News

  • NW Fishletter #381: NW Energy Coalition Commissions Study To Replace Energy From Snake River Dams

    May 7, 2018

    dam.lsrA study commissioned by the Northwest Energy Coalition concludes that energy from four lower Snake River dams can be replaced with a combination of solar, wind, energy efficiency and demand response.

    And, the Coalition says, these new energy sources would still provide reliable power to the Northwest and come with only small increases in ratepayer costs and greenhouse gas emissions.

    Meanwhile, a consultant for Northwest RiverPartners who looked at the study questioned its affordability and reliability findings.

    The Coalition, which represents about 100 organizations seeking clean energy solutions to restoring salmon, hired independent consultants Energy Strategies to find out if reliable and affordable clean energy options could replace the power now generated by the four dams. At an April 4 news conference, Fred Heutte, the Coalition's senior policy associate, said the company found no new natural gas plants are necessary, although some of the energy replaced if dams were removed would likely come from existing gas or other carbon-emitting energy sources.

    The study outlined several possible scenarios for replacing the dams, including the construction of new gas-fired power plants. But at its news conference, the Coalition focused on a "balanced-plus" portfolio that adds 1250 MW of new wind power, 250 MW of new solar, 160 aMW of energy efficiency and 500 MW of demand response--energy saved by compensating users who stop using energy when it's most needed.

    The balanced-plus option would add about 360,275 tons of carbon to the environment--an increase of about 1 percent--if greenhouse gas policies remain as they are today. And it would cost an estimated $464 million a year, requiring increased revenues of 3 percent beginning in 2026. NWEC said that's an average of $1.28 more per month for residential customers.

    Heutte said the four dams on the lower Snake River have been identified as a major threat to salmon. Failing to recover the fish hurts not only the environment, but also the fishing and tourism industries, American Indian tribes, and other species in the ecosystem, including orcas.

    The Coalition's presentation noted that the Northwest Power and Conservation Council has set a goal of 2 to 4 percent of sustained returns for salmon survival, and 4- to 6-percent returns to move toward recovery. "In the last 20 years, return rates for wild Snake River salmon have largely hovered between 0.5 and 1 percent--far below what's required for wild salmon to survive and thrive into the future."

    Heutte said removing the dams--which provide about 4 percent of the region's hydro power--would speed up river flows and cool water temperatures, contributing to higher survival rates for both juveniles and returning adults.

    Sean O'Leary, the Coalition's communications director, said the Coalition looked into removing the dams because federal agencies will be examining the possibility in a court-ordered environmental impact statement on operating 14 dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers. But while removing the four dams could be key to restoring declining salmon populations, "We don't have any interest in replacing any other dams," he said. "We support clean energy, including clean energy from hydro."

    Jim Litchfield, a consultant for Northwest RiverPartners, said it's not surprising that consultants were able to come up with a mix of other energy resources to replace the four dams. "That's what power planners do." A former power planning director of the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Litchfield reviewed the study and said he wouldn't call an increase in costs that ranges from about $400 million to $1.2 billion affordable, especially when all of the costs fall on BPA at a time when it's struggling to remain viable.

    He also questioned the reliability findings, which he said aren't the same conclusions as those reached in a recent NWPCC analysis showing that the region needs about 1,200 MW of new resources before 2023 in order to replace energy generated by coal plants that are going off line. "These new resources are needed to replace the output of coal plants that are going to be shut down," Litchfield wrote in an email. "If the dams were also removed, that would only make the system reliability even worse."

    In an interview, Litchfield said the study credibly explores options for rebalancing the region's energy needs if it suddenly lost the 3,000 MW of capacity, or 1,000 aMW of energy, from the four lower Snake River dams.

    "But it doesn't really answer the question of, 'Should we take the Snake River dams out?' There are a lot of other factors. They don't just provide power, but also navigation, irrigation, recreation; and they provide power system attributes you don't get from other resources," he said.

    The study also ignores other impacts of dam removal--such as the increase in carbon emissions if farmers transport wheat by rail or truck instead of barges, or the overall change in carbon emissions throughout the West, where much of the hydropower is currently sold, and not just the four Northwestern states examined.

    Litchfield added that there is no evidence in the study or anywhere else that removing the dams would recover four of the 13 ESA-listed stocks that spawn in the Snake River basin.

    "The economic analysis is not very honest, in that it tries to spread it to everybody," he said. "But all of those costs land on Bonneville; they don't land on anybody else." The study also does not look at the cost of removing the dams, although O'Leary said previous examinations have shown that it costs more in capital expenditures to maintain the dams than to remove them.

    O'Leary, however, also noted that the Coalition studied but rejected the higher-cost scenarios, and added that the decision to view costs across all Northwest households is the same methodology used by the NWPCC.

    Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon, said in a news release that costs of replacing the dams may drop even more, due to the plunging cost of renewables and the ability to fine-tune the energy resources identified in the study. In addition, he said, the dams are aging, and the cost of replacing worn-out turbines, for example, is predicted to cost at least $1.5 billion.

    He said scientists have identified the removal of the lower Snake River dams as the most effective, and likely the only way, to protect endangered wild salmon and steelhead from extinction. "This Power Replacement Study explodes the myth that we can't have both wild salmon and clean energy. Instead it shows that we can remove these four deadly dams, restore one of our nation's great salmon rivers and improve the Northwest's energy system," he said.

    Ben Kujala, NWPCC's current director of power planning, said he views the study as a "conversation starter." The Council provided a lot of data for the study--just as it does for other studies--but has not vetted its findings, he said. "If you really look into it, it's not one-sided. There are things people who are on either side can look at and use as part of their argument... Is this comprehensive? Probably not, but I think it adds something," he said. "It was a good and very interesting study."

    Kujala added that it's not easy to come up with a reliable, clean energy option for replacing a significant amount of hydropower. "Honestly, with our existing system today, if you remove something like the lower Snake River dams, you automatically end up emitting more carbon," he said. "It's just a natural consequence."

    As for the costs, he said, "I think there are many, many ways to run the power system, if you take money off the table." -K.C. Mehaffey<mailto:kcmehaffey@newsdata.com>

  • NW News Network: After 70 Years, Salmon Could Return To Columbia River Above Grand Coulee

    If all goes according to plan, there could soon be salmon above the Grand Coulee Dam again. That’s according to Cody Desautel, director of Natural Resources for the Confederated Tribes of the Colville. 

    “We’re going to trap and haul fish out of our hatchery and put them above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams,” he said. “So there will be salmon above Grand Coulee Dam this year for the first time in 70 years.”

    When the Grand Coulee Dam was built between 1933 and 1941, it effectively blocked salmon from traveling to the upper reaches of the Columbia River. But Desautel said that could change early this fall.

    “There was a lot of legwork that had to happen beforehand, like risk assessments and feasibility studies and habitat assessments to know if we brought those fish back, would there be any negative repercussions,” Desautel said. “Most of that works is done. All of that work has said it will not, so now is the time.”

    Desautel said the plan hangs on one last federal permit from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    For years, the tribes have been looking for a way to return salmon above the dam. Michael Marchand is the Chairman of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville.

    “When I was younger, I didn’t think I would see those things,” he said.

    Marchand said his grandmother once pointed out the spot where his ancestors used to fish.

    “One time, they lowered the water to work on the dam. I was just a young child and she said ‘that spot on that rock on this island is our family spot,’ and I was thinking like ‘Why is she telling me this? This dam is going to be here for a thousand years,” he said.

    The dam remains, but if the final permit is approved, Colville fish managers will trap salmon at their hatchery and drive them around the dam by truck, where they’ll be released back into the Columbia River. The tribe will keep track of where those fish go.

    It’s the next step in a decades-long process to reintroduce a viable salmon population on the river.

    Copyright 2018 Northwest News Network. To see more, visit Northwest News Network.

  • NW News Network: Study says plans needed to replace Snake River dams power generation

    By Courtney Flatt
    March 8, 2022

    dam.iceharbordamNow’s the time to begin planning ways to replace Washington’s four Lower Snake River dams with a mix of renewable energy projects, according to a report by the advocacy group NW Energy Coalition.

    The coalition also has advocated for removing the dams to help endangered sockeye salmon. While the dams are valuable, they are not irreplaceable, said Nancy Hirsh, NW Energy Coalition executive director.

    “We need a decision about dam removal now. Then we can start the planning process so that we’re ready to take these dams out,” Hirsh said.

    That process will take time, during which renewable energy, energy storage, and energy efficiency technologies will continue to develop, Hirsh said.

    However, Todd Myers, environmental director of the conservative think tank Washington Policy Center, said removing the four dams could create power grid instability in the Northwest, akin to statewide power outages in Texas during a 2021 cold snap.

    “Hydro is an extremely valuable part of making sure that we keep the lights on,” Myers said.

    Moreover, the Bonneville Power Association called the four dams workhorses during the Northwest’s cold snap in 2021, providing much needed flexibility when Chief Joseph Dam on the Columbia River experienced an equipment failure.

    “As we feel the impacts of climate change and the region builds more intermittent energy resources like wind and solar, we’re seeing more evidence that these dispatchable hydroelectric facilities are vital to public safety and electric reliability for the region,” said BPA Administrator John Hairston.

    However, Hirsh said, hybrid renewable energy projects that combine wind, solar and battery storage will help reduce generation concerns when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine.

    “That gives you a different kind of energy output than a wind project on its own,” Hirsh said.

    These types of hybrid renewable energy projects are evolving quickly, she said.

    “That indicates a robustness and diversity of resources across the region and the West that could meet the needs of utilities that are decarbonizing their systems and replace the output of the Snake River dams,” Hirsh said.

    The recent report found renewable energy costs have declined by around 50% between 2018 and 2021, when the coalition commissioned a similar study.

    In addition, the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, which just adopted its 2021 Northwest Power Plan, might analyze how power generation could be replaced if the Snake River dams are removed or altered. More discussion on the potential analysis is expected at the council’s March meeting.

  • NWNews: Federal report recommends breaching Lower Snake River dams to restore salmon

    By Courtney Flatt
    July 12, 2022

    dam.lsrIce Harbor dam is one of the four dams on the Lower Snake River. A new draft report says one or more of the dams should be breached to restore salmon runs to healthy and harvestable levels.

    To recover healthy salmon populations, one or more of the Snake River dams must be breached, in addition to other actions, according to a new draft report released Tuesday by federal officials.

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which manages threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead, prepared the draft report, with input from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Nez Perce Tribe, and the State of Oregon, which have been involved in ongoing litigation about the federal plan to operate the Columbia River hydropower system.

    “Salmon recovery depends on large-scale actions,” according to the NOAA report. “Inaction will result in the catastrophic loss of the majority of Columbia River basin salmon and steelhead stocks.”

    The NOAA report shows what it will take to restore salmon to healthy and harvestable numbers, said Brenda Mallory, chairperson of the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

    “Business as usual will not restore the health and abundance of Pacific Northwest salmon. We need a durable, inclusive, and regionally-crafted long-term strategy for the management of the Columbia River Basin,” Mallory said.

    In another report also released today, federal officials from the Bonneville Power Administration commissioned an independent analysis by the consulting firm E3 that looked at ways to offset any electricity generation from the four dams on the Lower Snake River.

    The E3 report found it’s possible to replace electricity generation as emerging technologies, such as small modular nuclear reactors and floating offshore wind turbines, become more commercially available.

    Replacing the electricity generation from the Snake River dams could cost $11.2 billion to $19.6 billion, which is similar to costs outlined in previous studies. At the high end, which officials deemed unrealistic, that cost could reach $77 billion, according to the report.

    For ratepayers, replacing the dams could mean $100 to $230 per year more in electricity costs in 2045, around an 8% to 18% increase in bills.

    “As the region continues to embrace the health and cost-savings of a decarbonized power sector and to further enhance its supply of clean energy, the E3 study can help inform long-term planning decisions, including to limit the impact to ratepayers,” said Kathleen Hogan, U.S. Department of Energy Principal Deputy Under Secretary for Infrastructure.

    The Biden administration did not endorse the actions outlined in either report. However, federal officials said the administration is considering the information in these reports as it assesses long-term plans for the Columbia River Basin, a first for recent administrations.

    Many groups that would like to see the dams removed said momentum appears closer to dam removal than it has over the last few decades.

    For example, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, both Democrats, are expected to release recommendations this month on what they think should happen with the dams. According to a separate draft report issued in June that will guide Murray and Inslee’s recommendations, breaching the dams would be the best way to remove Snake River salmon runs from the Endangered Species List and would best maintain treaty and trust obligations with tribes.

    Earlier, U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, outlined ideas to remove the four dams in a $33.5 billion proposal that would have replaced the additional services the dams provide, including irrigation for agriculture, transportation, and carbon-free energy.

    Removing the dams would take an act of Congress, according to federal officials.

    U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., has long advocated keeping the dams in place, most recently leading members of the Congressional Western Caucus on a tour of Ice Harbor Dam near the Tri-Cities. Newhouse represents an area that includes some of the Snake River dams.

    Newhouse released a joint statement with fellow Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash.; Jaime Herrera Beutler, R-Wash.; Cliff Bentz, R-Ore.; Russ Fulcher, R-Idaho; and Matt Rosendale, R-Mont.

    The statement sharply criticized the NOAA and E3 reports, noting the federal agency cherry-picked talking points that would lead to dam breaching, which the representatives wrote would negatively impact people in the Northwest.

    “The Biden administration is talking a big game on carbon goals while simultaneously engaging in actions to undermine valuable clean, affordable and renewable power resources on the Columbia River System, thus compromising energy stability across the region,” according to the joint statement.

    The first NOAA report prioritized the recovery of each salmon stock listed under the Endangered Species Act, with the Snake River spring/summer chinook and steelhead at the top of the list. In addition, the report examined the outlook for each of the 16 stocks that historically spawned above Bonneville Dam, calling the short-term outlook for interior Columbia Basin stocks grim.

    Of the 16 historical salmon stocks in the Columbia Basin, four are extinct; seven are included in the Endangered Species List; and one of the listed stocks is reliant on hatchery programs. One stock fares better, approaching historical numbers.

    However, according to the NOAA report, longer-term outlooks provide a brighter spot because of increasingly effective stream and estuary rehabilitation programs, large-scale habitat improvement projects, and hatchery and reintroduction efforts.

    “All optimism about future stock status must be tempered by the continued pressure from a changing climate and the ever-expanding human footprint,” according to the NOAA report.

    As climate change worsens, threatened and endangered salmon will face more risks, according to the report, which means opportunities to rebuild imperiled stocks will continue to diminish.

    Climate change will continue to increase droughts, wildfires, and vary river flows in the Northwest, according to the report. In addition, climate change will be less manageable in ocean conditions and marine environments, where salmon spend a majority of their lifetimes.

    “The increasing role of deteriorating ocean or freshwater conditions from climate change on the health of the salmon and steelhead stocks does not diminish the importance or necessity of taking meaningful actions in areas society has direct influence over,” according to the NOAA report.

    In that light, management actions should prioritize increasing salmon resiliency and adaptation to climate change, according to the NOAA report.

    To do that, society has direct influences over restoring properly functioning tributary habitats, which can help salmon as snowpack diminishes, and improving migration areas human influences degraded, according to the NOAA report.

    “We are at a crucial moment for salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River Basin when we’re seeing the impacts of climate change on top of other stressors,” said Janet Coit, assistant administrator for NOAA Fisheries.

    While no single action will act as a silver bullet, a diverse combination of management actions could help improve salmon and steelhead survival to reach “healthy and harvestable stocks” in the face of climate change, according to the NOAA report.

    The report also looked at mid-range goals of fish abundance set by the Columbia Regional Partnership, which decided that salmon populations in the Columbia River Basin needed to be higher than the threshold for Endangered Species Act recovery goals. Instead, the task force recommended fish stocks reach what it called healthy and harvestable numbers.

    To achieve that goal, according to the NOAA report, managers will need to take several actions, including removing one or more of the four Snake River dams, reducing the number of predators, restoring and protecting tributary and estuary habitats, adding fish passage above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams, and reforming hatchey and harvest practices.

    “These actions are needed to provide the highest likelihood of reversing near-term generational declines and toward rebuilding healthy and harvestable runs in the face of climate change,” according to the report.

    In addition, these actions, which the NOAA report noted science supports, should be implemented as soon as possible.

    Trout Unlimited, which has argued to remove the dams, said removing the dams could be transformative for fish, and possibly help salmon even faster than the report indicated. That’s because breaching the Snake River dams will help salmon and steelhead reach hundreds of miles of rivers and streams more quickly, said Rob Masonis, vice president for Western Conservation at Trout Unlimited.

    “This is the golden key that will unlock the benefits of other salmon recovery investments,” Masonis said.

    Moreover, on the heels of the NOAA report, nearly 70 Oregon businesses sent a letter today to the state’s elected officials asking to remove the dams and to invest in replacement infrastructure.

    Lukas Angus, of 7 Waters Sovereign Foods LLC and a Nez Perce Tribal member, said the dams are an affront to tribal sovereignty.

    “I have a cultural connection to the salmon as they are ones that sustain my people's existence and wellbeing. My people also have traditions of trade and commerce that predate colonization and the dams that followed that continue to this day,” Angus said.

    In the E3 report also released today, officials asked the consulting firm E3 to look at whether electricity generation from the Lower Snake River dams could be replaced.

    Critics of dam removal often raise concerns over replacing the carbon-free generation from the dams.

    According to the E3 report, replacing that generation is costly but feasible, especially if emerging technology, including small modular nuclear reactors, makes it to the market. Replacing the dams would require 2,300 to 4,300 megawatts generated by a variety of new resources, according to the E3 report.

    Even with the dams in place, the region will need these emerging technologies to meet clean energy standards and a growing need for power, according to the E3 report.

    How quickly these emerging technologies come online is uncertain, according to the E3 report.

    The cost of replacing the electricity generation from the dams, estimated at $11 billion to $19 billion, increases each year, as renewable energy standards become more stringent, according to the E3 report.

    The E3 report analyzed several scenarios, including when different types of generation could be available.

    Renewable energy advocates said a comprehensive energy replacement planning process would help develop these new technologies.

    “We can develop a portfolio of clean energy resources that replaces the output of the dams," said Nancy Hirsh, executive director of the NW Energy Coalition, which has supported removing the dams.

    However, critics of dam removal said the region’s energy supply shouldn’t come down to technologies that aren’t yet available.

    “We all want emerging technologies to be viable, but we cannot bet our climate and the health and safety of our region on something that doesn’t yet exist,” said Kurt Miller, executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, which has pushed for the dams to remain in place.

    https://www.nwnewsnetwork.org/2022-07-12/federal-report-recommends-breaching-lower-snake-river-dams-to-restore-salmon

  • NWNews: Tribal members gather to demand the federal government uphold treaty obligations, protect salmon

    2 chinook salmon

    By Courtney Flatt
    Nov. 3, 2023

     

    More than 15 Tribes joined together this week to demand the federal government uphold their treaty obligations.

    For Northwest tribes, removing the four lower Snake River dams means more than just saving salmon, more than just saving the orcas that rely on salmon for food. More than 15 tribes joined together in Tulalip, Wash., this week to demand the federal government uphold their treaty obligations.

    Throughout two days of emotional panels and testimony at the Rise Up Northwest in Unity Convening conference, tribal members asked everyone to pay attention to the science and traditional knowledge, to their leaders, and most of all to the salmon.

    “We gotta be careful with our English, right? We have a mindset that we need to save salmon and we need to save the orca. From what? Look in the mirror. We need to save ourselves,” said Jay Julius, of the Lummi Nation.

    He said the norm in policymaking needs to change.

    “Protecting like it's our giver of life, not a lack of political will to do what is right but won’t get us votes,” he said on a panel of male tribal leaders.

