California Wildfires and Climate Solutions: A Klamath River Perspective

Guest Opinion. As a Karuk Tribal member from the Klamath River, my heart goes out to everyone in Southern California who has been displaced or devastated by the recent wildfires. Our communities know this pain all too well—we, too, have seen homes reduced to ash and sacred lands scorched by wildfires. Fire, which can be a source of renewal, has become a destructive force, intensified by years of mismanagement, climate change, and systemic disregard for Indigenous knowledge.

The Klamath River region has faced its own wildfire crises. From these struggles, we’ve emerged with solutions rooted in Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). Cultural burns—practices our ancestors used to prevent catastrophic fires and maintain ecosystem balance—are now being recognized by public agencies charged with wildfire management as a key strategy in building fire-resilient landscapes. These controlled, low-intensity burns reduce fuel loads, promote healthy forests, and protect our homes and waterways.

Unfortunately, hateful rhetoric is now circulating that distorts the fact, not only about the cause of the wildfires that are ravaging Los Angeles but also about a recent win for the environment: the removal of four aging hydroelectric dams from the Klamath River. These claims ignore the reality that the removal of these dams, which are more than 600 miles from LA, is a hard-fought victory for Indigenous communities who have battled for over 20 years to see them come down. These dams had been producing stagnant, toxic waters that nearly depleted our rivers of salmon, with the devastating 2002 fish kill being one of the most tragic outcomes. With the dams now gone, the river is flushing itself clean, and for the first time in 100 years, salmon are spawning above the former dam sites. This restoration is a major step toward healing both our land and our people, and in no way impacts water supplies in the rest of California…

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