial
use.
This is the type of system
that many river users have feared, including Sisters business owner Jeff
Perin.
Perin is the owner of The
Fly Fisher's Place, which conducts guided trips on the Lower Deschutes.
"My business can absorb change
and weather this storm, but I'm nervous for my guides, said Perin. "It's
going to be inconvenient for customers. No longer will we be able to have
permits ready for people before they schedule with us because we can't
apply for the permit without the customer contacting us first and then
we have to check the availability.
Ken Streater of Destination
Wilderness, a guide service in Sisters, was weary of the Deschutes years
before this lawsuit began.
"In 1997 we made a conscious
decision to stay off the Deschutes in part because of this permit conundrum,
said Streater.
Regarding the common pool
of permits, where no percentage is set aside for guides, Streater said,
"Yes this is a public river, but the public is well served by guides.
Madras Mayor Rick Allen claims
that, "It's going to take $100,000 of taxpayer money just to implement
the permit plan.
Allen hopes to continue the
battle to prevent the limited entry permit system from taking effect.
"We'd like to get the attention
of Congress or the Governor, but unfortunately it's going to take an angry
public to change things, he said. |
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