    Fellow panelist JoDe Goudy, of the Yakama Nation, said the political policies harken back to policies like the Doctrine of Christian Discovery, which he said were backbones of “false religious pretenses and lies” that now govern policies with tribes.

    “We are looking at extinction and the extermination of our salmon,” Goudy said. “I’m not going to just stand by with my brothers and my sisters and say we’re just going to accept it. We’re going to have to start telling the truth and live within that truth and understand who we wish to be within that truth and work our way to a better future.”

    Biologists say removing the four dams on the Lower Snake River could give salmon there a fighting chance. Still, they say, a lot more would need to be done.

    To remove the dams, politicians, like Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, say there need to be solutions for the services the dams provide, like carbon-free electricity, irrigation and transportation of things like wheat.

    Alyssa Macy, of the Confederated Tribes of the Warms Springs, said there are solutions, if people are willing to work at them. She spoke during the panel of women tribal leaders, which moderator Kayeloni Scott called “salmon queens.”

    “We are each other’s relatives, and it’s going to take hard work and with that in mind, we need to be kind and loving toward one another,” Macy said.

    Also on the panel, Kim Hartwig, of the Nez Perce Tribe, said salmon are connected to the whole well-being of a person – physical and spiritual. Hartwig is the Nimiipuu Health Medical Director.

    “Our ways of life and living offer much greater healing than an insulin injection or a pill that I can give and I truly feel that that’s where we need to go to heal communities in Indian Country,” Hartwig said.

    Many will remember an emotional moment at the conference, which spoke to more than just the trauma of losing salmon. During the Tribal Women panel, several speakers acknowledged other traumas, from childhood sexual assault to cancer diagnoses. After they finished speaking, four male tribal leaders sang a prayer for the women, moving many in the room to tears.

    All of the women imparted a sense of hope for young activists who will pick up the fight. Youth speaker Free Borsley, of the Lummi Nation, noted how salmon declined after colonization.

    “Really if we want to see a better tomorrow, we have to re-Indigenize everything around us, every part of us as individuals,” Borsley said during a youth panel.

    That healing work includes tribal and nontribal people, and it benefits everyone, said Fawn Sharp, of the Quinault Indian Nation.

    “We have to maintain hope, we have to work together, we have to rise above, and we have to find that place where that eternal light is shining on our future,” Sharp said.

    The work ahead, she said, is enormous, but not impossible.

    Listen to the article here: https://www.nwnewsnetwork.org/environment-and-planning/2023-11-03/tribal-members-gather-to-demand-the-federal-government-uphold-treaty-obligations-protect-salmon

  • NWNews: Tribes, governments sign historic agreement that's a 'path forward' for salmon, dams

    Salmon Neil Ever Osborne

    By Courtney Flatt
    February 23, 2024

    Cell phones and cameras popped above a packed room to capture the moment Friday each of six sovereigns – the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla Tribes and the governors of Washington and Oregon – signed the historic Columbia Basin Restoration Initiative, held securely in a maroon binder.

    The hard-fought agreement put an end to decades of court cases over efforts to protect salmon and steelhead, while dealing with complex problems in the Northwest: energy transitions, irrigation and transportation.

    This agreement, combined with other funding, will bring more than $1 billion to wild fish restoration and a 10-year break from court cases, according to the Biden administration.

    The tribal, state and federal leaders officially signed the historic agreement Friday in Washington, D.C. Supporters say the plan will protect salmon and help ensure an environmentally-just future in the Northwest.

    “When one side is being burdened, like we are with the lack of salmon in the system, then it's our obligation to come to the other sovereigns and say, ‘Hey, what's happened here is affecting our salmon runs and, therefore, our treaty rights. Therefore, we need to sit down and talk about how we can fix this,’” said Shannon Wheeler, Nez Perce Tribe Chairman.

    An entire system shouldn’t burden one group, he said.

    At the ceremony, Gerland Lewis, Chairman of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, said this level of commitment from the federal government is unprecedented.

    “Our fishers have empty nets and our homes have empty tables because, historically, the federal government has not done enough to mitigate these impacts,” Lewis said.

    Treaties with the federal government ensure tribes have the right to fish in usual and accustomed places, forever. Since the dams were built, tribal leaders say the federal government hasn’t held up its end of the bargain.

    “Now, we have an opportunity to do better and to have the tribes at the table,” Lewis said.

    The work isn’t new, said Corinne Sams, Fish and Widlife Committee Chair for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.

    “All we’re doing is collaborating and partnering, which we should have been doing all along,” Sams said.

    Moreover, this agreement is “charting a new and exciting path,” said Brenda Mallory, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

    “We will find pathways to secure a better future for all the Northwest,” Mallory said.

    A better future for tribes includes more salmon, said Jonathan Smith, Chair of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation.

    “We are working hard to improve the lives of our tribal members but it is difficult when the primary source of wealth – the natural resources of the Columbia River and the landscape – has been taken from us,” Smith said.

    In December, the Biden administration announced an agreement with tribes and the states of Oregon and Washington to restore healthy and abundant fish populations, grow tribal carbon-free energy projects and look into ways to replace the benefits provided by the four Lower Snake River dams.

    Those benefits are numerous, from transportation upriver to Lewiston, irrigation to farmlands near the Tri-Cities, and carbon-free energy supplied by the dams.

    However, the benefits have a cost, Wheeler said. Tribes and biologists say removing the four dams is one big action that needs to happen to keep wild salmon runs from extinction on the Snake.

    “When you turn on your lights, when you charge your phone, when your heater goes on or your cooling system goes on, you don't understand that what you're doing is actually affecting salmon. We’ve just become accustomed to it,” Wheeler said in an interview.

    Now, more than ever, Northwesterners need to come up with innovative ideas and solutions, he said.

    Especially as the climate continues to change, salmon have a matter of years, not decades, said Collin O’Mara, president of the National Wildlife Federation.

    “The politics are one thing,” O’Mara said. “But the science is always unforgiving. We have to make sure we're acting according to the science.”

    While the agreement didn’t ensure the removal of the dams, it is widely seen as a pathway to help understand how to do just that. Studies on replacing transportation, irrigation and energy benefits from the dams will help Congress make a decision on the fate of the Snake River dams.

    However, several Congress members who represent districts where the dams are located have stood strong in keeping the four dams in place.

    "The Biden administration has crossed the line with its blatant, hypocritical assault on the Lower Snake River Dams," said Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., in an earlier statement.

    Over the last couple of years, a flood of reports and recommendations have supported breaching the four dams, as long as a plan is in place to help everyone that uses the services the dams provide.

    In 2022, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, also a Democrat, issued a report that found removing the dams would benefit fish – but it couldn’t be considered until people found a way to replace the dams’ benefits.

    A federal report, from the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration, the agency charged with managing threatened and endangered fish, released a month after the much anticipated Murray-Inslee report. It also recommended breaching the dams to save fish.

    There has also been a growing chorus from tribal governments and their supporters. They’ve asked the federal government to uphold its end of treaty obligations that have been in place since 1855: for tribes to be able to fish in usual and accustomed places in perpetuity, which diminishing salmon returns have denied them.

    Wheeler said the administration has listened.

    Last September, the Biden administration released a memo directing all federal agencies to work towards “healthy and harvestable” salmon populations in the Columbia River System. That distinction would improve salmon numbers beyond being removed from the Endangered Species List.

    Now, Wheeler said, it’s time for more candid conversations.

    “We roll up our sleeves and, you know, we come together and, and we get to work,” Wheeler said. “We’d like to change things that are going to be positive for the future generations and fundamentally build those foundations. So that the future generations can make decisions without feeling the problems of the past that haven't been corrected.”

    NWNews: Tribes, governments sign historic agreement that's a 'path forward' for salmon, dams article link

  • NWPB: Biologists truck Snake River sockeye to cooler Idaho waters

    Sockeye salmon with lesions dying Conrad GowellSockeye salmon with lesions dying © Conrad Gowell

    By Courtney Flatt
    July 31, 2024

    On the banks of the Snake River in far eastern Washington, sockeye salmon have had a rough summer. The water behind the last major concrete dam they have to swim past is way too hot.

    “It’s running 74 degrees. That’s getting up to lethal temperatures for sockeye,” said David Venditti, a biologist with Idaho Fish and Game.

    To keep the fish out of potentially deadly waters, this team is giving salmon some wheels. They’re hauling sockeye from Lower Granite Dam to the Eagle Creek Hatchery in central Idaho. The whole endeavor costs thousands of dollars.

    At a holding pool, technicians scoop a fish at a time into a white tank on the back of a green pickup truck. Technician Tara Beckman stands in the truck bed. She dumps the salmon from the net into the tank.

    “They are wily,” Beckman said, as the fish thrashed in the net.

    These fish need that energy to make their journey inland. Snake River sockeye are born in Idaho’s Sawtooth Mountains. The young salmon swim out to the ocean, where they live for up to three years.

    When they’re ready to spawn, they make what sounds like an impossible journey.

    “These salmon, they travel like 900 miles. It’s insane,” said Elizabeth Holdren, a supervisory biologist with the Army Corps of Engineers.

    The salmon also climb roughly 6,500 feet in elevation until they reach the stream where they were born, Holdren said. Then, they spawn and die.

    This is the third summer biologists have trucked these endangered fish to cooler waters. The biologists first transported them in 2015, and then in 2021.

    Scientists say it’s a peek into the future of a changing climate. Jay Hesse, with the Nez Perce Tribe, said less snowpack in the mountains means less water in Northwest rivers.

    “Low stream flows result in elevated water temperatures because of reservoir habitats that tend to heat up faster and retain that heat,” Hesse said.

    Climate change is one of the compounding problems for salmon, he said.

    David Johnson manages the fisheries department for the Nez Perce Tribe. He said many tribal members rely on salmon for their primary food, nutrition and livelihoods.

    “Salmon and these tribes are hand-in-glove. Quite honestly, they’ve supported each other for countless years,” Johnson said.

    Now, Snake River sockeye are on the brink of extinction, said Joseph Bogaard, the executive director of the fish advocacy group Save Our Wild Salmon. These salmon are some of the most endangered fish in the Northwest, he said.

    “They’re giving us a message. Our ecosystems, our climate, our waters aren’t healthy. And they’re also telling us we’ve gotta do things differently and quickly or things are going to continue to unravel,” Bogaard said.

    Trapping and hauling salmon for hundreds of miles is just a stopgap measure, he said.

    “It’s really important right now. It is not a long-term strategy,” Bogaard said.

    A long-term strategy to save salmon, he said, would be to breach the four dams on the lower Snake River.

    However, the dams provide energy, transportation and irrigation for many communities across the region.

    Some who rely on the dams say they aren’t the main reason the salmon aren’t doing well. They point to changing temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, the need for new culverts or better habitats to help salmon make it upstream.

    Michelle Hennings, the executive director of the Washington Association of Wheat Growers, said there isn’t a silver bullet to protect these endangered fish.

    “The dams aren’t one issue,” she said. “There are multiple issues that happen within why salmon could be at lower levels.”

    Back at the Snake River, biologists add a few more fish to fill up the truck’s tank, and hop in the cab to start their drive.

    “We’re taking fish from as early in the run as we can,” Venditti said.

    To gather the sockeye, technicians gently guide fish into what’s called a salmon sock. The sock is a slender, blue bag and it’s about 4 feet long. It keeps the fish’s gills wet while a technician carries it to a tank on the back of a truck.

    “You get an arm and a leg workout,” said Rebekah Windover, one of the technicians.

    She plops the fish into the tank for its long ride to Idaho.

    “They all look happy in there,” Beckman said, peering into the tank.

    The truck is packed with 800 pounds of ice split between several coolers. Keeping the fish cool between the occasional traffic jam or road work project are the biggest challenges for the team.

    “It’s nerve wracking. These aren’t just fish. It makes a long day even longer,” Venditti said.

    This month, Venditti says they transported six truckloads of salmon. Although they’ve stopped trucking sockeye for the season, he said, temperatures in Washington are expected to creep back into the 100s.

    NWPB: 'Biologists truck Snake River sockeye to cooler Idaho waters' article link

  • NWPB: Toxic algal bloom found on the Snake River for second year in a row

    Toxic algal blooms SR 2 LighthawkToxic algal blooms in the Lower Snake River Oct. 2023 © Dr. Judy Parrish, Lighthawk

    By Courtney Flatt
    August 17, 2024

    Toxic algae is turning up once again on the Snake River.

    Water sampling on Aug. 12 revealed a large algal bloom near Granite Point, also known as Granite Rock, on the Snake River. It’s a popular swimming spot roughly 28 miles from Lewiston, Idaho. Public health leaders said it’s been especially busy since college and university students have returned to campus.

    The algae, microcystins, is a liver toxin that can harm people, pets and livestock in high concentrations. Toxins can also accumulate in fish. It’s the same type of algae that turned up on the Snake River last year.

    Washington health leaders are advising people to stay out of water that’s got a green scum on the surface. The bloom is popping up in different spots along a roughly 50 mile stretch of the Snake, between Nisqually John Landing and Little Goose Dam.

    The Whitman County Public Health department took a baseline sample in June, said Chris Skidmore, the director for the department. No toxins showed up in those samples, he said.

    If ingested in high concentrations, it can cause liver damage or death. In lower concentrations, health leaders said it might irritate skin.

    These blooms often happen when there’s too much runoff into rivers and lakes, Skidmore said.

    “Recently, when we have these thunderstorm rain events after a very long dry period, my theory right now is that it’s flushing extra nutrients into the water,” he said.

    The bloom could last for months. Signs have been posted to warn people. But Miles Johnson, the legal director for Columbia Riverkeeper, said an ongoing bloom could close public access to waterways.

    “People should be able to go to the river and swim and take their pets there without fear of encountering toxic algae blooms or other toxic pollution,” he said.

    One way to help decrease the chances for large algal blooms in the Snake River would be to remove the four Lower Snake River dams, Johnson said.

    “In the Lower Snake River, there is something real that we could do, for a lot of reasons,” Johnson said, referring to the ongoing debate about removing the four dams. “The dams slow down the river. They make it too hot, and they’re leading to these toxic algae bloom events that prevent people from using the river.”

    Whitman County Public Health leaders said it will continue to check water quality each week, testing for toxins in various locations. In addition, Skidmore said, satellite photos could help show the size of the bloom.

    “A lot of times you can see a clear outline of that bloom and how far it’s stretching down the river,” Skidmore said. “Last year, it was pretty helpful to us.”

    To stay safe, health leaders ask people to not go in water where there is a visible bloom. They said to wash skin and clothing if you come into contact with water that is smelly or discolored. Health leaders added that boiling water from an algal bloom will not remove the toxins. Shellfish should not be eaten from waters with algal blooms.

    NWPB: 'Toxic algal bloom found on the Snake River for second year in a row' article link

  • NWPR: Puget Sound's Southern Resident Orca Population Drops To 30-Year Low

    orca.aerialSep 27, 2017

    Orca researchers and conservationists are urging more steps to protect Puget Sound's endangered southern resident killer whales. The push comes in the wake of the death of a 2-year-old male orca known as J52.

    The death, which researchers say was caused by malnutrition, brought the population to a 30-year low.

    J52 is the seventh orca to die this year. That’s the biggest year-to-year decline ever recorded. The decline comes less than two years after a killer whale baby boom had researchers feeling optimistic about orcas' prospects for survival in Puget Sound.

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, which manages the southern resident orca population, listed them as one of eight species most at risk of extinction in a 2015 report to Congress.

    “We’re going to keep sliding down unless we take some immediate action to improve the situation for these whales,” says Robb Krehbiel, the northwest representative for Defenders of Wildlife.

    The southern resident orca population is suffering from two main problems: too much pollution, and not enough fish to eat. The two problems compound each other because, when orcas go through periods of starvation, they burn fat and release the toxins stored there into their bodies.

    That’s why “the biggest thing that we can do to help our southern resident orcas is restore Chinook salmon runs so that there’s just plenty of fish out there in the water for these guys to eat,” says Krehbiel, with Defenders of Wildlife.

    Krehbiel says the dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers need to be more fish-friendly; others are calling for the complete removal of the Snake River dams.

    At the same time, NOAA is considering expanding the area designated as the southern resident orcas’ critical habitat some time in 2017.

    Krehbiel says it’s not just federal agencies that can do something; everyone can help address the pollution of Puget Sound by being careful about what products they use on their lawns, vehicles, and for hygiene.


    To see more, visit EarthFix.

    http://nwpr.org/post/puget-sounds-southern-resident-orca-population-drops-30-year-low

  • NWPR/EarthFix: Conservation Groups Ask To Stop Barging Sockeye Around Dams

    Courtney Flatt, April 19, 2017

    sockeyestream 2Helping juvenile salmon migrate out to sea has long been difficult and controversial. Barging is a common way to get the fish around dams. 

    The salmon are hauled around eight dams in the Columbia and Snake rivers. Idaho Conservation groups say this practice harms fish — and needs to stop now. Seven groups sent a letter to NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, asking the agencies to this spring stop sending salmon along their migration route in barges. “When it comes to endangered sockeye salmon, the science shows that it’s particularly detrimental for sockeye salmon to be barged,” said Zack Waterman, Idaho Sierra Club director.

    The groups say barging Snake River sockeye can make them more vulnerable to warm water conditions, like the 2015 drought and heatwave that killed 95 percent of the run. One reason: In barges, the fish can’t develop their homing abilities that help them return to spawning habitat as adults. “It takes the fish that were barged longer to make it back to where they were originally spawned at, than their counterparts that went through the river system,” Waterman said. NOAA officials say it’s long been known that it takes barged salmon a longer time to reach spawning grounds, but, they say, 2015 was a highly unusual year. By their math, excluding 2015 and 2014, it’s more beneficial to both barge juvenile salmon around dams and to allow others to fall over spillways. Every year isn’t going to be as hot as 2015, said Ritchie Graves, a fisheries biologist with NOAA Fisheries. He said barging is a way to increase your odds when gambling with Mother Nature. “If you’re playing on the roulette wheel in Las Vegas, and you have to make a bet every year, the smartest bet to make most of the time is still to at least bet some of your [juvenile salmon] on the transport strategy,” Graves said. Right now the federal government barges about 50 percent of Snake River sockeye salmon. Graves says the federal agencies are “diversifying risk.” “The problem with all this is we don’t know what the temperature is going to be like two years out,” Graves said. “Essentially we’re working under spread-the-risk advice. … We’re watching these numbers very carefully, and we’ll be thinking about how or if we need to change transport operations in the future.” The fish are collected above Lower Granite Dam in southeast Washington, along with other species that depend on barging, like steelhead. They’re then released below Bonneville Dam, about 50 miles east of Portland. Stopping barging, conservation groups said, would mean juvenile salmon would be spilled over the tops of dams. Ultimately, the groups would like to see the removal of the four Lower Snake River dams — this barging request, they say, is an important interim step to saving wild runs. “Removing the Lower Snake River dams — that’s what’s going to solve the problem,” said Kevin Lewis, Idaho Rivers United executive director. “Everything up to that point is a stopgap measure.” The conservation groups say juvenile mortality is the most problematic part of salmon recovery — that’s why how they get to the sea is important. David Cannamela is a retired fisheries biologist, now with Sierra Club. “We have 10,000 years of data that essentially prove that the river will work, and so for the long-term, anything that we can do that makes the system more like a river is going to be more successful to juvenile and adult [salmon] survival,” Cannamela said. Dam removal on the lower Snake has been consistently opposed by those who rely on the dams and impounded water for agriculture, hydroelectricity and commerce.

    http://www.opb.org/news/article/conservation-groups-ask-to-stop-barging-sockeye-around-dams/

  • NY Times: How Long Before These Salmon Are Gone? ‘Maybe 20 Years’

    Warming waters and a series of dams are making the grueling migration of the Chinook salmon even more deadly — and threatening dozens of other species.

