Last summer, the City of Klamath Falls and Klamath County approved the use of $600,000 in COVID relief funding to install a decommissioned F-15 fighter jet in Veteran鈥檚 Memorial Park on the edge of Lake Ewauna near downtown.
The jet would come from nearby Kingsley Field Air National Guard Base. According to the , it鈥檚 known as the training grounds for all F-15 pilots in the National Guard and Air Force.
The effort to bring a decommissioned jet to one of the city鈥檚 parks has been going on since 2015, according to the city.
Klamath Falls resident Ed Schilling is one of the organizers of the jet installation protest. He said there are sometimes homeless veterans sleeping in or near the park, and the federal relief funding could be better used for support services.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got people with PTSD, people who are suffering from substance abuse and so on,鈥 Schilling said. 鈥淎nd these funds, I think, should be used much more humanely than mounting this jet.鈥
Schilling said this project is an improper use of COVID relief funds. The Klamath Falls city council disagrees.
鈥淥ur council has determined that to help improve our economy and tourism to our community, that this is an appropriate use of those funds,鈥 said Klamath Falls Public Information Officer Kristina Mainwaring.
According to guidance from the , in general, funding categorized as 鈥渞esponding to the far-reaching public health and negative economic impacts of the pandemic鈥 can鈥檛 be used for general economic development, or, 鈥渁ctivities that鈥 generally enhance the jurisdiction鈥檚 business climate.鈥
But, Mainwaring said the city counts this project under the criteria of 鈥渞eplacing lost public sector revenue,鈥 as the city lost tourism during the pandemic. In building this display, Mainwaring said they hope to attract more tourists to the city.
The guidance on that category is much more broad. According to the Treasury Department, 鈥淩evenue loss is the most flexible eligible use category under the [State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds] program.鈥
Mainwaring added other projects, like playground installations, pool improvements and new trash receptacles in the downtown were all funded with ARPA dollars, and those didn鈥檛 receive any backlash.
The city already works with other organizations to help both veterans and homeless people in Klamath Falls, she said.
Because of the public outcry, the city is considering moving the display to the other side of the Veteran鈥檚 Memorial Park, where several other veterans memorials and displays are located.
Schilling and other residents plan to march through downtown on Saturday. They鈥檒l end at the park, where they鈥檒l place flowers on the ground to show how much space the jet display will take up.