Please watch The Last 100 Miles

Dave G

Steelhead
Forum Supporter
If you haven't yet watched The Last 100 Miles, I strongly recommend doing so. It's a short documentary about the declining water quality in the lower Deschutes River.

The video can be seen here:

If, after seeing the film, you are moved to do so, please write to Governor Tina Kotek to request that she champion this cause, and compel Oregon Department of Environmental Quality to start enforcing the Clean Water Act. You can also write to PG&E and the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs.

This is only one small issue in a world of larger issues, but it is local, eminently solvable, and very important to fly fishers and those whose livelihood relies on a robust healthy fishery.

I was quite surprised to find how writing just one letter went a long way in helping me feel less impotent about the issues facing us today. Please don't sit by idly and watch one of the country's best fisheries decline in the face of corporate greed and lack of integrity.

Once it goes it'll never come back (and then what will you do with all those Chubby Chernobyls)?
 
This has been a problem for many, many years.
The powers that can do something about this don't want to spend the $$$$$
 
Done, so sad. Fished it from ‘67-‘76. Hoping to have one more visit this fall after the releases revert back to bottom draw.
What PGE has done is criminal, I don’t understand why the Confederated Tribes support this when it’s obvious that it’ll never restore the upstream salmonids and has such a negative effect downstream.
 
What’s the money trail (flow) look like on this whole project?
Might answer a few questions and let us realize what upstream currents we may face to encourage some call to action.
 
I agree that this is NOT a new problem.

The only thing that is new is my resolve to not simply sit and watch it happen. I may not be able to do much on the national stage, but this is a local problem, and I can't idly watch a beloved river die right in front of us.
 
So sad.
When the last tree is cut, the last fish is caught, and the last river is polluted; when to breathe the air is sickening, you will realize, too late, that wealth is not in bank accounts and that you can’t eat money.
 
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