    Salmon.Chinook.Dying.SpawningSeptember 16, 2019

    By Jim Robbins

    North Fork, Idaho — The Middle Fork of the Salmon River, one of the wildest rivers in the contiguous United States, is prime fish habitat. Cold, clear waters from melting snow tumble out of the Salmon River Mountains and into the boulder-strewn river, which is federally protected.

    The last of the spawning spring-summer Chinook salmon arrived here in June after a herculean 800-mile upstream swim. Now the big fish — which can weigh up to 30 pounds — are finishing their courtship rituals. Next year there will be a new generation of Chinook.

    In spite of this pristine 112-mile-long mountain refuge, the fish that have returned here to reproduce and then die for countless generations are in deep trouble.

    Some 45,000 to 50,000 spring-summer Chinook spawned here in the 1950s. These days, the average is about 1,500 fish, and declining. And not just here: Native fish are in free-fall throughout the Columbia River basin, a situation so dire that many groups are urging the removal of four large dams to keep the fish from being lost.

    “The Columbia River was once the most productive wild Chinook habitat in the world,” said Russ Thurow, a fisheries research scientist with the Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station.

    Standing alongside the Salmon River in Idaho, Mr. Thurow considered the prospect that the fish he had spent most of his life studying could disappear. “It’s hard to say, but now these fish have maybe four generations left before they are gone,” he said. “Maybe 20 years.”

    Thirteen species of salmon and steelhead trout are listed as threatened or endangered in the Columbia basin, an area that includes parts of Idaho, Oregon, Washington, Montana and British Columbia. Salmon are a keystone species in this region, critical as a food source for animals from bears to eagles to insects.

    That group of beneficiaries includes an endangere

    d population of orcas, or killer whales, along the West Coast that survive by eating Chinook in the winter and spring, up to 30 a day.

    Many experts believe the orcas are starving in large part because of the decline of wild salmon. This year alone, their number has dropped from 76 to 73, alarming conservationists and scientists. Last year, an orca mother carried a dead calf for 17 days on her back. She was presumed to be grieving.

    “The best thing you could do to get more spring Chinook for the orcas is to remove those four lower dams,” said Don Chapman, a retired fisheries scientist who worked as a consultant to the hydropower industry and defended the dams and mitigation efforts.

    He has since changed his mind about the dams: “They kill too many juveniles going downstream and some adults going back.”

    Salmon are swimming in warming waters, with uncertain consequences, according to a recent study. Breaching the dams also would help keep water temperatures cooler as the climate changes, Dr. Chapman said.

    Warming waters

    Chinook, or king salmon, are huge, powerful fish, the largest member of the salmon family in North America. Spring-summer Chinook make an epic migration thousands of miles through the Columbia River to the waters surrounding Alaska’s Aleutian Islands, and then back to the high elevations of the Rocky Mountains.

    Before the 20th century, some 10 million to 16 million adult salmon and steelhead trout are thought to have returned annually to the Columbia River system. The current return of wild fish is 2 percent of that, by some estimates.

    While farming, logging and especially the commercial harvest of salmon in the early 20th century all took a toll, the single greatest impact on wild fish comes from eight large dams — four on the Columbia and four on the Snake River, a major tributary.

    The four Snake River dams are used primarily to create reservoirs for the barging of Idaho’s wheat to ports. But the dams raise water temperatures and block travel migration routes, increasing fish mortality.

    Climate change also has raised both river and ocean water temperatures, which can be deadly to fish. In 2015, for example, unusually warm water killed an estimated 250,000 sockeye salmon.

    For decades, experts have tried to ameliorate the loss of the Columbia’s wild fish by installing ladders that allow the fish to swim around the dams, and by placing them in barges and trucks for transport around the dams. The massive efforts have not stemmed the decline, despite the fact that more than $16 billion has been spent on recovery over the last several decades.

    Now most scientists come down on the side of removing the dams. Last fall, orca researchers urged Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington and the Southern Resident Orca Task Force, a state government panel, to begin removing the four dams on the Snake River to aid the starving whales.

    Orca.Sunset.Leaping“Put simply, orca need more Chinook salmon available on a year-round basis, as quickly as possible,” they wrote, calling the removals “vital to ensure orca survival.”

    The federal agencies responsible for managing fisheries on the Columbia, though, maintain that removing the Snake River dams is not critical to the survival of salmon and that hatchery-reared fish have made up for the loss of the river’s wild fish for the orcas.

    The southern resident killer whales “do not distinguish between hatchery and wild fish,” the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in a statement.

    The National Marine Fisheries Service has proposed killing more than 1,100 sea lions along the Columbia River because they eat salmon as they gather to spawn.

    Those who want to keep the dams point to changing ocean conditions as a major factor in the decline of the salmon. Water temperatures have been unusually warm in recent years, which reduces salmon food sources. Federal officials just announced that the marine heat wave has returned this year.

    But hatchery fish are not the same, said Deborah A. Giles, science and research director at Wild Orca, a group that studies and advocates for protection of the whales. Orcas evolved eating big wild fish, some 300 to 350 pounds a day.

    “Wild fish are much bigger and more lipid-rich,” she said. “Having to catch the equivalent of 350 pounds in hatchery fish, which are smaller and lower quality, expends significantly more energy. They have to work a lot harder for their meals.”

    Nutritional stress is part of the reason that the whales are in decline. About 70 percent of pregnancies among the southern resident orcas are lost before the calves are born, an alarmingly high figure, according to a recent paper.

    Since 2001, federal courts have taken the agencies responsible for protecting the salmon, including NOAA and the Army Corps of Engineers, to task for not doing enough to ensure the survival of the fish. In 2016, Judge Michael H. Simon of the Federal District Court of Oregon ordered a new plan to restore the species, saying previous efforts had violated endangered species and environmental laws. The ruling cited the agencies’ refusal to consider removing the lower Snake River dams. The plan is due in 2021.

     

    Federal and state agencies have released untold numbers of hatchery-reared fish to replace wild fish in the Columbia basin. But some experts believe that hatchery fish could adversely affect the genome of the remaining wild fish.

    In 2016, a study found that 723 genes were operating differently in the first generation of hatchery-reared fish than in wild fish, affecting such functions as the immune system and wound-healing, as hatchery-reared fish adapted to crowded conditions.

    Traits that wild fish lose by mating with hatchery fish may one day be important for adaptation to climate change, Mr. Thurow said. The Middle Fork population, here in Idaho, is one of the few without genetic influences from hatchery-reared fish.

    A grueling journey

    The extreme migration of the spring-summer Chinook salmon is one of the natural world’s great journeys.

    Before the dams were built in the 1960s and 1970s, the fish born in the Middle Fork were swept by strong spring currents 800 miles to the sea. The rivers moved them rapidly along, from six to 10 miles per hour, and the young fish reached the brackish waters of the Columbia River estuary in a couple of weeks.

    As they travel, the parrs, or young freshwater salmon, undergo a profound transformation called smoltification, becoming smolts able to thrive in saltwater. After leaving the river, the fish turn north and travel to the North Pacific, near the Aleutian Islands.

    They spend up to four years feeding at sea, and then those that survive the seagoing journey return to the mouth of the Columbia. Their physiological changes are reversed as they move upstream, and they again become freshwater fish.Dams.HellsCanyon

    Picking up the scent of their natal stream, they fight the current, foregoing food on the grueling trip, gaining about 6,500 feet in elevation, and overcoming physical barriers in what biologists describe as a heroic journey.

    “I’ve seen them jump an eight-foot waterfall, and they are known to jump 12 feet,” said Mr. Thurow. “They are the definition of persistence.”

    Chinook are known as “high-fidelity” spawners, not only returning to the stream where they were born, but also often to the same shallows. Then the game is afoot: In their waning days, as males battle for dominance, females excavate a redd, a depression in the gravel riverbed.

    The female releases clusters of eggs as the male sidles up, releasing its sperm at the same time. The current mixes them, resulting in fertilization. The eggs are adhesive and stick to the gravel after they fall. The female buries them in an egg pocket.

    The mating is repeated multiple times; all told, some 5,000 eggs may be released by a single female. “By the times she finishes, she’s within a day or two of dying,” Mr. Thurow said. The next spring, the offspring emerge and make their own journey to the sea. Always a gauntlet, the migration now is far more deadly. The eight large dams along the Snake and Columbia rivers created 325 miles of slack water in reservoirs. The average speed of the water flowing downstream has dropped to less than 1.5 miles per hour, and it takes the fish far longer to reach the sea.

    When the parrs reach a reservoir on the way, they must swim instead of being pushed by the current, and often become disoriented and are more susceptible to predators. Delayed, they may go through smoltification at the wrong time.

    The young salmon eat plankton and insects. But the waters of the Pacific along the West Coast have experienced unusual warming — the so-called blob — which reduces the available food supply.

    Before the Snake River dams were built, three to six of every 100 fish that left their natal streams returned home, a ratio called smolt-to-adult return. Today that number is just under one. Biologists say it must reach four to rebuild the fisheries.

    It is not just orcas that are suffering because of the decline of salmon. An estimated 137 species rely on the surge of protein brought upriver by millions of fish each year. The salmon also provided phosphorous, nitrogen and other nutrients that nourish the great forests of the Northwest. Three-quarters of the nutrients in some trees in Alaska and British Columbia are derived from salmon.

    The Middle Fork of Salmon River will be critical as the waters of the Columbia warm, Mr. Thurow said. High-altitude streams are expected to warm less, and the Chinook here will find a cold-water refuge — and if they adapt, a base for repopulating other streams.

    “The outlook isn’t good, but these fish are what give me hope,” Mr. Thurow said. “Despite all of the obstacles, they are still here.”

  • Oceana: Study: endangered orcas are losing their unborn babies because they’re starving

    orca.oceanaBy Allison Guy, July 12, 2017

    A unique group of killer whales is miscarrying at an astronomical rate, and it’s because humans have wiped out most of their food supply.  

    A recent study in the journal PLOS ONE found that as high as 69 percent of Southern Resident killer whale pregnancies end in failure. These famous whales, which frequent the Salish Sea off Seattle and Vancouver, rely on Chinook salmon for the lion’s share of their diet. Once abundant, Chinook are now rare and the whales are going hungry. The study is the first to demonstrate a clear link between orca miscarriage and poor nutrition brought on by the scarcity of their main prey.

    Scientists at the University of Washington collected orca feces between 2008 and 2014 to measure hormones that regulate hunger, stress and reproduction. DNA profiling let them track the stages of pregnancy for individual orcas, and figure out when a female became pregnant and at what point she lost her baby.

    Lead author Samuel Wasser said that for mammals, spontaneous abortion becomes increasingly rare as a pregnancy progresses. This is not the case for Southern Residents. “Out of the 69 percent that aborted, about a third of those were in late pregnancy,” Wasser said. “That’s a period that’s extremely costly to females. It’s a pretty serious problem.”

    Past explanations for the Southern Resident’s sky-high abortion rate have included stress from dozens of whale-watching boats that encircle the orcas during tourist season, as well as poisoning from industrial chemicals. Wasser’s team found no correlation between ship traffic and miscarriage, but it was a different story for toxins. 

    Persistent pollutants like DDT and flame retardants get into the water and are passed up the food chain, where they’re eventually locked away in orcas’ blubber. Well-fed whales have little to fear, but starving Southern Residents must burn their fat stores to survive. Wasser found that burning blubber releases stored toxins and drives up miscarriage rates.

    “This study further underscores that Southern Residents are starving, and that they’re careening towards extinction,” said Oceana Pacific senior scientist Ben Enticknap.

    Southern Residents are among the most endangered whales in the United States. There are now only 78 whales left, including just 30 adult females. The sex ratio of calves is skewed 5-1 in favor of males, Wasser said, which may be a worrying sign of inbreeding.

    “Projections are that in a little more than a decade, they’re going to be down to 60,” Wasser said. “We’re about to lose these guys.”

    Dammed if you do

    Southern Residents almost exclusively dine on Chinook salmon. These fish are the largest salmon species and also the most threatened. In the Fraser and Columbia rivers — the two biggest remaining sources of salmon for Southern Residents — Chinook are at just a sliver of their historical abundance. In British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest, more than 50 native stocks of this species have already gone extinct. 

    Both Wasser and Enticknap agreed that the only way to prevent Southern Resident killer whale extinction is to restore Chinook salmon abundance. But politicians, tribes, dam operators, fishermen, loggers and farmers can’t agree how to restore the salmon.  They’ve clashed over the particulars of restoration since the first Chinook populations were declared endangered in the early 1990s. Some say fishing needs to be curtailed. Others advocate for habitat restoration or rearing baby Chinook in captivity.

    Many scientists agree that dams on the rivers where Chinook reproduce are a prime threat. Some dams are totally impassable, blocking fish from thousands of miles of historic spawning grounds. Even those equipped with fish-friendly improvements, like spillways and ladders to let salmon though, can be deadly. Dams create reservoirs that harbor once-rare predators that gobble up baby salmon. And the slow-moving waters above and below a dam can get hot enough to kill adults and juveniles alike.

    In the past few decades, four dams on the Snake River in Washington have drawn particular ire from conservationists. These dams hurt adult salmon migrating up the Snake and, according to one estimate, claim 50 to 90 percent of juveniles heading downstream. They also cost taxpayers far more money than they generate, a 2016 economic analysis found.

    To bring back Southern Residents, Enticknap said these dams need to go: “From my perspective, it’s the number one action we can take to recover spring Chinook.” These fish, which migrate up the Columbia and Snake rivers in the spring, are the last big meal Southern Residents can find before summer Chinook peak in August.

    There may be a glimmer of hope on the horizon. A new partnership of government officials, farmers, tribes, fishers and environmental organizations including Oceana is developing sweeping recovery goals for Columbia River Basin salmon over the next two years.

    Enticknap urged Congress and United States government agencies to take “quick and bold action” to recover Chinook salmon.  “Ideally, this would have happened 10 years ago,” he said. “The orcas need relief now.” 

     

  • OPB and ProPublica: How the BPA is contributing to salmon’s decline in the Northwest

    Damming the powerful waters of the Columbia River was a boon for cheap, clean electricity. But the fish that swam those waters are dying out. And the agency in charge isn’t stopping that.

    By Tony Schick
    August 4, 2022

    dam.lsrThis is part two in a series produced in partnership with the ProPublica Local Reporting Network. Part one: Federal efforts to save salmon in the Northwest are failing.

    Crystal Conant was camped for the night on a bluff overlooking the upper Columbia River in northeast Washington, beading necklaces by the glow of a lantern.

    The next morning, hundreds would gather at Kettle Falls for the annual salmon ceremony, held since time immemorial to celebrate the year’s first fish returning from the ocean. Conant and fellow organizers needed necklaces for everyone who would come. Honoring the gift of salmon, she said, requires giving gifts in turn.

    Behind them, friends and family had formed a drum circle inside the wooden husk of an old Catholic mission. Back when the salmon were still running up Kettle Falls, the sound of dozens of drum circles would have thundered across the plateau.

    But there is only one circle now. And there are no salmon.

    The fish cannot get past two federal dams, masses of concrete each hundreds of feet tall. The construction of those dams, which began more than 80 years ago, rendered salmon extinct in hundreds of miles of rivers and destroyed the area’s most important fishing grounds.

    “The salmon still keep trying to come, and they come and they hit their little noses on the dam, over and over, ‘cause they hear us calling,” said Conant, a member of the Arrow Lakes and Sanpoil tribes. “So we’re going to keep having our ceremonies and we’re going to keep calling the salmon home until they get here.”

    After nearly a century without salmon, Conant and other members of upper Columbia River tribes want to reintroduce the fish into waters long blocked by the dams.

    But there’s been something blocking those efforts, too: the Bonneville Power Administration.

    The U.S. government promised to preserve tribes’ access to salmon in a series of treaties signed in the 1850s. Upholding those treaties now rests in no small part with Bonneville, a federal agency little known outside the Northwest that takes hydropower generated at Grand Coulee and other dams and sells it wholesale to electric utilities, primarily in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Decades ago, Congress placed the agency at the center of salmon recovery, giving it conflicting mandates: protect fish and fund their recovery, all while running a business off the dams that have reduced fish populations by the millions.

    For decades, judges have admonished the federal government over its failure to do more to protect Columbia River salmon. Most recently, the Biden administration in March took the unprecedented step of acknowledging the harm dams have caused to Native American tribes and calling for an overhaul of Columbia River Basin management. Bonneville, the government’s money-making arm on the Columbia, is the federal agency involved in every measure the Biden team is discussing to save salmon.

    But an investigation by Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica has found that Bonneville has, time and again, prioritized its business interests over salmon recovery and actively pushed back on changes that tribes, environmental advocates and scientists say would offer the best chance to help salmon populations recover without dismantling the entire dam system.

    The agency said it has invested heavily in supporting salmon and sacrificed revenue to make dams safer for fish. It said any limitations on its fish and wildlife measures are the result of financial pressures.

    In response to the news organizations’ findings, Bonneville spokesperson Doug Johnson said in a statement that the agency and its federal partners “will continue to participate in regional discussions on long-term strategies to address the protection and enhancement of salmon and steelhead,” including the White House efforts.

    “Ultimately, the region as a whole must continue to advance collaborative solutions to meet the needs of the Pacific Northwest,” Johnson said. Two other federal agencies that work with Bonneville to manage the region’s dams, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation, issued statements identical to Bonneville’s.

    In an interview, Johnson said the agency has had to contain its fish and wildlife spending at levels it could sustain. “The statutes direct Bonneville to operate in a business-like manner,” he said. “Like any other business, we monitor projects in our budgets and make appropriate adjustments as needed.”

    Columbia River salmon recovery is one of the most expensive endangered species efforts in the country, costing Bonneville more than $20 billion since it started in 1980. But while Bonneville’s net revenues have surpassed targets in the last few years, it flatlined or reduced budgets for fish recovery at a time when, according to salmon advocates, more money is needed than ever to prevent extinctions of more Northwest salmon populations.

    Proposals on the table, according to the White House and other participants in the talks, include breaching dams on the lower Snake River in southeastern Washington, funding the reintroduction of salmon into blocked areas and removing Bonneville from salmon management.

    “We cannot continue business as usual,” the White House memo said.

    But on each of those three issues, interviews and documents show, business as usual is what Bonneville has tried to preserve.

    Building to a crisis

    The Bonneville Power Administration began as a federal agency designed to run as a business. And, in many ways, that has never changed.

    The agency was created in 1937, when Pacific Northwest hydroelectric dam-building had just begun and federal officials spoke openly about sacrificing salmon runs for the sake of developing cities and farmland. Bonneville was the government’s way to market the dams’ hydropower and electrify the rural West.

    The successful harnessing of the Columbia for electricity became synonymous with American pride over settling the West and winning World War II. Massive flows of water rushed down through tunnels, spinning turbines and generating electricity that in turn powered homes and factories, most notably aluminum plants that manufactured bomber planes. Bonneville even hired Woody Guthrie to write folk songs about Uncle Sam putting the river to work for factories and farmers.

    Although the dams are owned and operated by different agencies, Bonneville co-manages them, covering construction debts and operating costs with the proceeds from the electricity that the dams generate. Bonneville sells electricity to public utilities, which in turn sell it to homes and businesses. Today, Bonneville’s operating revenues are more than $3.8 billion per year. It manages power from 31 dams and owns about 75% of the Pacific Northwest’s power lines.

    But what was good for generating power was devastating for fish. In the mid-1950s, when wild Chinook salmon on the Snake River had to pass just one dam on their journey to the ocean, they numbered about 90,000. By 1980, seven additional dams later, the Snake River population had fallen to around 10,000.

