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Portland, Oregon
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With 2005 shaping up as a historically poor water year, three Columbia
River treaty tribes today urged a federal judge to establish specific
protections to ensure that Columbia River salmon are not left vulnerable
to an inadequate federal salmon plan.
The tribes filed two documents supporting a collective plaintiffs
motion for injunctive relief. The plaintiffs, a coalition of conservationists,
sport and commercial fishers, and businesses, filed their motion
for preliminary injunction that asks for two specific actions to
ensure survival and recovery of salmon. First, federal agencies
must adjust river flows, including limited drawdowns of two reservoirs,
to move juvenile salmon downriver faster. Second, they must direct
a portion of the river’s flow over the dam spillways—the
safest way for the juvenile salmon to get downstream and avoid the
hydroelectric turbines.
Tribal scientists estimate these actions will yield a 10% faster
downriver travel time and up to a 50% survival increase over and
above what would be expected with the Bush Administration’s
2004 salmon plan. Federal, state and tribal scientists have concluded
that in-river migration, with flow augmentation and spill at all
dams, is a much safer and more reliable way for salmon to reach
the ocean than trucking and barging methods.
“The best hope for juvenile salmon this summer is to place
them in an environment that most closely mimics the natural conditions
that juvenile salmon have thrived under in the past,” said
Jay Minthorn, chairman of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.
Today’s injunction request is part of a larger legal challenge
to the 2004 federal salmon plan. A lawsuit was filed in February
in a federal court in Portland, Oregon by a coalition of fishing
and conservation groups and the State of Oregon. The tribes are
active in that court proceeding as amicus curiae.
Should the Bush Administration’s salmon plan be implemented,
ratepayers and taxpayers will bear a $6 billion dollar burden over
the next ten years with little or no biological benefit. The new
federal plan, which the tribes argue has directly ignored earlier
court instructions, allows salmon to continue to decline, abandons
the idea that the species must be recovered, and treats the dams
like they are an immutable part of the river environment.
“Today, we put some biologically sound and responsible actions
on the table,” said Olney Patt, Jr., executive director of
the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. “ The salmon
can’t wait for the theoretical, untested or unfunded - they
need practical actions.”
Adding to the urgency of these measures is the current water forecast.
Weather services predict this will be the third lowest runoff year
on record. In 2001, the Columbia Basin experienced its second worst
water year. That year federal agencies sacrificed fish protections
in favor of power production causing salmon and steelhead to suffer
the lowest in-river survival rates – as low as 1% in the case
of Snake River fall Chinook- on record.
“Ultimately our goal is to restore healthy, harvestable
salmon runs for the benefit of the entire Pacific Northwest. This
injunction will protect salmon and hopefully provide the incentive
for the federal government to comply with the Endangered Species
Act,” said Minthorn.
Today’s filings - a memorandum in support of the plaintiff’s
motion for preliminary injunction and a declaration by Frederick
Olney, a former biologist with the US Fish and Wildlife Service
– are available at the links listed to the left.
The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the
Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon, and
the Yakama Nation made the filings.
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About CRITFC
The Portland-based Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission is
the technical support and coordinating agency for fishery management
policies of the Columbia River Basin's four treaty tribes: the Confederated
Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the Confederated Tribes
of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon, the Confederated Tribes
and Bands of the Yakama Nation and the Nez Perce Tribe.
CRITFC, formed in 1977, employs biologists, other scientists, public
information specialists, policy analysts and administrators who work
in fisheries research and analyses, advocacy, planning and coordination,
harvest control and law enforcement. |