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Water fight a land-grab scheme

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Editor,

The federal government is in the process of closing down the nation’s natural resources and thereby our wealth. Here in Montana, the primary current risk is water, which may become managed and controlled by the federal government through administration of the upcoming  CSKT water use compact soon to be voted on by the Montana state legislature. The decision would impact some 350,000 people living both on the reservation, as well as throughout 11 western counties from the Canadian border down to Butte, and to the western border.

The proposed reserved water rights compact for the Salish and Kootenai Tribes has experienced 12 years of planning by numerous high-salaried attorneys, hydrologists and other professionals. It is scheduled for early action by the incoming state legislature. Land and water availability are closely linked, impacting returns on investment. Property values determine economic health of business, industry and personal.

In Montana, all lands owned or held by any Indian or Indian tribe are held in trust by the federal government. The Montana State Constitution claims full force of absolute jurisdiction and control by the U.S. Congress. Federal government influence and direction has essentially been initiated through the tribes, giving appearance of excessive “tribal” demands related to water use and availability. Utilizing tribal dictate, the EPA would even be able to eventually introduce rulings enforcing basically unachievable water quality standards. All such costly mandates put pressure on landowners, reducing land value and salability while holding real estate agents responsible for non-exposure of risks. 

Meanwhile, governmental agencies, primarily federal and/or tribal, are in position to buy up “cheap” private property made available due to excessive regulation. Governmental agencies, including federally owned Indian reservations, being “nonprofit” entities, qualify to buy up “contractual property management rights” held by land trusts (usually The Nature Conservancy). Land and water management and manipulation schemes could easily set precedence for Indian reservations nationwide, as well as vast dwindling regions of land being gobbled up, thus evolving into socialistic ownership and control of property. 

Many varieties of federal land grab schemes are under way, exposing motives of those in power. We need to be informed and help elected officials make the right decisions regarding compact documents.  Refer to the websites: http://www.dnrc.mt.gov/rwrcc/Compacts/CSKT/Default.asp and http://www.cskt.org/tr/nrd_waternegotiations.htm. 

Clarice Ryan

Bigfork

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