    4.Basin.map.snake.tribes copy

    In some places, like the Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph dams in northeast Washington, there is no way for fish to pass through at all, and the salmon are entirely gone upriver from the dams. While the rest of the federal dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers include ways for salmon to migrate past them, these passages still take a toll. Fish can get thrashed by turbines if they pass through the dam’s powerhouse. They suffer in the warm and stagnant reservoirs that replaced free-flowing water when the rivers were dammed. And they fall prey to predators like sea lions, which have thrived in the conditions the dams created. Scientists say many fish that pass through multiple reservoirs and dams end up dying later on from the stress of the journey.

    Faced with the possibility of federal agencies labeling salmon as endangered, Congress took action in 1980: It passed the Northwest Power Act, tethering the fate of salmon to that of the Bonneville Power Administration. The act required Bonneville to fund a comprehensive fish and wildlife program, and to “protect, mitigate, and enhance fish and wildlife to the extent affected by the development and operation of any hydroelectric project of the Columbia River and its tributaries.”

    The new law established conflicting mandates for Bonneville: making money from hydropower while helping save salmon from extinction. And by the 1990s, it was clear the measures were failing to rescue salmon. Several populations became listed as threatened or endangered and salmon advocates filed lawsuits over federal dam operations.

    As part of an ongoing court case that has lasted decades, judges have ordered federal agencies, including Bonneville, to improve special passageways that allow fish to bypass dams’ turbines. Judges also ordered the agencies to increase their “spill,” meaning the amount of water they allow to flow past a dam instead of into its powerhouse; young salmon on their way to the ocean benefit from that spill, traveling faster past the dam with less likelihood of getting caught in a turbine.

    But for Bonneville, every drop that didn’t go through turbines was also wasted fuel and lost revenue — revenue it claimed it could hardly afford to miss out on.

    In 2008, Bonneville tried to halt ballooning fish and wildlife costs and lawsuits with a series of funding agreements. The agency doled out $900 million over 10 years to states and tribes for fish and wildlife restoration. But that money came with a catch: Signing the accords required a promise not to sue over management of the Columbia River power system. The accords also required signatories to affirm the adequacy of the federal government’s fish and wildlife mitigation.

    Only the Nez Perce Tribe and the state of Oregon declined the money. Along with a dozen fishing and environmental groups, they continued the longstanding challenge of federal dam operations in court.

    As the case dragged on, Bonneville faced multiple pressures. It needed to raise its rates to pay for mounting fish and wildlife requirements ordered by the courts, but the Public Power Council, a coalition of consumer-owned public utilities that buy the bulk of its electricity, pushed back. The power council warned Bonneville that it would lose customers if it didn’t curb its rising power costs, a third of which stemmed directly from fish and wildlife measures.

    Then, while Bonneville was struggling to improve its finances, salmon fell further into crisis. By 2018, declines in salmon populations triggered an official warning from federal scientists. Scientists had set a threshold that, once crossed, was meant to put the government in urgent action mode to help the fish.

    But at the same time, Bonneville was desperate to help itself.

    Shortchanging the fish

    In 2018, the same year salmon declines were triggering federal alarm bells, Bonneville adopted a new strategic plan meant to fix its finances. It aimed to keep the agency’s fish and wildlife spending from exceeding the rate of inflation; in some years, this spending didn’t end up growing at all. Electricity markets also improved; the agency sold surplus power during times of peak demand like summer heat waves. And it kept expenses low.

    Since then, Bonneville’s net revenues have soared past agency targets. Last year, the agency’s net revenues were $360 million above its target. Halfway through 2022, it was on pace for an even better year.

    “For the past four years, we’ve done fairly well financially,” Johnson, the Bonneville spokesperson, said. “Five, six, seven years ago, our detractors were talking about the potential for us to go bankrupt because we had so much debt and we were doing so poorly financially. This found solid footing that we have financially is a recent development for us.”

    The agency used the unexpected revenues to shore up its cash reserves and lower rates for customers. It didn’t put any of the windfall toward fish and wildlife programs.

    In fact, after adjusting for inflation, Bonneville’s current two-year budget for fish and wildlife is down more than $78 million from what it was 2016-17, before the agency adopted its new strategic plan. That came at a time when scientists said significantly more investment has been needed to give salmon a chance as the climate warms.

    “Simply put,” Andrew Missel, attorney for the Idaho Conservation League, wrote in a 2021 brief to Bonneville about its budget process, “in the face of declining salmon and steelhead runs, BPA has decided to starve mitigation projects of needed funds, and has failed to even consider using an expected boon in revenue to help shore up those projects.”

    After fish and wildlife agencies told Bonneville its budgets were compromising their efforts, Bonneville announced in June it would increase fish and wildlife spending by about 8% in 2024 based on its assessments of what the program needed to remain viable. That increase would still put it below inflation-adjusted spending levels prior to 2018.

    Jeremy Takala, a biologist and member of the Yakama Nation Tribal Council, said the tribe has shovel-ready salmon habitat restoration projects waiting for funding.

    Anglers, conservationists, and tribal members rally on the Willamette River in Portland, Ore., on June 25, 2022, to call for removal of Lower Snake River dams in order to restore habitat for wild salmon and orca. (Photo by: Alex Milan Tracy)“It’s really frustrating,” Takala said in a July speech at a save-the-salmon rally in Portland. “BPA basically managing our funding source, it just does not make sense. It’s a really, really huge conflict that frustrates the tribes.”

    Bonneville and its spending have factored heavily into negotiations between salmon advocates and the Biden administration.

    Jim McKenna, an adviser to Oregon Gov. Kate Brown who is involved in the negotiations, said Oregon, tribes and salmon advocates are asking the administration to greatly increase funding for fish hatcheries and habitat restoration, and to put tribes and other local fish and wildlife biologists directly in charge of how to spend the money.

    “The bucket of money is woefully inadequate,” McKenna said. “And, Bonneville is not the agency that should be managing those funds.”

    Ultimately, that funding is paramount to whether the government will honor the treaty, signed over 150 years ago, that assured the Yakama tribe of its right to take fish where they always had “at all usual and accustomed places.”

    Bill Bosch, who has spent decades working for the Yakama Nation’s fisheries program, said the federal government must fully fund tribes’ hatcheries and habitat efforts, unless it intends to spend the money itself on removing dams and restoring the natural river.

    “If you’re not willing to fund one or the other of those,” Bosch said, “then are you basically saying you’re going to abrogate the treaty?”

    ‘Their interests are not fish’

    Two years ago, Bonneville and its partner agencies faced a major turning point. The agencies had been scolded by U.S. District Judge Michael Simon for running a dam system that “cries out” for a new approach. He ordered them to conduct a comprehensive environmental impact statement for the Columbia and Snake River dams that included “all reasonable alternatives” to their current actions. The judge hoped the process could “break through any logjam that simply maintains the precarious status quo.”

    By 2020, Bonneville and its dam co-managers, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation, released their long-awaited new master plan for the river. Despite Judge Simon’s hopes, the plan mostly preserved the status quo.

    The plan hinged on a proposal the federal bodies called “flexible spill.” For years, the courts had been ordering them to spill water past their dams to aid fish migration. Under the flexible spill plan, they’d spill as much water as they could when it wasn’t needed to make electricity. The plan was an experimental concept, but modeling showed it could increase the number of salmon that survive their migration to return as adults by as much as 35%, and the agencies hoped it could become their long-term solution.

    For many salmon biologists, the plan wasn’t the solution it purported to be. They argued such measures hadn’t seen enough real-world use to establish how fish actually responded, and said even the predicted 35% increase wouldn’t be enough to halt the decline of salmon populations. And, they said, other aspects of the federal plan gave dam operators leeway to slow or even stop the flow of water behind dams at times, making it harder for salmon to migrate out to sea.

    In many regards, the agencies’ plan was a step backward for salmon compared to what courts had already rejected, said Michele DeHart, manager of the Fish Passage Center, a small federal research body funded by Bonneville.

    Records show that DeHart provided Bonneville and its co-managers with analyses demonstrating that they were overstating the benefits of their preferred course of action for the Columbia River, and that it would likely lead to a further decline of the river’s fish.

    Still, all three federal bodies proceeded with their preferred option, which they said struck a balance between clean energy, economics and fish and wildlife needs.

    At the same time, Bonneville and its partners have rejected an increasingly popular suggestion for saving several of the Columbia basin’s salmon populations from extinction: taking four dams on the lower Snake River in southeastern Washington out of operation and restoring the natural flow of water.

    The Fish Passage Center, the Nez Perce Tribe, and more than 60 scientists have all concluded that breaching the four dams is the only scenario that has a likelihood of allowing Snake River salmon populations to recover. In July, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration called breaching the dams “essential” for healthy salmon runs.

    The dams generate just 4% of all the power sold by Bonneville, but breaching them is opposed by the public utilities that make up Bonneville’s customer base and by farmers, who rely on the dam-impounded reservoirs to irrigate their crops and barge them downriver. Two separate reports released this year, one by Washington elected officials and the other by the Department of Energy, concluded the services of the four dams could be replaced, with a total cost between $10 billion and $30 billion.

    Public utilities have spent millions on public relations campaigns in support of keeping the lower Snake River dams. They have pushed Bonneville to be more aggressive in opposition to breaching any dams. They say the dams are crucial to the region’s goals of reducing carbon emissions and fighting climate change, which presents another major threat to salmon.

    Though Bonneville has not vocally opposed dam removal, behind the scenes it worked to sway public opinion in favor of keeping the dams fully operational. The agency drafted talking points in 2019 and distributed them to public utilities for use in conversations about the dams, instructing them that “BPA would prefer to NOT have these statements attributed to the agency.”

    In 2020, the agency sent emails to a dozen news organizations “correcting the record” with facts about the importance of the dams, and tried to pitch reporters on an angle about the questionable benefit to salmon of breaching the Snake River dams when compared to the importance of the clean energy the dams produce.

    “How many more fish would it actually bring back? Would it be worth it?” an agency communications staffer, Dave Wilson, said in one email to an NPR reporter.

    Both Bonneville and its public utility customers have pointed to a handful of studies, funded by Bonneville, that cast doubt on the effectiveness of dam removal.

    Asked about the emails, Johnson said Bonneville wanted the public to understand the importance of the dams to public power, and for the region to understand what it would be giving up if the dams are breached.

    DeHart, of the Fish Passage Center, said it should come as no surprise when Bonneville protects dam operations.

    “It is BPA’s job to protect their interests, and they’re doing a good job,” DeHart said. “They’re protecting their own interests, and their interests are not fish.”

    Nowhere are those interests more significant than on the upper Columbia River, where two massive dams produce roughly half of all the power Bonneville sells.

    Bonneville and its partners have operated those dams without any way for fish to pass them for more than half a century.

    That, the Spokane Tribe argued in court documents, “has been nothing short of an attempt to permanently destroy a culture.”

    ‘The government’s been fighting us’

    A year ago, Michael Marchand sat on the banks above the Columbia, his long white hair blowing in the wind as he watched members of his tribe perform a salmon ceremony without any salmon. The former chair of the Colville Tribes grew up hearing stories from his grandparents about sharing the fish from Kettle Falls with tribes across the region. He said they worried, after the falls were inundated, that the tribe’s connection to the salmon would disappear.

    In the water below him, Conant and other ceremony organizers and tribal leaders were ankle deep in the current. They stood with a stone in each hand, lifted them into the air and rapped them against each other. The crowd on the banks echoed them, and soon the rhythmic clacking of their salmon call drowned out even the speedboaters in the distance. Before the dam drove them extinct on this part of the Columbia River, the salmon passing Kettle Falls were legendary, growing to the size of an 8-year-old child and capable of hurdling waterfalls and navigating by smell for more than 1,000 miles to reach their home streams.

    Upper Columbia tribes have a multiphase plan to restore salmon in those waters: transplanting fish above the dams to establish populations, then creating new systems of fish passage, like trapping fish and trucking them around the dams, a technique already used on other rivers.

    It’s not just about restoring the tribes’ own fisheries. The rivers and streams above Grand Coulee Dam offer some of the best remaining cold-water habitat for salmon, and could be a bastion for the fish amid climate change. Reintroduction has been endorsed by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council, which oversees the fish and wildlife program funded by Bonneville, and more recently by NOAA. It’s part of the ongoing negotiations between salmon advocates and the Biden administration, which have also discussed dam breaching and shifting Bonneville’s fish and wildlife responsibilities to states and tribes.

    But, so far, tribes in the upper Columbia say they haven’t been able to get the help they need from the federal government, which by treaty and federal doctrine is the trustee of their rights.

    “The government’s been fighting us about putting these fish here,” said Marchand, who served on the Colville tribal council when upper Columbia tribes released their plan for reintroduction. “Part of it is energy costs. And part of it’s just, to me, it’s just raw power politics.”

    Because salmon are extinct above Grand Coulee Dam, Bonneville doesn’t currently have to worry about how well fish pass the dam and all the costs associated with that. But upper Columbia tribes say they’ve designed their reintroduction plan to work within existing dam operations and have no intention of jeopardizing power production.

    Bonneville and its partners have refused to evaluate the idea of bringing salmon back to the upper Columbia. Collectively, Bonneville, the Army Corps and the Bureau of Reclamation told the tribe that fish passage was too complicated and too time-consuming to include in their plan for the river.

    “You’re talking about roughly half of the production of the entire system with those two very large dams on the upper Columbia,” Johnson said. “That could introduce fairly high costs and a lot of upward rate pressure for Bonneville’s power customers.”

    Johnson called it a very complex issue, and one that “warrants a lot of discussion.”

    Bonneville has created other obstacles to the reintroduction of fish. The Spokane Tribe told the agency in 2019 that its “lack of funding and stonewalling” put their efforts three years behind schedule. The Colville Tribes say it has been more difficult to get funding for the fish reintroduction than for any other fish and wildlife project. And in 2018, when the Colville Tribes and Bonneville were due to renew their funding accord, the agency included provisions in the new agreement that forbid the use of any accord funding in the tribe’s reintroduction efforts. It also forbade the tribe from using any fish from their Chief Joseph Hatchery for relocation.

    Two tribes partnering with the Colville on reintroduction efforts asked Bonneville to remove the language: One called it “meddling” and the other said it “directly undermines” its efforts “in seeking cultural restitution for lost resources.” But Bonneville kept the language, and with roughly $68 million in funding — and the many jobs that this money would sustain — riding on the accord, the Colville Tribes signed.

    Bonneville said reintroduction above Grand Coulee Dam isn’t what Congress authorized the hatchery for, but that it is working with tribes to find a path forward.

    Meanwhile, tribes have worked around the restrictions to try to reintroduce fish.

    In 2019, they began to capture adult salmon that were returning from the ocean and relocated them above the dams. Conant, who organizes the salmon ceremony, was among the tribal members who released those captive fish into the water. To her delight, biologists later found salmon from the tribes’ releases spawning in the Sanpoil River, a tributary of the upper Columbia.

    “It’s not necessarily like, oh, ‘salmon’s the magic food that saves the Indian!’” Conant said. “But it brings back fishing. It brings back taking care of the fish, cutting and drying it, processing, spending that time with your uncle, spending that time with your grandma. It brings it all back.

    “There’s bits and pieces of all of our hearts that are missing,” Conant said. “We’re filling our hearts back up and fighting our way back to our culture.”

    Members of the Spokane Tribe were amazed to discover in 2019 that some of the juvenile Chinook salmon they tagged with trackers and released above Grand Coulee Dam somehow not only made it downriver through Grand Coulee and Chief Joseph dams despite their lack of dedicated fish passageways, but made it more than 600 miles to the ocean.

    One of those salmon returned as an adult, swimming all the way back to the Chief Joseph Hatchery at the base of its namesake dam.

    But its journey ended there. The federal agencies’ protocols prohibited tribes from relocating the captured salmon above Grand Coulee Dam.

    Instead of returning to its home waters, it died below the dam.


    ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. OPB is a member of the ProPublica Local Reporting Network.

  • OPB Radio: Lawsuit Aims To Lower Columbia And Snake River Temperatures For Salmon

    by Jes Burns Follow OPB/EarthFix | Aug. 15, 2016

    Advocates.notice.8.2016Conservation groups announced plans Monday to sue the Environmental Protection Agency.  They say the agency isn’t doing enough to protect salmon from high water temperatures on the Columbia and Snake rivers.

    Warm water can be deadly for salmon. Just last year, 250,000 sockeye died on the Columbia because of high temperatures.

    The EPA started addressing the issue more than a decade ago, but that process stalled.

    Miles Johnson of Columbia Riverkeeper said he hopes the lawsuit will jump start federal efforts to lower river temperatures.

    “We want the EPA to take a holistic approach, to look at all the sources of temperature. But when EPA did that between 2000 and 2003, their conclusion was that it’s really the dams and flow that are controlling most of the temperature issues in the Columbia,” he said.

    The lawsuit aims to force federal environmental regulators to determine “total maximum daily load” for the rivers, which would set a limit on water temperatures in order to protect salmon. The EPA and other agencies would then have to operate under those guidelines when regulating the river.

    Johnson said a plan to manage river temperatures could include changes to dam operations and removal of what he called obsolete dams on the lower Snake River.

    “I think this is really about whether, looking down the road 50 years from now, do we want to be teaching our children and grandchildren to catch salmon in the Columbia or explaining to them what salmon were?” Johnson said.

    The EPA did not immediately provide an explanation for why the regulatory process was initially shelved.  A spokesperson said it was the agency’s policy not to comment on pending litigation.

  • OPB: Endangered Orcas Are Starving. Should We Start Feeding Them?

    orca.swimBy Tom Banse, Northwest News Network

    Jan. 25, 2018

    Washington state officials have proposed a new tack to save the Pacific Northwest’s critically endangered orca population. Their idea is to boost salmon hatchery production by 10 to 20 million more fish per year to provide more food for the iconic killer whales.

    No one wants to see orcas starve, but reliance on fish hatcheries leaves some whale advocacy groups uneasy.

    There are just 76 orcas left in the pods that call the inland waters of the Northwest home. That’s the lowest number in more than three decades. Numerous factors take the blame for the dwindling population, but one of the biggest according to biologists is lack of prey. Chinook salmon are the preferred food for these orcas.

    Sport fisherman Greg King can relate.

    “The science is there. They’re dying,” he said. “We’re on a world stage here right now. The whole world is watching us. Are we going to let these orca whales die and have that blood on our hands? I don’t think we want that.”

    King trooped to the Washington Legislature this month to support spending tax dollars to increase hatchery production of Chinook—also known as king—salmon. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife first proposed this idea and the governor is running with it.

    State Rep. Brian Blake, D-Aberdeen, independently put forward the concept and is getting traction with both parties in the legislature. ?

    On one level, the idea is pretty simple. rear more salmon at maybe half a dozen existing hatcheries throughout the state with spare capacity and release them.

    Some of that could happen at the Hoodsport salmon hatchery on Hood Canal.

    “We want to see if we can add to that prey base here from Hoodsport,” State Fish and Wildlife Regional Hatchery Manager Rob Allan said.

    The big question is will it work? in the end, the fish have to be pretty big by the time the killer whales go for them.

    “We’re hoping so,” Allan said. “All we know is that we release fish, they go out to the salt (water) and then they come back. So then it’s up to the whales to go ahead and eat ‘em. We think it’s going to help.”

    But potential complications abound. The federal government will need to give the OK because both the Puget Sound orcas and many wild salmon runs they used to feed on are listed as endangered.

    “Hatchery fish has been identified as a bit detrimental to recovery of wild stocks,” Allan said. “They want us to put the reins on it a bit.”

