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The oral history of Thomas J. Graff documents his long career with the Environmental Defense Fund and his role in influencing California and national energy and water policy for nearly four decades. He was one of three young men, two attorneys and a fishery biologist, who opened the first office of EDF in the West in 1971. An easterner with a Harvard law degree, he was new to California and had virtually no connection to the burgeoning environmental movement or the outdoor life. Within just a few years, he had been fully initiated as a backpacker and river runner, and with his colleagues had launched three important legal actions to protect California rivers: opposing the New Melones and Auburn Dams and beginning a three-decade long legal battle against the East Bay Municipal Utility District to protect the American River.

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