    That’s because hatchery fish could compete for resources with wild stocks and they might interbreed. So it’ll be a challenge to identify the right salmon stocks, hatchery locations and run timing.

    “Where do we emphasize, you know a Chinook or a chum salmon? Where do they need to be when the whales are there?” Allan said. “Also where are we not going to have this impact on wild fish? So it’s a real juggling match.”

    The federal government’s Southern Resident killer whale recovery coordinator said she is in discussions about how to make this work.

    “We need to come up with creative solutions,” said Lynne Barre of NOAA Fisheries. “There is kind of a sense of urgency around the whales with the recent losses.”

    Environmental groups are the most wary of the orca food pantry concept as it proceeds through the Legislature, though not opposed. Darcy Nonemacher handles government affairs for the Washington Environmental Council.

    “Given the urgency with orcas and the critical need for food to be available to sustain orca populations, everything is on the table,” Nonemacher said. “At the same time, we do not want have hatcheries done in a way that undermines listed salmon and other species that orcas eat, in particular Chinook salmon.”

    The president of the Orca Conservancy, another group, said using hatcheries to feed the orcas should only be a “short-term” solution until wild runs rebound. The governor’s office says it may take years to figure out if the supplemental feeding strategy works so they’ve penciled in indefinite funding.

    One way to measure results would be to collect and dissect orca poop to see what they ate, which is easier said than done.

    Environmentalists have long favored breaching dams on the lower Snake River to boost salmon numbers and are now directly linking that to creating food for orcas. However, breaching those federal dams appears to have minimal support in Congress.

    Separately, the Washington Legislature is debating a bill to reduce noise impacts on orcas by imposing a seven knot vessel speed limit within 400 yards of an endangered resident killer whale. Additionally, the governor and state Senate have proposed to increase spending on marine patrols to enforce such a speed limit and existing rules for boaters to stay at least 200 yards away from whales.

    Both the governor’s office and legislators are talking about creating a Southern Resident killer whale task force to focus on securing more public and private resources and support for orca recovery efforts. Gov. Jay Inslee included nearly $4 million for various orca recovery initiatives, including increased hatchery production and vessel enforcement, in his 2018 budget requests now pending before the state
    Legislature.

    Canada is working on its own orca protection plan with many similar elements. The Southern Resident killer whales routinely cross the maritime border between Washington state and British Columbia.

    In 2014, WDFW hatcheries released around 145 million juvenile salmon and steelhead, about one-third of which were Chinook. A 10 million increase in king salmon production for the purpose of feeding hungry orcas would equate to a 20 percent increase in annual releases of that
    species.

    Hatchery fish not eaten by the killer whales may provide increased fishing opportunities for humans.

    The proposed budget authorization to rear the first cohort of Chinook salmon to feed the orcas comes in at $1.5 million.

    https://www.opb.org/news/article/npr-endangered-orcas-are-starving-should-we-start-feeding-them/

  • OPB: ‘The Very Essence Of Our Being’: Northwest Tribes (And Politicians) Gather To Discuss Future Of Salmon

    By Courtney Flatt July 8, 2021 2021.wheeler.summitTribes across the Northwest called for immediate action to remove the four Lower Snake River dams during a two-day Salmon and Orca summit in western Washington. The group called on President Biden and congressional members to “take bold action, now.”

    Many tribal leaders placed support behind Idaho Republican Congressman Mike Simpson’s broad concept to breach the dams while still finding ways to support the resulting holes in industries like energy development and agricultural irrigation.

    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee spoke on the second day of the conference, connected virtually from off site. He continued to call for more talks on how to move forward – at one point jumping in to tell Suquamish Chairman Leonard Forsman, “We should have daily discussions.”

    Inslee and Sen. Patty Murray have not signed on to Simpson’s $33.5 billion dollar concept. In May, they said solutions for the Snake River dams controversy need more work. 

    During the conference, Inslee called this a “critical” moment. Climate change, and the recent heatwave, make the urgency even more apparent, he said. “I believe we should be – and have to be – committed to getting down to business to define what can provide the services that these dams provide, so we can take the next steps in this regional discussion,” Inslee said. “… To define how to replace these services so that we can build more support in our communities to taking the next step in the dam breaching discussion.”

    He said that should happen “in the months ahead.”

    In the online chat discussion, attendees called Inslee’s comments “encouraging” news for dam breaching.
    “Well, I didn’t expect to hear the Gov say ‘breach the dams!’ explicitly, but he did come as close as I think he dared, with his statement about the next step being to replace the services provided by the dams!” Marjorie Millner wrote.

    Simpson was the only member of Congress to attend the meeting in-person, although Murray and Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo sent staff members to the event. Other staff attended over virtually.

    “Sen. Murray understands the federal government’s need to honor its treaty obligations, in particular with the tribe of the Pacific Northwest,” said Shawn Bills, Murray’s state director, who attended the summit in her place.

    Bills said Inslee and Murray would work with the Northwest congressional delegation to “prepare next steps.”

    Removing or altering the four Lower Snake River dams would take an act of Congress.

    Who wasn’t there
    Eastern Washington Reps. Dan Newhouse and Cathy McMorris Rodgers, whose districts include the dams that would be removed, have long supported keeping them in place. They have denounced Simpson’s plan, arguing that salmon and dams can coexist.

    Washington state Rep. Debra Lekanoff, the only Native American woman currently in the state Legislature, called to create a comprehensive plan that “benefits and protects salmon for all people.”

    “If you have a healthy salmon, you have a healthy people. You have a healthy social structure. Your people in Washington state and in the Pacific Northwest will thrive, if you have a healthy salmon,” Lekanoff said.
    Throughout the two-day conference, leaders from various tribes across the Northwest pushed for support of Simpson’s plan or another plan that could move forward quickly with dam breaching.

    “We’re looking to solve here,” said Nez Perce Vice-Chairman Shannon Wheeler. “We’re not looking to talk or rearrange anything that’s in the equation. We have everything that’s in the equation. We just have now. We have to solve for x. We have to solve for y. We have to solve for z.”

    To help with those solutions, Nisqually Indian Tribe Chairman Willie Frank III said he’d continue his family history of fighting for treaty rights. 

    “Growing up, one of the things that I was taught was that we need to work together – our tribes, our state and our federal partners – to do what’s best for the environment and do what’s best for the natural resources,” Frank said.

    Frank said that all tribes across Indian Country are suffering losses, from salmon to orcas to buffalo. “It all ties in together because we are all one,” he said.

    Salmon on a “quasi-extinction threshold”
    Snake River spring and summer chinook are approaching a “quasi-extinction threshold,” said Nez Perce fisheries manager Dave Johnson. He says 42 percent of the wild salmon are returning to the basin to spawn, which means there aren’t enough spawners to sustain the population.

    Looking at different streams in the basin, Johnson said the tribe found multiple streams with 50 fish or fewer on spawning grounds for four consecutive years.

    “What we found was shocking,” he said. “Really, what it means is that you’re running out of options. … You could have a landslide in a particular area – you could have a heatwave, like we’re having right now. There just aren’t enough fish on the spawning grounds to save that particular population.”

    He said recovering those populations is very challenging, without “substantial intervention.”

    Johnson said populations are declining by 19 percent each year. Following those trend numbers, 77 percent of spring and summer chinook in the Snake River Basin could reach the quasi-extinction threshold by 2025.

    Simply turning right at the Snake River dramatically decreases the chance of survival, as the salmon pass through four dams, Johnson said.

    Culverts, he said, are a big challenge – something the Nez Perce have worked on for years, and something many in the Northwest congressional delegation have argued would be a better way to help salmon than including Simpson’s concept in President Biden’s infrastructure plan.

    “(Culverts) really open up miles and miles of habitat,” Johnson said. “But, in this case here, think of (the dams) as a culvert. But these ‘culverts,’ unlike other ones, they actually kill fish. … These four dams are a huge series of culverts that need to be addressed.”

    Youth Leadership Council
    A group of high school students from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation pushed for the dam issue to be addressed. The Youth Leadership Council recently sent a letter, signed by Native youth from 10 tribes, asking Biden to take the matter seriously.

    “America made a deal and promised that we would be able to fish forever. We can’t fish if there aren’t any salmon left,” 17-year-old Keyen Singer, of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, read from the letter at the conference.

    A change.org petition from the group has collected 10,801 signatures as of July 8. The goal is 15,000 signatures.

    As leaders from tribes across the Northwest took to the microphone to express their deep concern for the survival of salmon – and the endangered orcas that rely on them for food – person after person spoke about how few salmon are left. They demonstrated an urgency that’s needed to save them, especially in a changing climate.

    Dams built in the 1930s have blocked salmon from tribes on the Upper Columbia. While they’re working to reintroduce salmon above the blocked area – a plan that could take decades – they say they’ve now got to get salmon from trucks.

    Hemene James, of the Coeur D’Alene Tribal Council, said his tribe has been without salmon for nearly 100 years. James said his tribe should serve as a warning.

    “The very essence of our being is the salmon. When that gets taken the people can never be whole again,” James said. “My people are relegated to getting fish out of the back of a truck. … You all that have salmon, you should be freaking out. Excuse my language, you should be downright crapping your pants because you don’t want to end up like us.”

    https://www.nwpb.org/2021/07/08/the-very-essence-of-our-being-northwest-tribes-and-politicians-gather-to-discuss-future-of-salmon/

  • OPB: Benefits of Snake River dams must be replaced before breaching to save salmon, report says

    iceharbordam1

    Aug. 25, 2022

    By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS

    The benefits provided by four giant hydroelectric dams on the Snake River must be replaced before the dams can be breached to save endangered salmon runs, according to a final report issued on Thursday by Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Washington U.S. Sen. Patty Murray.

    That is especially true regarding the reliable and carbon-free electricity the dams generate, the report concluded.

    If the four Snake River dams were ultimately removed, it would be the largest such project in U.S. history. In 2012 the Elwha Dam on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula was removed to restore habitat. At the time, the National Park Service said eliminating the Elwha Dam was the largest project in U.S. history.

    Congress will ultimately decide if the federally-owned dams will be removed, and would have to appropriate money for the work.

    The issue is not a matter of electricity versus salmon, Thursday’s report said.

    “We believe that is an oversimplified binary choice, and it is one that we do not accept or see as inevitable,” Inslee and Murray wrote.

    But, “the science is clear that — specific to the Lower Snake River — breach of the dams would provide the greatest benefit to the salmon,” the report said.

    Breaching the dams would significantly improve the ability of salmon and steelhead to swim from their inland spawning grounds to the Pacific Ocean, where they spend most of their lives, and then back to their original spawning grounds to procreate and die, the report said.

    Significant benefits of the dams besides electricity include making the Snake River navigable up to Lewiston, Idaho, allowing barges to carry wheat and other crops to ocean ports. Eliminating the dams would require truck and rail transportation improvements to move crops, the report said. The dams also provide irrigation water for farmers and recreation opportunities for people.

    A draft report released on June 9 concluded the benefits provided by the dams would cost between $10.3 billion and $27.2 billion to replace.

    The dams have many supporters, including two GOP members of Congress representing eastern Washington state, where the dams are located. The dams are also supported by barge companies, farmers and other business interests.

    Republican U.S. Reps. Dan Newhouse and Cathy McMorris Rodgers recently introduced a bill to protect the dams.

    But the chairman of the Yakama Nation has said the dams must be breached.

    “Our people are salmon people,” tribal council chairman Delano Saluskin said earlier this year. “When the salmon thrive, we thrive; but when they suffer, our people suffer too.”

    Exploring the Columbia River Basin in 1805, Lewis and Clark wrote of waterways so full of salmon that you could all but walk across on their backs.

    In the late 1800s, up to 16 million salmon and steelhead returned to the Columbia River Basin every year to spawn. Over the next century and a half, overfishing whittled that number down. By the early 1950s, just under 130,000 Chinook were returning to the Snake River.

    Construction of the first dam on the lower river, Ice Harbor, began in 1955. Lower Monumental followed in 1969, Little Goose in 1970, and Lower Granite in 1975. The dams stretch from Pasco, Washington, to near Pullman, Washington, and stand between migrating salmon and 5,500 miles (8,850 kilometers) of spawning habitat in central Idaho.

    The dams have fish ladders, but too many of the salmon die as they swim through the dams and across slack water reservoirs on their migrations.

    In 1991, Snake River salmon and steelhead were listed as endangered species, requiring the production of a federal recovery plan. Over the next three decades, environmental organizations sued the federal government six times, arguing that the recovery plan was inadequate.

    The most recent lawsuit, in 2016, resulted in a four-year study of the environmental impact of the dams. Although it found that breaching the dams would be the most effective salmon recovery action, federal agencies ultimately decided against it.

    The U.S. government has spent more than $17 billion trying to recover Snake River salmon, through improvements to fish ladders and other measures, with little to show for it. In 2017, the number of Chinook salmon returning to the Snake River dropped below 10,000.

    Dam supporters blame declining salmon runs on other factors, such as changing ocean conditions.

    Inslee and Murray said there are “clear areas of common agreement.”

    “People of every perspective share a desire to see progress on the underlying issues and relief from the uncertainty created by litigation,” the report said.

    Inslee and Murray said it is clear that, with adequate money, it is possible to replace most of the services and benefits provided by the dams and to mitigate the loss of others.

    Government must move forward to provide replacements for the benefits of the dams “so that breaching of the Lower Snake River Dams is a pathway that can be credibly considered by policymakers in the future," the report said.

    Going forward, Inslee and Murray committed to:

    • Substantially expand salmon habitat and passage throughout the Columbia River Basin and Puget Sound.
    • Improve the siting process necessary to build the clean energy resources needed.
    • Leverage the investments made in the Biden administration’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and the Inflation Reduction Act to support energy replacement, infrastructure enhancement, and salmon recovery and habitat restoration.

    https://www.opb.org/article/2022/08/25/snake-river-dams-washington-salmon/

  • OPB: Court Orders More Spill Over Columbia River Dams In 2018

    Sockeye in RiverCassandra Profita March 27, 2017  

    A judge has ordered federal agencies to spill more water over Columbia River dams to help threatened and endangered salmon and steelhead, though not until next year after testing.

    The order from U.S. District Judge Michael Simon came in response to a motion filed by conservation groups together with the state of Oregon and the Nez Perce Tribe.

    The groups represent the plaintiffs in a longstanding lawsuit over dams in the Columbia River Basin. Last year, Judge Simon rejected the federal plan for managing dams to protect salmon. Federal agencies are now in the process of writing a new plan.

    The plaintiffs had asked the court to order as much spill as the law allows starting in April. State laws set limits on how much water can be spilled over dams before the gases produced in the process become harmful to fish.

    In his response, released Monday, Simon said the federal agencies need time to test the effects of additional spill to avoid unintended consequences. He delayed the court order for increasing spill until the spring of 2018 to allow the agencies to test out spill options and develop tailored plans for individual dams. The court plans to confer the next year with the agencies’ on their plan for increasing spill.

    Todd True, an EarthJustice attorney representing conservation groups, said new science shows spilling more water over the dams in the spring will improve the survival rate of imperiled fish by helping them reach the ocean.

    “While we recognize that this relief will not eliminate the harm to salmon and steelhead from dam operations in the long run, we are encouraged that increased spring spill will be granted to reduce irreparable harm to juvenile salmon and steelhead,” True said in a statement about the ruling.

    Spilling water over the dams reduces the amount of hydropower the agencies can produce.

    Terry Flores, director of Northwest RiverPartners, represents ports, farms and utilities that rely on dam operations. She said the spill requested by the plaintiffs would have cost $40 million, which represents a 2 percent increase in customers’ electric bills. Flores said she’s worried her group “won’t get a fair shake” from the court in the larger case over dam management.

    “We’re just very concerned that his judge believes that simply more spill is better,” she said. “We do know that some spill can be very good for fish, but too much spill can really harm fish or kill them.”

    Flores points to studies showing young fish migrating though the dams can be exposed to too much gas and suffer from a condition similar to the bends. She said adult fish can have trouble finding the fish ladders that allow them to swim past the dams when there’s a lot of spill.

    The plaintiffs also asked the court to stop the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from spending money on upgrades to the four lower Snake River dams until the new plan for managing dams is complete. Environmental groups are advocating for those dams to be removed as part of the new federal dam management plan.

    Judge Simon did not grant their request to halt spending on all future upgrades, but he did tell the Corps to provide the court with advance notice of planned projects so the plaintiffs can seek injunctions in the future.

    Flores said that decision raises concerns for her group as well because it shows the court is “willing to immerse itself in decisions relating to what sorts of investments should be made at the Snake River dams.”

    She said those decisions are supposed to be made by Congress.

    http://www.opb.org/news/article/court-orders-more-spill-over-columbia-river-dams-in-2018/

  • OPB: Dam Agreement Aims To Help More Salmon Survive Columbia River Journey

    December 18, 2018

    By Tony Schick, Cassandra Profita, and David Steves 

    seattletimessockeyePortland, OR - A new agreement aims to help more young salmon make their way past dams along the Columbia and Snake rivers.

    The agreement, released Tuesday, spells out new strategies for spilling more water over the dams — and sending less water through power-generating turbines — each spring. It signals a reprieve to the yearslong legal skirmishes that have been playing out in federal courts over how best to save salmon and steelhead from extinction.

    The fish face a number of challenges because of the hydroelectric dams built on the two rivers throughout the 20th century. Those threats include miles of slackwater behind dams, forcing juvenile fish to swim down rivers where currents previously carried them along. Dams also have created more opportunities for predators like sea lions and cormorants to prey on young salmon. And getting past the dams and their turbine blades presents dangers of its own.

    Government and tribal leaders announced the new agreement, describing it as a way to strike a balance between fish survival and continued hydropower generation from eight dams on the lower Columbia and Snake rivers.

    Spilling water has been ordered by the courts in the past, as recently as last spring.

    But those orders have created friction between salmon recovery advocates and groups that say curbing the flow of water means less electricity — and that means higher rates for customers.

    This latest approach calls for “flexible spill,” according to a joint statement released by the agreement’s parties. In other words, dam operators would control the volume of water that gets released to help move fish downriver; more water when electricity demand is lower, less water when there’s high demand for electricity. During those high-demand periods, more water would be sent through power-generating turbines.

     “I don’t think this piece would be the solution, but it might be the start of a move toward a solution, and that’s what I think we’re all hopeful for,” said Jim Litchfield, executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, a group that has opposed increased spill in the past.

    “At the same time, we are concerned about the unprecedented and scientifically unproven levels of new spill being contemplated by the agreement,” said Litchfield, whose group represents utilities, ports, farms and other operations that support dams.

    Fishing and environmental advocacy groups characterized the agreement an important incremental step in the right direction.

    “The urgency for strong action remains, while Columbia Basin salmon remain on life support,” said Glen Spain, Northwest regional director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations.

    Tom France, regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation, called the plan a step to help both salmon and the endangered resident orcas of south Puget Sound. Their waning chance of survival has been directly linked to the historically declining population of Columbia and Snake river chinook salmon.

    “Much more will be needed, however, to protect endangered salmon — and orca — from extinction,” he said in a statement.

    The parties that agreed to the new spill strategy include the Washington, Oregon and the Nez Perce Tribe in Idaho. Other parties include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation, which operate the dams, and the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets hydropower to utilities and other customers.

    Bonneville Power Administration spokesman Dave Wilson said the plan could keep everyone out of court for the next three years.

    “The new approach is collaboration rather than litigation, working together the states, tribes, federal agencies,” he said. “We’re going to try to do it all.”

    Some, including the federal judge who previously presided over the case, and more recently, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, have called for research or consideration for the removal of dams on the lower Snake River. It’s an idea that’s been discussed as way to save salmon and ensure they are plentiful enough for orca survival in the Northwest — especially if more incremental steps don’t work.

    Todd True is an EarthJustice lawyer who has represented environmental groups in legal action over the dams and salmon. He said it would be great if, after the new agreement’s three-year period, the government can come up with a long-term solution to protect salmon and orcas.

    “Scientists have been saying for decades that’s the single biggest step we can take to put salmon on the path to sustainable populations,” True said. “So that is front and center and it’s an issue we think we need to come to grips with and address.”

  • OPB: Federal report recommends removing four Lower Snake River dams to protect salmon

    Nez Perce.snake.riverBy Courtney Flatt (Northwest News Network)
    Sept. 30, 2022 

    Breaching the Snake River dams is one major way to protect salmon, according to a final federal report announced on Friday on salmon and steelhead recovery in the Columbia River Basin.

    “The common message is clear across all the work: salmon rebuilding depends on large-scale actions, including breaching dams, systematically restoring tributary and estuary habitats, and securing a more functional salmon ocean ecosystem,” according to the report.

    This report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which manages salmon recovery, could have big implications for the fate of the four controversial dams in southeastern Washington, conservation groups said.

    Removing the four Lower Snake River dams is the foundation of salmon recovery measures in the Columbia Basin, said Rob Masonis, Trout Unlimited’s vice president of Western conservation.

    “If you don’t have that foundation, the billions of dollars that we have spent, and will spend in the future, will not produce the desired outcome of salmon recovery,” Masonis said. “We need to remove the big bottleneck that’s preventing us from realizing the benefit of those investments and that’s the four dams on the Lower Snake River.”

    However, U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Washington, said the report ignored the opinions of most people in the Columbia Basin.

    “The Biden administration is playing politics with its energy future, while ignoring recent data showing spring and summer chinook returns at higher levels than they have been in years,” Newhouse said in a statement today.

    The four Lower Snake River dams provide carbon-free energy to the Northwest. In addition, the four dams allow farmers along the river to irrigate crops and barges to reach the inland Port of Lewiston. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, both Democrats, have said these services need to be replaced before the dams can be removed.

    However, removing the dams would lead to one of the best chances for salmon recovery, according to the report, especially in the face of a changing climate, which will continue to increase water temperatures and decrease river flows important to salmon survival.

    In other cases where dams have recently been removed, such as on Washington's Elwha and White Salmon rivers, river ecosystems improved faster than expected, according to the report.

    In the Columbia Basin, the biggest challenges to salmon and steelhead outlined in the report included climate change; degrading tributary and estuary habitat; the hydrosystem; predation from penipeds, native and non-native fish, and colony-nesting waterbirds; and other barriers built by people, such as culverts.

    The report outlined mid-range goals for wild salmon and steelhead numbers by 2050 set by the Columbia Basin Partnership task force, which included tribes, agriculture, fishing, and transportation groups.

    The task force suggested recovery goals that would reach beyond removing salmon and steelhead from the Endangered Species List, instead aiming for what the task force called healthy and harvestable populations.

    The mid-range goals show that the fish would not reach healthy and harvestable populations. Mid-range goals would be on the path to healthy and harvestable populations, which the report called “a substantially more ambitious goal than meeting Endangered Species Act recovery standards.”

    To reach these mid-range numbers of salmon, the report identified several core actions, which it indicated would make the best progress in recovering salmon and steelhead in the region. Those actions include breaching the Snake River dams; managing predator numbers; restoring and protecting tributary and estuary habitat and water quality; adding fish passage to the Upper Columbia River, which is blocked by Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams; and implementing harvest and hatchery reforms.

    All of the actions must happen quickly and on a large scale, according to the report.

    Breaching the Snake River dams would help young fish move faster downstream, according to the report. It would reduce the number of dams the fish must encounter as they head to the ocean, which would reduce stress for juvenile salmon. It’s uncertain, but that additional stress may lead to more of these young salmon dying in the ocean, according to the report. In addition, breaching the dams would create more rearing and spawning habitat.

    Moreover, reintroducing fish above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams and establishing adult and juvenile fish passage into the Upper Columbia River would buffer populations against climate change, according to the report. It would provide access to more productive spawning grounds. In addition, it would benefit other species as salmon are reintroduced above the two dams.

    "This is a crucial time for the Columbia Basin's salmon and steelhead. They face increasing pressure from climate change and other longstanding stressors, including water quality and fish blockages caused by dams," said Janet Coit, assistant administrator for NOAA Fisheries and acting assistant secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere at NOAA.

    Climate change will deteriorate ocean and freshwater conditions, which is why it’s important to improve conditions that are more directly impacted by people, according to the report.

    To buffer against climate change, the report recommended maintaining low water temperatures and appropriate water flows for fish, including adjusting water flows for fish. In addition, to help salmon survival during periods of poor ocean conditions, the report recommended increasing salmon survival and spawning in freshwater habitats. Moreover, the report recommended maintaining and restoring access to habitat that’s more climate resilient because it’s in areas of high-elevation or connected floodplains.

    If all of these actions are done, salmon and steelhead should see numbers improve, according to the report.

    In all, the report looked at 16 salmon and steelhead runs that spawn upstream of the Bonneville Dam on the Lower Columbia River.

    The report didn’t consider funding sources, regulations needed for implementation, or impacts of the recovery measures, including dam removal. Instead, the actions outlined in the report should help inform other dam removal discussions, according to the report.

    To figure out which salmon and steelhead needed the most help right away, the report analyzed several criteria, which weighed the extinction risk with the ability to rebuild as the climate changes. Another key factor included the importance to tribal communities.

    The highest priority runs included Snake River spring/summer chinook salmon, Snake River steelhead, Upper Columbia River spring chinook salmon, and Upper Columbia steelhead, according to the report. These stocks of salmon make up earlier recreational fisheries and tribal subsistence and ceremonial harvests.

    Other prioritized stocks included Upper Columbia fall chinook salmon and Upper Columbia summer chinook salmon. Although these salmon are not listed on the Endangered Species Act, they are important for tribal harvest and recreational and commercial fishing, according to the report. In addition, tribal reintroduction efforts above Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee dams rely on Upper Columbia summer chinook salmon. Salmon haven’t reached the Upper Columbia River since the dams were built.

    https://www.opb.org/article/2022/09/30/lower-snake-river-dams-removal-salmon-protections-federal-report/

  • OPB: Groups seek pause in long-running Columbia River Basin salmon dispute

    By Todd Milbourn (OPB)

    Aug. 4, 2022

    Break would give stakeholders more time to develop a plan to protect fish

    OPB.logoA legal dispute over the impact of hydroelectric dams on salmon runs in the Columbia River Basin has been winding its way through federal court for more than 25 years.

    It’s been on hold for the past year while stakeholders develop a long-term plan that protects fish while safeguarding the region’s power system.

    On Thursday, a coalition of tribes, environmental groups and the U.S. government asked a federal judge for another year to craft that vision.

    Supporters say “business as usual is not an option” as they seek to restore historic runs of salmon and other fish. They say the construction of more than a dozen dams has made it hard — and often impossible — for salmon to swim from Northwest rivers to the ocean and back.

    “Salmon are running out of time and barreling toward extinction,” said Erin Farris-Olsen, regional executive director of the National Wildlife Foundation, in a statement. “Time is of the essence.”

    The request follows the release of a federal report that found removing some dams on the lower Snake River — a tributary of the Columbia — might be required to restore salmon runs to historic levels.

    According to the federal government, anywhere from 7.5 to 16 million adult salmon and steelhead once swam the region’s waterways, providing food for over 130 wildlife species, such as orca, bears and wolves.

    Republican lawmakers including Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) and Cliff Bentz (R-Ore.) wrote a letter to federal officials in support of keeping dams on the lower Snake.

    “The infrastructure on the Columbia River System provides invaluable benefits to the Pacific Northwest, including carbon-free energy, flood control mitigation, irrigation, navigation, and recreation benefits,” the lawmakers wrote in a statement. “Balancing these vital interests with species conservation is not an easy task. It is made significantly more difficult when science and collaboration is replaced by politically-motivated intervention.”

    Federal officials say it would be possible to replace the energy lost by removing hydroelectric dams and it would cost $11 billion to $19 billion.

    https://www.opb.org/article/2022/08/04/groups-seek-pause-in-long-running-columbia-basin-salmon-dispute/

  • OPB: Hundreds of gallons of oil leak into Snake River from Little Goose Dam

    Dams.LittleGooseBy Courtney Flatt 
    Northwest News Network
    Oct. 31, 2022

    Somewhere between 300 and 600 gallons of oil has leaked into the Snake River from a turbine system at eastern Washington’s Little Goose Dam, according to the Army Corps of Engineers. Oil leaks at dams are a problem environmental advocacy groups have fought in court to stop – a problem that leaders at advocacy nonprofit Columbia Riverkeeper said still needs more oversight and accountability.

    “For decades, the hydroelectric dams on both the Columbia and the Snake rivers have repeatedly released oil into the river systems without any consequences and without a concrete plan and actions to catch the oil releases much earlier than what’s playing out right now on the Snake,” said Lauren Goldberg, executive director with Columbia Riverkeeper.

    The oil leak at Little Goose Dam went on for 90 days, according to the Corps, a timeline that Goldberg called unacceptable.

    However, the oil leak happened in an unusual way that wasn’t caught by the Corps oil monitoring system, said Dylan Peters, a spokesperson with the Walla Walla district of the Corps.

    Typically, an oil monitoring system, which manages the supply, drain and storage of oil at the dam, would alert staff to a potential leak, Peters said.

    Instead, the oil leaked back into the turbine oil conveyance system’s governor, which regulates the oil monitoring system, Peters said.

    “Because the oil was leaking back through the system into the turbine itself, it wasn't giving us the normal readings that you would look for for a potential oil leak. Moreover, it wasn't creating a sheen on any water, which is a physical indicator that oil is getting into the waterway,” Peters said.

    After the leak was discovered, technicians installed an oil boom to collect any additional oil. No oil sheen was visible in the water, according to the Corps.

    In a news release, officials with the Walla Walla District of the Corps said staff work to respond quickly to oil leaks.

    “Our team at Little Goose Dam took appropriate actions to remove the turbine from service, assess and contain the leak. The turbine will remain out of service and isolated from the river until repaired,” said Paul Ocker, Operations Division chief for the Walla Walla District, in a news release.

    Now, Peters said, engineers will audit the dam’s oil system and make recommendations to improve the transfer of oil. In addition, what happened during this leak will be incorporated into a leak accountability system in what Peters called a lesson learned.

    “We do everything possible to mitigate risks and prevent such leaks. But, even under the best circumstances, oil is difficult to contain and costly to clean up once it does start leaking and entering waterways,” Peters said.

    In 2014, Columbia Riverkeeper settled a lawsuit against dam managers to reduce chronic oil pollution leaking from eight dams into the Columbia and Snake rivers.

    Then, in 2021, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued discharge permits for four dams on the Lower Snake and four dams on the Columbia River.

    In an emailed statement, Bill Dunbar, a spokesperson with the EPA, said the Corps is keeping the EPA informed about the oil leak investigation.

    “EPA is continuing to gather information regarding the incident before determining if the spill violates the terms of the new Clean Water Act permit for the dam facility. EPA will conduct a follow up inspections at the dam in the near future,” Dunbar said.

    This most recent oil leak at Little Goose Dam is the first major leak since the EPA’s discharge permits set standards of no more than 5 milligrams per liter released into the river per day.

    “This amount of oil pollution is not sanctioned by the Clean Water Act, and it really flies in the face of the critical need to protect clean water and salmon and steelhead in the Snake River,” Goldberg said.

    Moreover, Goldberg said, it’s disappointing that oil leaks at dams have yet to be solved, calling it another reason to remove the four Lower Snake River dams. Groups supporting dam removal have said that’s the best way to protect wild salmon runs on the Snake River.

    “These dams that are alleged to be so clean and green on a regular basis release, in some cases, really large amounts of oil. If it was coming from an individual corporation, it would never be acceptable,” Goldberg said.

    www.opb.org/article/2022/10/31/hundreds-of-gallons-of-oil-leak-into-snake-river-from-little-goose-dam/

  • OPB: Repairs on Snake River Dam slow wheat barges at peak of season

    By Anna King500px USACE Lower Monumental Dam
    Aug. 31, 2020

    A lot of freshly harvested wheat bound for Portland could stack up in the Columbia River and its tributaries soon because an old guy wire has snapped on the Snake River’s Lower Monumental Dam.

    The wire was helping to anchor a guide wall on the upriver side of Lower Monumental, said Dylan Peters of the Walla Walla District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. A guide wall helps the barges navigate into the lock with strong currents. In the meantime, the dam is using a tug boat to hold the wall in place without the cable.

    Now, workers have to string a new wire underwater. It’s going to take about two weeks for the Army Corps to finish the whole project.

    Delays will slow down some of the transports but won’t stop them entirely.

    Farmers are about three-quarters into their harvest, and this is peak time to move wheat downriver to Portland.

    “Any time we have notice in advance that we’re able to work with it, then it certainly makes it much easier,” said Rob Rich, with Shaver Transportation Co.

    About 50% of the nation’s wheat is moved down the Columbia River and its tributaries, according to the U.S. Wheat Associates.

    Each year Shaver barges about 600 loads of wheat — each weighing 3,600 tons — down the Columbia River system to Portland. Tidewater Transportation & Terminals moves about 800 loads.

    This is prime wheat hauling time, according to Jennifer Riddle with Tidewater. The wheat harvest is about 75% done so far.

    “Although wheat is our main commodity, we also move wood chips, finished paper products, and fertilizer along the Snake River system,” she said.

  • OPB: Salmon - the original superabundant food of the Pacific Northwest

     By Francisca Benitez
    Nov. 5, 2021


    Few things unite the Pacific Northwest’s culture, economy and ecology like food. But sometimes the ingredients we eat are also divisive. Take salmon: Once these fish were superabundant throughout the region, but the arrival of western settlers — who introduced overfishing and dams — has taken a toll. Now, despite monumental efforts, some salmon species are endangered. Yet these fish remain crucial to the Indigenous cultures that learned how to sustainably manage the resource for millennia.

    “Superabundant” is OPB’s video series dedicated to the stories behind the foods you love. As we examine salmon, we meet with Indigenous fishers, traders and scientists who have adapted to a changing world and who are working to bring these fish back to a state of superabundance.


    news1 salmonwilly ryanjohnsonZach Penney, the fishery science department manager at the Columbia Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, shares a traditional story from the treaty tribes of the Columbia, about the creation of humans. In it, the Creator asked all the animals what they could do to help humans survive, as they didn’t know how to feed themselves. According to the legend, the salmon volunteered to help.

    “Salmon was the first animal to stand up. It said, ‘I offer my body for sustenance for these new people,’” Penney said.

    “‘I’ll go to far-off places and I’ll bring back gifts to the people. My requests are that they allow me to return to the place that I was born, and also, as I do these things for the people, I’ll lose my voice. Their role is to speak up for me in the times that I can’t speak for myself.”

    The fish are used in important tribal ceremonies and the cultural knowledge of fishing and caring for salmon is central to many Native tribes’ way of life. Many tribes also continue to eat salmon as a major part of their diets.

    “There is a lot of Indigenous knowledge within the landscape here in the Columbia River,” Penney explained.

    “You don’t live in a place for 16,000 years without learning something, and you don’t live in a place for 16,000 years by messing it up,” he said.

    Family and tribal traditions today

    Brigette McConville owns Salmon King on the Warm Springs Reservation in Warm Springs, Oregon. The store specializes in salmon and beads. Husband Sean McConville is a fisherman who provides fish for the store.

    “The sale of fish is something that our people have always done,” Brigette McConville said. In addition to being a salmon trader, she is vice chair of the Warm Springs Tribal Council and a member of Warm Springs, Wasco and Northern Paiute tribes.

    “I always look for the fish that have no blemishes or bruises. So there’s a clean cut and it’s pretty,” she said. “Our wind-dried salmon: It’s the oldest processing that we have. It hasn’t changed from forever.” In addition to the retail store, Salmon King has online shopping and delivery, catering, cultural experiences and education.

    “Whoever works with fish, it’s important to be happy. The old saying, ‘don’t cook when you’re mad,’ that’s true in every culture,” Brigette McConville said.

    “My mind is thinking of happy thoughts — touching the food with happy thoughts of a young boy when he tastes candy for the first time when I’m catching every fish,” Sean McConville agreed.

    “My dad was Nez Perce. My mom was Nez Perce/Yakama, but I consider myself from the Columbia River,” he said.

    “I’m a fisherman. Born and raised a fisherman,” he said. “We’re fighting for our food. We’re not fighting just for a commercial fishery. We’re fighting for families to have food at home.”
    As Penney, with the Columbia Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, put it: “The tribes have depended on this species, these animals since time immemorial. A lot of our wealth was accumulated from having abundant salmon runs,” he said.

    A journey through rivers and through time

    Salmon are famous for their big journey from the ocean back to the freshwater place where they were born, where they spend their last weeks. The journey is a feat of nature that continues to impress even after millions of years.

    By some estimates, before European contact, the Columbia River hosted runs of tens of millions of salmon per year. The fish reached as far inland as Canada and Idaho and could weigh more than 100 pounds.

    As white settlers made their homes in the Pacific Northwest, that changed. Commercial fisheries and canneries depleted the runs, and dams changed the river, blocking the downstream passage of juvenile salmon.

    In 1855, tribes in the Pacific Northwest ceded lands in treaties with the U.S. government. But those tribes also reserved the right to fish at their “usual and accustomed places.” The government accepted “a trust responsibility” to assure the health and livelihood of the tribes.

    Court cases in the 1960s and 1970s affirmed these rights and specified that tribal fishers were entitled to 50% of the harvestable fish in the Columbia.

    Related: With Snake River spring, summer Chinook on a ‘quasi-extinction threshold,’ NW tribes call for dam removals

    While the Columbia is a salmon highway, many other rivers and streams in Oregon carry salmon too. On the Willamette, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde are taking action in their own way.

    “Just to be able to provide those fishes for our ceremonies, it’s kind of a big deal. We’re doing that for all our people,” said Bobby Mercier, a language and cultural specialist and ceremonial fisher for The Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde. “Our bodies, our DNA knows this fish for forever,” he said.

    “That food goes into your body and it goes into your soul,” Sean McConville said.

    The runs continue to struggle. Fish ladders and hatcheries help support salmon, but just a fraction of the fish successfully journey from ocean to spawning areas each year. Scientists with the tribes and the state keep track by tagging salmon and collecting DNA samples and other data.

    “In some cases, they can tell you who the parents were of that fish and even some cases they can tell you who the grandparents were of that fish,” Penney said.

    “Age composition can give you some ideas about what’s going to happen with their progeny in the next couple years,” he said.

    These measurements help predict salmon runs, which in turn helps set limits on how many fish can be safely caught, and when. Many Northwest salmon are caught in the ocean, but there would be no ocean salmon without the fish that first spawn in river hatcheries and stream beds.

    “The Columbia River is probably one the bigger arteries of salmon production in the Pacific Ocean,” Penney said.

    That knowledge informs many tribal members’ efforts as they push for restoration and advocate for treaty rights.

    “Let us fish. Let us practice our treaty rights on the Columbia River,” advocates Warm Springs tribal council member Brigette McConville.

    Salmon is so much more than a delicious Pacific Northwest dish. It’s a livelihood for an entire industry and the center of a wealth of cultural history. It’s not simply a delicacy, it’s a need, a requirement and, to Native tribal members, a right.

  • OPB: Salmon Conference Calls For Innovative Solutions To Protect Fish

    April 23, 2019

    By Courtney Flatt

    seattletimessockeyeWhat to do with the four Lower Snake River dams and how to best protect imperiled salmon have been a tough questions for decades. They were the focus at a conference on salmon Tuesday at Boise State University’s Andrus Center for Public Policy.

    Bonneville Power Administration’s top official said removing the dams would be a difficult task.

    Elliot Mainzer, the head of BPA, said he’s doing “significant due diligence” to understand the best path forward to protect salmon, while still keeping energy costs low. He said the administration must adapt and change.

    “We’ve got to try to lean in a bit more for the fish,” Mainzer said.

    BPA is one of the agencies in the midst of developing a plan for the Columbia and Snake rivers. One piece of that plan could be to remove or alter the four Lower Snake River dams.

    Mainzer said the four dams are integral parts of the power system’s flexibility and capacity.

    Without the dams, Mainzer said, “You would have a smaller system, and — absent other changes — you would be looking at having to put flexibility, capacity and energy focus on other parts of the grid.”

    Several growers worried that removing or altering the Snake River dams could mean they would no longer have access to irrigation water, like Pasco, Washington-based wine grape grower Jeff Gordon.

    “We’re just above Ice Harbor Dam. That’s a pretty big body of water — it’s at least over a quarter of a mile wide and 90 feet deep. My sense is that water would be too far away for us to get to,” Gordon said.

    A solution will come down to working together, said Merrill Beyeler, an Idaho rancher and former legislator. Beyeler has also worked on salmon restoration in the Lemhi River Valley.

    “What I think has to happen is we have to find some way to advocate for each other. That means we do not leave anybody behind. We do not leave folks that depend on the Columbia River system to move the grain to the coast. We just don’t leave anybody behind,” Beyeler said.

    Tribal representatives said it’s important to have legislative support in Washington, D.C., before giving serious consideration to removing or altering the dams.

    Jaime Pinkham, the director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, breaching the dams will be a “tough political lift to get through the halls of Congress.”

    He said a lack of congressional support for removing Snake River dams could lead to trouble for salmon.

    “It would not surprise me to see legislation introduced to either change the Endangered Species Act or do something as drastic, like we did with wolves, when we legislated their recovery,” Pinkham said.

    Right now, Pinkham said, flexible spill and salmon predator policies should be the main focus of restoration efforts.

    Other tribe members and fish advocates at the conference called for dam removal sooner, rather than later, both to save salmon and the Puget Sound orcas that depend on them for food.

    Chris Wood, the president of Trout Unlimited, said to solve the problem, people have to start thinking on a bigger scale than they do now.

    “We’re not succeeding. We’ve spent $16 billion in one of the least successful recovery programs in the history of the world. That’s where we are right now with the status quo,” Wood said.

    He said carrying the conversations on from this conference could lead to a “far better place in five or 10 years than we are in today.”

    Looking decades into the future, U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, challenged the room to look for innovative solutions, like small modular reactors. He said people need to stop protecting their own interests and find ways to make keep energy rates low and protect salmon.

    “Make no doubt about it, I want salmon back in Idaho. Can this be done? I honestly don’t know. I don’t know if the willpower is there to do it. I don’t know if the willpower is in Congress to do it, but I will tell you that I’m hardheaded enough to try,” Simpson said.

  • OPB: Southern Resident grandmother orca missing and likely dead

    Dukes orcas thinkstock WEB 01252018 640x427By AP staff
    September 21, 2021

    The Center for Whale Research has declared an orca in one of the Puget Sound’s endangered Southern Resident killer whale pods “missing and likely dead.”

    The Bellingham Herald reports mother and grandmother L47, or Marina as she was also known, was missing from the center's 2021 census, according to a Monday news release, and she hasn't been spotted since Feb. 27.

    The 47-year-old orca “did not appear to be in particularly poor condition” in that sighting, but she was missing from surveys this summer conducted by Fisheries and Oceans Canada in the western Strait of Juan de Fuca, a body of water that separates Washington state from Canada.

    The Center for Whale Research said it had six encounters with L47’s matriline and photographed all of her offspring without finding her. “Her repeated absence meets our criteria for declaring a whale missing and likely deceased,” the news release said.

    Marina was born in 1974 and was among the Southern Resident’s most prolific females, giving birth to seven calves that survived long enough to receive an alpha-numeric designation, according to researchers.

    Four of the calves did not survive past their first year, but three — L83, (Moonlight), L91 (Muncher) and L115 (Mystic) — are still alive. L115 is a male, while females L83 and L91 are raising their sons, L110 (Midnight) and L122 (Magic).

    “As a mother and grandmother, L47’s death may have severe consequences,” researchers said. “Center for Whale Research data shows that older, post-reproductive females hold key leadership roles in this society, particularly when food is scarce.”

    According to the center, L115 has a three-times greater risk of death in the next two years than a male of the same age whose mother is still alive, while L47’s grandchildren face a six-fold increase in their chances of death over the next two years. Those risks will rise even higher if salmon abundance shrinks.

    In July, the endangered killer whales received new habitat protections from the U.S. government. While environmentalists praised the action, many also called for habitat protections for salmon to aid in the orca’s recovery.

    With the loss of L47 and the oldest Southern Resident male orca, known as K21 or Cappuccino, the current Southern Resident population is 73. Researchers said this week after presuming K21's death this summer, they could now confirm the death, as their teams have repeatedly censused all of K pod without finding the 35-year-old whale.

    The oldest Southern Resident on record was J2, or Granny, who lived to be 105.

  • OPB: The racism, and resilience, behind today’s Pacific Northwest salmon crisis

    salmon.superhighway.2

    By Tony Schick (OPB)
    Sept. 24, 2022

    Reporter’s notebook: Salmon have been endangered my entire life. Here’s what I didn’t realize until I started reporting.

    Leavenworth is a charming tourist town, tucked in Washington’s North Cascades mountains and styled as a Bavarian village. I spent a weekend there, noodling around in souvenir shops, snacking on pretzels and soaking in faux-European culture. It wasn’t till after dark, when I headed to the banks of Icicle Creek just outside of town for an interview, that I saw a vestige of what the region once was.

    Perched on a plywood scaffold over roaring waters, a Wenatchi father and son fished using long nets made by hand and under the cover of darkness so it was harder for salmon to spot them.

    Only a handful of their tribe still fish this way. Dams through the region’s system of rivers have electrified cities, irrigated crops and powered industry. But those dams also decimated salmon numbers and wiped out fishing grounds that were central to tribes’ ways of life.

    “My people have had to sacrifice a lot of these things so everybody else can have that,” Jason Whalawitsa, the father, told me as he fished. “We pay for that with our culture.”

    When Whalawitsa said “we pay for that,” he meant tribes like his throughout the Columbia Basin who consider themselves the “salmon people.” And when he said “so everybody else can have that,” he might as well have pointed right at me.

    I live in Portland, Oregon, the city where I grew up. It sits just south of the confluence of the Willamette and the Columbia rivers on land taken from Indigenous people.

    My dad’s foundry supply business — the one that housed me, fed me and put me through school — only existed because of the shipping and manufacturing industries enabled by the river and the dams.

    I proposed to my wife on a stern-wheeler on the Columbia River, the tourist boat floating on a reservoir created between two dams, in a spot that used to be a series of rapids where tribes fished.

    There’s no one in this region whose life isn’t touched by the fish, whether they think about it or not. We populated towns to fish for salmon and can them. We sacrificed them for cheap electricity. Even the region’s iconic farming and timber industries wouldn’t be possible without salmon, whose dying bodies have enriched the Northwest soil with ocean nutrients.

    But for decades the injustice at the heart of that story has been systematically hidden. There was nothing in my history or social studies classes about Northwest tribes. It wasn’t until 2017 that the Oregon Department of Education required schools to teach Native American history. And the Army Corps of Engineers, which operates most Columbia River dams, has its own curriculum for use in schools around the region; it glosses over the damage done to tribes, talking instead about how they’ve worked alongside federal agencies to help salmon recover.

    David G. Lewis, a professor at Oregon State University and a member of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde in Oregon, has spent much of his career compiling previously untold histories of tribal experiences in the region, rewriting the “white person’s history” he sees in most published works.

    “Average folks just do not know how bad that history is,” Lewis said, “the trauma, the abuses, the loss tribes experienced for more than 150 years.”

    Before the era of dam building, the most important fishing site for upper Columbia River tribes was a huge collection of waterfalls they called Shonitkwu (meaning “roaring waters”). Downriver tribes had Wy-am (“echo of falling water”). In a case from the early 1900s, the Supreme Court described Native peoples’ right to fish locations like these as “not much less necessary to their existence than the atmosphere they breathed.”

    Both those iconic sets of waterfalls, known today as Kettle Falls and Celilo Falls, are gone. Also gone are other, smaller fishing grounds, destroyed by the dams. That’s a blatant violation of treaty language, signed by the U.S. government and tribes, that reserved the right to fish at all usual and accustomed places.

    Tribes, who have never stopped fighting for salmon and their treaty rights, are now in negotiations with the Biden administration. Over the next year, the administration says it will decide whether to take the unprecedented steps of removing some dams on the Snake River and reintroducing salmon in areas of the Columbia where they’ve been extinct for nearly a century.

    Scientists say that, because of climate change, the time to reverse some of the damage on the Columbia and Snake rivers is, essentially, now or never.

    In the early 1900s, after the salmon canning industry had begun to exhaust fish populations, Northwest states sought to preserve the supply for commercial catch — specifically by putting restrictions on fishing by tribes.

    This wasn’t an anomaly. “From the time of the founding of the Republic, state governments have consistently maintained an adversary, if not openly hostile, posture towards the Indian tribes and their separate rights.” That was the conclusion reached by Alvin Ziontz, an attorney who spent 30 years representing tribes in the Northwest, in a little-known history of treaty fishing rights he assembled in 1977.

    Both Washington and Oregon, according to Ziontz, found ways to allocate nearly the entire harvest of the region’s salmon to nontribal fisheries. They justified it by saying restrictions on tribal fishing were necessary for salmon conservation, even though there’s evidence that before European settlers, tribes actually increased abundance by actively managing salmon populations.

    In 1947, as we previously reported, the Department of the Interior asserted that the “the present salmon run must be sacrificed” for the sake of dam building, but it added that “efforts should be directed toward ameliorating the impact of this development upon the injured interests.”

    Columbia River tribes, whose traditional fisheries would be located behind many proposed dams, were the most injured interest. But they received almost none of the amelioration, which came in the form of 26 government-funded hatcheries along the Columbia. All but two of those were sited below the dams, to boost commercial and sport fishing nearer the ocean: The fish they made would never swim as far as tribes’ fishing grounds.

    Around that same time, after returning from fighting in World War II, two members of the Warm Springs Tribe began hatching salmon to plant in Central Oregon rivers. State officials shut the effort down because they hadn’t authorized it.

    For many years, states also tried to prevent tribes from ever harvesting fish produced at government hatcheries. As late as the 1970s, Washington argued in court that tribes had no right to harvest the salmon produced in its hatcheries.

    Tribal members fought to assert their treaty rights. And they were jailed for it.

    In an infamous case known as the Salmon Scam, 75 Native fishermen were arrested in a federal sting operation claiming their poaching was responsible for 40,000 fish missing from the Columbia River. Yakama fisherman David Sohappy, whom federal investigators cast as the ringleader, was sentenced to five years in prison. It later turned out the fish weren’t actually missing: As the Yakima Herald-Republic reported, they’d been driven away by pollution from a nearby aluminum plant.

    In the middle of the last century, as dam building and state policies were driving Columbia River Indian people from their homes and ways of life, a national policy emerged to terminate Native tribes entirely: For 20 years, the U.S. aimed to erase its obligations to tribes by assimilating Native people into cities and white culture and then eliminating recognized tribes, reservations and the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs. (The policy was abandoned by the Nixon administration, which condemned it as “clearly harmful.”)

    In the Northwest, tribes found ways to preserve their culture and adapt to the losses of wild salmon and sacred fishing grounds. They also faced backlash for it.

    When we reported on dwindling survival rates for salmon, I received emails blaming Native people for catching too many fish, despite the fact their harvest agreements with states are closely monitored. The same thing happened when Seattle TV station KING 5 reported on salmon and dams in the Skagit River, prompting the head of Washington’s Department of Fish and Wildlife to denounce such blame as “misinformation.”

    Similarly, tribal hatcheries have come under scrutiny from federal regulators and wild fish advocates for diluting the health of wild salmon with fish bred in captivity. It’s an ironic dynamic given that the hatcheries were the government’s own stop-gap invention, and that tribes have pioneered hatchery techniques specifically designed to help wild populations.

    “Tribes and salmon will not look as they did 200 years ago, so maybe stop expecting that of either, given what we live in now,” said Zach Penney, a fisheries scientist and member of the Nez Perce Tribe.

    I spoke with Penney a few months ago, while he was head of fisheries science for the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, a coalition of four tribes that coordinates fisheries policy. He’s now a senior adviser for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the federal agency responsible for endangered salmon recovery. Penney said that back when he was a doctoral student, he was asked to explain the tribal perspective on salmon so often that he eventually developed a slide presentation.

    In it, he draws a parallel between Native people, who were driven onto reservations, and salmon, who were driven into hatcheries. Both were forced to adapt to unfamiliar lifestyles. And for both, the changes did not bring good things.

    As fishing disappeared, Ziontz wrote in his history 45 years ago, the river tribes’ economic position also changed: “From a life of relative plenty and ease, they moved to the position ultimately of poverty and want.”

    The harms have outlasted the policies that caused them. Now, as state and federal officials look to address the region’s fish and rivers, they are seeking compromises — without acknowledging the compromises that have already been made.

    In debating the merits of dam removal and other measures to save salmon from extinction, elected leaders in the region and Washington, D.C., are taking every measure to ensure that the river’s other users — like farmers, irrigators and power producers — are kept whole in the process.

    Penney recalled sitting in meetings in the past few years where tribes were told they’d need to make compromises along with everyone else.

    “I think that’s really insulting,” Penney said. “We’ve already compromised our way of life. This has all been compromised already. And you’re asking for more?”

    https://www.opb.org/article/2022/09/24/racism-endangered-salmon-federal-policy-northwest-tribes/

  • OPB: US would keep more hydropower under agreement with Canada on treaty governing Columbia River

    Hugh Keenleyside Dam on Lower Arrow Lake Peter Marbach 1200x800 WMHugh Keenleyside Dam on Lower Arrow Lake © Peter Marbach
    By Gene Johnson (Associated Press)
    July 11, 2024

    The U.S. and Canada said Thursday they have agreed to update a six-decade-old treaty that governs the use of one of North America’s largest rivers, the Columbia, with provisions that officials said would provide for effective flood control, irrigation, and hydropower generation and sharing between the countries.

    The “agreement in principle,” reached after six years of talks, provides a framework for updating the Columbia River Treaty. It calls for the U.S. to keep more of the power generated by its dams while improving cooperation between the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets power from dams in the northwestern U.S., and Canadian utilities, to help avoid blackouts.

    The U.S. would pay Canada for reservoir capacity to hold back water during flood seasons, protecting downstream communities, at a rate that would begin at $37.6 million per year and increase with inflation. And the agreement would provide Canada with more flexibility in using the water stored in its reservoirs.

    “After 60 years, the Treaty needs updating to reflect our changing climate and the changing needs of the communities that depend on this vital waterway,” U.S. President Joe Biden said in a written statement Thursday.

    But environmental groups lamented the deal as a missed opportunity to provide more water for imperiled salmon and steelhead runs that have been decimated by dam operations in the Columbia River basin over the past century. While the original treaty ratified in 1964 was designed to cover flood control and hydropower generation, conservationists and Indigenous tribes have long argued that it should be updated to include river health and salmon restoration as a third principle.

    “Our community is frustrated and disappointed today,” said Joseph Bogaard, of the nonprofit Save Our Wild Salmon. “The treaty needs to be a tool to address challenges for these fish. There are benefits and certainty for the power sector and for flood risk management, while salmon basically get status quo treatment.”

    The Biden administration earlier this year brokered a $1 billion plan to boost salmon runs in the Northwest.

    The Columbia River begins in Canada but flows mostly in the U.S. on its 1243-mile journey to the Pacific Ocean. It forms most of the border between Washington state and Oregon. Its tributaries account for 40% of U.S. hydropower, irrigate $8 billion in agriculture products, and move 42 million tons of commercial cargo annually, officials noted Thursday.

    The Columbia River Treaty came together after a 1948 flood washed away the Oregon community of Vanport, leaving more than 18,000 people homeless.

    It provided for the construction of one dam in Montana, which flooded land in Canada, and three in British Columbia, completed between 1968 and 1973, that together more than doubled the amount of reservoir storage in the basin, providing benefits for both flood prevention and hydropower. The British Columbia dams also flooded tribal lands and retained much spring runoff that would otherwise be available for migrating salmon.

    The treaty provided for what came to be known as the “Canadian Entitlement," under which Canada receives $250 million to $350 million a year worth of electrical power in exchange for storing water in huge reservoirs that can be released to boost U.S. hydropower generation. The cost is higher than anticipated by the United States when the treaty was signed, and it increased prices for U.S. customers, lawmakers in the Pacific Northwest long complained.

    Under the agreement announced Thursday, the U.S. will immediately reduce by 37 percent the amount of Columbia Basin hydropower it delivers to Canada, with further cuts amounting to 50 percent by 2033. BPA administrator John Hairston said Thursday that will save the agency about $70 million next year and about $1.2 billion over the next two decades.

    “These new terms will go a long way toward helping meet the growing demand for energy in the region and avoid building unnecessary fossil fuel-based generation,” Hairston told reporters during a briefing Thursday.

    U.S. Sens. Maria Cantwell, D-Washington, and Jim Risch, R-Idaho, who have pushed for updates to the treaty, called the agreement a positive step, but said they would need to review the details. Government negotiators will finalize details before the treaty is submitted to the U.S. Senate for ratification.

    Indigenous tribes have long wanted the Columbia to flow more like a natural river, instead of a series of reservoirs with slow-moving water that often heat up to temperatures that kill migrating salmon.

    U.S. and Canadian officials said the agreement would establish a tribal-led body that will provide recommendations on how treaty operations can better support ecosystem needs and tribal and indigenous cultural values.

    In a written statement, Chief Keith Crow, of the Syilx Okanagan Nation in British Columbia, said the agreement gave him hope that one day his grandchildren might harvest salmon in the upper Columbia River region.

    “We still have lots of work to do with Canada and B.C. to start addressing the past and ongoing impacts to our lands, waters and people,” Crow said.

    Canada has been providing up to 1 million acre-feet of water a year to help juvenile salmon on their migration to the Pacific, with up to an additional half-million acre-feet in dry years, subject to negotiation between the countries, Bogaard, of Save Our Wild Salmon, said.

    Researchers insist that the fish need 3 million to 5 million acre-feet per year released by Canada, but the agreement announced Thursday would reinforce the current amount, with the minor improvement that in dry years Canada would automatically provide the extra half-million acre-feet if available, he said.

    “Salmon have suffered tremendous losses through the industrialization of the Columbia Basin’s rivers, in part, as a result of this Treaty,” Neil Brandt, executive director of WaterWatch of Oregon, said in a written statement. “A modernized Treaty must do better for salmon.”

    OBP: 'US would keep more hydropower under agreement with Canada on treaty governing Columbia River' article link

  • OPB: Washington Budget Funds Group To Study Snake River Dam Removal

    April 29, 2019

    By Courtney Flatt

    Inslee OrcaTucked into Washington’s $52.4 billion operating budget passed Sunday night by the Legislature is controversial funding for a “stakeholder group” tasked with looking into what would happen should the four Lower Snake River dams be removed or altered. Supporters say this group will make sure Washingtonian’s voices are heard in the often contentious conversation around dam removal. Critics say the effort is a waste of time and money – too similar to a discussion already happening at the federal level. Gov. Jay Inslee had asked for $750,000, following the recommendations of the state’s Southern Resident Orca Task Force, a group created by the governor to find ways to save the orcas. “Funding the Snake River stakeholder discussions is critical for Washington communities and stakeholders to assure their voice is heard and interests addressed if the four lower Snake River dams are removed - which the science shows is essential for the salmon and orca,” said Bill Arthur, the Sierra Club’s salmon campaign coordinator, in a statement. Critics of Washington’s dam removal study have said the federal process is enough and what the governor asked to spend money on essentially duplicates the federal government’s assessment. “Calls for additional processes and forums that undermine the existing study are counterproductive, not based in science, and divert resources from the creation of a credible plan that is best for salmon and the Northwest,” Kristin Meira, executive director of Pacific Northwest Waterways Association, said in a statement. U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon ordered federal regulators to take a hard look at all options to protect salmon, including the potential (and controversial) removal of the four dams on the Lower Snake River. “Despite billions of dollars spent on these efforts, the listed species continue to be in a perilous state,” Simon wrote. “The (Federal Columbia River Power System) remains a system that ‘cries out’ for a new approach.” That kicked off a years-long process, where federal agencies began studying ways to protect imperiled salmon on the Columbia and Snake rivers. A final decision on that study is expected in September 2020. In an earlier statement, Washington Republican U.S. Reps. Dan Newhouse and Cathy McMorris Rodgers said spending taxpayer money to look at removing or altering the dams (something they both oppose) would be a waste. “Congress has the sole authority to authorize breaching our federal dams, and as representatives of Eastern Washington communities that depend on the many benefits they provide, breaching them is out of the question. We commit to do everything in our power to save our dams,” the representatives said in the joint statement. At a salmon conference in Boise April 23, Michael Garrity said there’s “new urgency” around these issues in the state because of the connection between salmon and orca health. Garrity is the Columbia River and Water Policy Manager for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. “There’s a call for exploring the social and economic benefits of breaching the Lower Snake River dams,” Garrity said during a panel. At the same conference, Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, said he has started to ask “what if” questions, looking more deeply at what should happen if the dams are removed or altered. What happens to Lewiston (the most inland port in the West)? What happens to farmers? How do growers transport their grains? “There are an awful lot of questions that have to be asked, because you need to address these if you are going to solve this problem,” Simpson said. Simpson challenged the group to come together to save salmon. Conservation groups are now drawing comparisons to that challenge, with the funding of Washington’s stakeholder task force. “We are encouraged to see leadership emerging in both states. The problems facing salmon, orca and energy in the Northwest can’t wait,” said Sam Mace, Inland Northwest program director for the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition, in a statement. The funding ask was the result of recommendations from the Southern Resident Orca Task Force. The whales mainly feed on chinook salmon. Their population has dropped to 74 orcas, as they face threats from a dwindling food supply, water pollution and vessel noise. (The task force did not recommend breaching the dams.) In the budget, the stakeholder forum funding will be split between fiscal years 2020 and 2021. “Should it be determined that it’s time for the dams to be removed, then communities must have the opportunity to collaboratively develop a transition plan to ensure the region’s needs will continue to be met. We must insist on a path forward that works for salmon and people,” said Wendy McDermott, Puget Sound and Columbia Basin director of American Rivers, in a statement.

  • OPB/EarthFix: Salmon-Friendly Rulings On Columbia, Snake Dams Could Be Oveturned By Congress

    Dam.BonnevilleBy Cassandra Profita, Oct. 12, 2017

    A bill sponsored by several U.S. House members from the Northwest aims to overturn two recent court decisions on Columbia and Snake river dams.

    Last year, U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon rejected the federal plan for managing dams to protect salmon in the Columbia River Basin.

    He then ordered federal agencies to spill more water through the dams to help fish and to consider removing Snake River dams.

    A new bill in the U.S. House of Representatives would allow Congress to overrule those decisions. House Bill 3144 reinstates the rejected plan and cancels court orders for spilling water and analyzing dam removal.

    At a hearing before the House Committee on Natural Resources Thursday, Washington Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers, one of the bill’s sponsors, said the goal is to reassert congressional authority over the dams and keep hydropower affordable.

    With Bonneville Power Administration already hiking electricity rates, she said, utilities are shopping for other options.

    “Unnecessary litigation and unnecessary spill requirements by this Oregon judge only add onto the cost,” she said. “Dams and fish can co- exist, but we must get out of the courtroom and allow fish recovery to continue.”

    Conservation groups say the bill would hurt already imperiled salmon and steelhead. They’re worried it will get attached to a must-pass bill in the coming months.

    Liz Hamilton, director of the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association, told the committee that the bill would lock in “an approach that isn’t working for fish.”

    She said increasing the amount of water spilled for fish, which reduces the amount of hydropower produced, has produced positive results for fish in previous years.

    “We know dams and reservoirs are the salmon’s main cause of human-caused mortality,” she said. “Spill is our most effective near-term tool. What we want are adult (salmon) coming back, and there’s overwhelming evidence that spilling gets adults back.”

    http://www.opb.org/news/article/salmon-rulings-columbia-snake-dams-congress/

  • Orca advocates, businesses and scientists call on Governor Inslee to take action to rebuild endangered chinook salmon stocks

    From the desk of Howard Garrett, Director of Orca Network

    Jan 13, 2014

    orca and chinookThousands of years ago, when the ancestors of today’s Southern Resident orcas moved into the newly thawed Salish Sea, they learned they could depend almost entirely on chinook salmon for food. Then chinook  were plentiful, huge and packed with calories, not toxins.

    Now chinook are smaller and far fewer, and though orcas scan every current and crevice for miles around, during times of scarcity they can’t find enough to sustain themselves, and some of them inevitably starve. By tradition, they share their fish with the youngest and oldest family members, raising mortalities among otherwise healthy adults.

    By 2001 this extended orca family had dropped to just 78 members. Today there are but 80.

    We have a chance to help this once robust population by revitalizing salmon habitat and protecting the remaining salmon runs. Of the many ways to help salmon survive, perhaps the most effective in the near-term is to increase spills over Columbia and Snake dams in the spring and summer to allow more smolts to arrive more quickly and safely to the ocean, increasing adults spawners in years to come – and prey for hungry southern resident killer whales.

    With this letter to Washington State’s Governor Jay Inslee, we’re asking for his help make sure these endangered orcas can bring more generations back to the Salish Sea  to feast on chinook.

    Read the letter here.

  • Orca and Salmon - An Evening of Storytelling

    You're invited to a very special evening of storytelling about orca and salmon by three renowned writers and storytellers from the Pacific Northwest. The evening includes a reception with excellent food and drinks. We hope that you can join us!

    To help celebrate Orca Awareness Month and raise awareness and understanding about the majesty of and peril facing our iconic Sourthern Resident Killer Whales and Chinook Salmon, Save Our wild Salmon, Center for Whale Research, Earthjustice, and Natural Resources Defense Council are hosting a special evening featuring authors David Neiwert and Brenda Peterson, and Elwha Storyteller Roger Fernandes

    Orca and Salmon - An Evening of Storytelling

    Town Hall Seattle

    Wednesday, June 29 at 6 pm - 9 pm

    Our delicious reception will be catered by Kevin Davis / Blueacre Seafood.Beer will be provided by Fremont Brewing Company.We'll also serve wine and non-alcoholic beverages.

    Tickets are $20 per person, with a $10 student, senior, limited income option available.

    PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS HERE.

     
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    Further information on our presenters:
     

    David Neiwert is an investigative journalist based in Seattle, a longtime environmental reporter and currently the Pacific Northwest correspondent for the Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project. He is the author of Of Orcas and Men: What Killer Whales Can Teach Us,published in June 2015 by The Overlook Press, as well as numerous other books, including And Hell Followed With Her: Crossing the Dark Side of the American Border,winner of the 2013 International Latino Book Award for nonfiction.Neiwert won a National Press Club Award in 2000 for Distinguished Online Journalism for his reportage on domestic terrorism for MSNBC.com, and had a long and distinguished career in blogging at such sites as CrooksandLiars.com (where he is still a senior editor) as well as at his own pioneering blog, Orcinus.

     

    Brenda Peterson is the author of 19 books, including the National Geographic book, SIGHTINGS: The Gray Whale’s Mysterious Journey and the memoir Build Me an Ark: A Life with Animals. Peterson’s children’s book, Leopard and Silkie: One Boy’s Quest to Save Seal Pupsand Seal Pup Rescue was chosen for Scholastic Books Fairs and selected by National Science Teachers Association as an “Outstanding Science Book” for students K-12. Peterson has been interviewed on PBS’s EarthFix  and NPR’s national “Living on Earth,”  “To the Best of Our Knowledge,” and many other NPR stations.  She has written extensively about marine mammals for The Huffington Post.
    Peterson lives in Seattle on the shores of the Salish Sea. Go here for further information.

    Roger Fernandes is a member of the Lower Elwha Band of the S'Klallam Indians from the Port Angeles, Washington, area. He describes himself as an urban Indian since his mother, Violet Charles, moved to the city of Seattle where he was born in 1951. He is from a family of four brothers who are all active doing various cultural things like singing, basket making, artwork, and storytelling.

    Roger has been storytelling for about seven or eight years. The stories he started with were simple legends. Over the years, he has moved into telling myths, creation stories, flood stories, and hero stories. In sharing these types of stories Native people can teach non-Natives about the aspects of their culture that go beyond food, shelter, and clothing. These stories actually define the culture of the tellers. In the course of learning Native American stories, Roger has integrated stories he has learned from other cultures around the world like Mexico, Africa and Asia. All stories speak the same human language and teach same lessons.

    With special thanks to:

         PC copy fremont copy   Blueacre.logo

     

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  • Orca Month 2016

     

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    For more information, contact Rachael Carrell at: rachael@wildsalmon.org

    Orca Month 2016 Calendar of Events

    Orca Month 2016 on Facebook

    Orca Salmon Alliance

     

     

  • Orca Month 2016 Calendar of Events

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    For more information, contact Rachael Carrell at:

    Orca Month 2016 on Facebook

    Orca Salmon Alliance

     

  • Orca Tahlequah’s new baby dies

    J61 Maya Sears NOAA Permit 27052Dec. 31, 2024
    By Lynda V. Mapes

    In a day of sadness and surprise, researchers on Puget Sound on Tuesday found J61, the new calf born to mother orca Tahlequah, had not survived — and that a new calf also had been born to J pod.

    Brad Hanson, biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, was on the water with other researchers for a health survey of the endangered southern resident orcas and confirmed the news.

    Tahlequah’s new calf was especially important as it was a female. The birth also was of symbolic importance to the region. Tahlequah is the mother orca who carried her calf that lived only a half-hour in 2018 in a journey of more than 1,000 miles and 17 days, stirring grief around the world.

    The mother and gender of the new calf is not yet confirmed.

    Baby orcas always face long odds of survival. Tahlequah’s calf appeared to be having trouble from the start, with the mother often pushing her and carrying her and the baby not looking as lively as he might have expected, Hanson said, after getting a look at her last week.

    The southern residents are the orcas that frequent Puget Sound. The families live in the J, K and L pods and are endangered, with only 73 orcas in the population.

    They face numerous threats, including lack of salmon, especially Chinook; too much vessel noise and disturbance, which makes it harder for them to hunt; and pollution in their food.

    It was a hard day for scientists who have followed the southern residents through their many difficulties and are working for their recovery.

    “Three of the four of us had been on the boat last week and were all very concerned about its viability then,” Hanson wrote in an email about J61. “So while today’s observations didn’t come as a complete surprise, the general feeling was one of profound sadness, not only for J35 (Tahlequah) knowing her history, but also knowing what the loss of a female means to the potential for SRKW (southern resident killer whale) recovery.”

    The Seattle Times: Orca Tahlequah’s new baby dies 

  • Orcas and Salmon Roundup by Howard Garrett: Will The Present Administration Act In Behalf Of Orcas And Salmon?

    orca.sm- a three part series by Howard Garrett

    1) How Can Dams in Eastern Washington Affect Puget Sound Orcas?

    2) We Can Replace 1000 Megawatts. We Can't Replace Salmon And Orcas.

    3) If Hydropower Wins Then Salmon And Orcas Lose

  • ORECA's alert targeting Governor Brown doesn’t tell the full story.

    Below you will find an alert recently sent out by the Oregon Rural Electric Cooperative Association to its member coops.  It is seriously incomplete and potentially misleading in a number of ways. First, on the costs of an April court order to increase spill to protect juvenile salmon and steelhead, BPA recently provided testimony in an on-going rate case admitting that the impacts of the order could range from negligible to several million dollars and cannot be determined at this time.  Moreover, BPA’s prediction of possible multi-million dollar costs for the increased spill depends on assumptions about the market price for electricity in the spring of 2018 that could well be double actual market prices then.  The most likely outcome is that the increased spill will have minimal, if any, impact on customer bills.  Those bills will be much more affected by market conditions and other forces.

    Second, years of scientific research by scores of scientists working together in the region demonstrate that increased levels of spill help increase juvenile salmon survival and adult returns. Third, the best scientific information shows that the federal hydro-system is the largest source of human-caused mortality for salmon and steelhead in the Columbia Basin - killing up to 70% of the fish annually.  The 97% survival number in the alert is for survival from the just above to just below a single dam.  Juvenile salmon have to get past eight dams.  The 97% number also leaves out fish that die in the reservoirs behind each dam from predation, disease and warm water.  And it leaves out fish that die after they get past all the dams because of injuries and wear-and-tear from dam passage.  For most salmon and steelhead populations, juvenile survival through the entire hydrosystem is about 50% or less. Finally, Oregon has been a regional leader in advocating for salmon and steelhead restoration based on careful scientific analysis of the effects of the hydrosystem on these fish.  At the same time, it has been a strong advocate for a smart and efficient electric power supply.  Oregon’s consistent success in court over the years in protecting salmon reflects this focus on good science and balance.  Courts do not rule for parties that misuse science or present inaccurate and incomplete information.  But the courts have consistently ruled for Oregon.  And Oregon is not alone in its efforts.  It has the strong support of the Nez Perce Tribe and of sport and commercial fishing organizations whose livelihoods and families depend on the recovery of our wild salmon heritage. ORECA’s use of incomplete and potentially misleading information in an alert to its member coops is a disservice to all of those served by our rural electric cooperatives.  These cooperatives could play an important and constructive role in restoring Columbia basin salmon – but only of they have all the fact, not just a handpicked few.

    If you have questions and would like to see further information, please contact joseph@wildsalmon.org. Thank you.

    11.oreca011.letter111.background2

  • Oregon Business: The Salmon and the Snake

    By Nick Cunningham
    May 25, 2021

    Nez Perce.snake.riverBreaching the Snake River dams may offer the best shot at ensuring a healthy future for salmon in the Columbia Basin. Can a grand bargain be reached to reimagine the region with fewer dams?

    "We have 3,000 members of my tribe and we fish in seven major tributaries that go into the Snake River. And historically, we had tens of thousands of fish for those 3,000 members,” says Don Sampson, chief of the Walla Walla Tribe, and member of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.

    “In the last 20 years, we’ve had 120 fish to feed 3,000 members.”

    For millennia, the Umatilla Tribes in Northeastern Oregon, along with many other Columbia Basin tribes, thrived on abundant salmon runs, catching thousands of pounds of fish each year, drying and preserving them to last through the winter and to trade with other tribes in the region.

    But salmon go way beyond mere sustenance. For many Indigenous tribes in the Northwest, salmon are at the heart of tribal culture, economy and religion.

    The scarcity of salmon in the Snake River and its tributaries continues to leave a void for tribal communities. “Now we can barely catch five or six fish a year for 3,000 people. How can we survive? How can our religion survive? How can our culture survive on six salmon?” says Sampson.

    In addition to the hulking hydroelectric dams on the main stem of the Columbia River, the U.S. government built four large dams on the Snake River, which feeds into the Columbia, in the 1960s and ’70s.

    The dams have played a large role in the decline of salmon in the region in the second half of the 20th century and up through the present.

    But for the first time, there is serious talk of change. A convergence of factors has made the prospects of breaching some of the dams — once considered taboo in a region that prides itself on the economic vitality brought by New Deal-era dams — no longer unthinkable.

    Renewable energy is growing and is increasingly the cheapest form of new electricity. Decades of salmon-recovery efforts have come up short, and litigation over the dams’ role in the decline of salmon is not going away.

    The politics of dam breaching are shifting, with support for a new way forward coming from some unlikely places.

    The odds that the dams are breached anytime soon appear remote, but advocates are leaping at what they see as a narrow path in the U.S. Congress to strike a grand bargain that would involve dam breaching to save the salmon, coupled with federal dollars to compensate impacted sectors, such as agriculture and shipping.

    For Salmon People, as many Columbia Basin tribes refer to themselves, the clock is ticking. “These salmon populations are near extinction,” Sampson says. “The momentum is building and the urgency is now.”

    Following the construction of the Bonneville Dam in the 1930s, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built seven more dams on the lower Columbia and Snake rivers over the course of 40 years, culminating with the Lower Granite dam in 1975, the uppermost on the lower Snake River in Eastern Washington.

    The large federally constructed dams brought cheap power for heavy industry and linked agriculture hundreds of miles inland to the Pacific Coast.

    The dam system allowed for barge traffic along placid rivers, and interior Northwest farmers could ship their grain through the Port of Lewiston, the most inland port on the West Coast, more than 450 miles from the mouth of the Columbia River in Astoria.

    In many ways, the hydro system was an economic boon for the region, fueling rapid economic and population growth. But the salmon never recovered. Salmon populations plunged over the second half of the 20th century, and despite some modest signs of improvement at various points in the past two decades, their status remains dire.

    There are many factors contributing to the decline of salmon — warmer ocean temperatures, predation, fish-hatchery competition, disease and overfishing. But the eight massive concrete walls erected across the lower Columbia and Snake rivers play an outsized role in pushing Snake River salmon closer to extinction, according to experts.

    “It definitely is the dams. There’s no question there. The science is really solid,” says Michele DeHart, manager of the Fish Passage Center, a Portland-based nonpartisan research group that provides technical data on salmon in the Columbia River Basin.

    The dams pose multiple threats to salmon. The physical barrier is ameliorated by fish passage and spillways, but the dams slow the river down to a crawl, lengthening the journey young salmon have to make to the ocean and back upriver as adults.

    A stagnant river results in warmer water temperatures, which can rise to levels that are lethal to fish. Salmon also become more vulnerable to predators as they mill about behind a dam, looking for a passage. And the cumulative impact of having to pass eight large dams batters young Snake River fish, reducing their odds of survival.

    Before the construction of dams, juvenile fish could hitch a ride on a fast-flowing cold river for a quick trip to the ocean. Now the migration is littered with risk.

    Biologists point to the smolt-to-adult ratio, which measures the percentage of fish that return from their journey compared to the total number that left as juveniles.

    Scientists say that a 2% return can keep the population stable; anything below and the population is declining.

    In the mid-1960s, before the construction of the three final lower Snake River dams, Snake River spring/summer Chinook salmon saw smolt-to-adult ratios ranging between 3.5% and 6.5%, which were healthy numbers. But that declined to less than 1.5% in the 1970s after the last three dams were constructed.

    Over the years, dam improvements — fish passage, spilling more water and other dam modifications — have lessened the impact somewhat, reducing the loss at each dam. But it still is not enough.

    There is a clear divide between salmon returning to the lower Columbia — the Deschutes and John Day rivers, for example — which only have to pass a couple of dams, and the salmon that need to travel farther up to the Snake River, which have to pass eight dams.

    Spring/summer Chinook on the John Day River, which pass only three dams, averaged more than 3.5% between 2000 and 2017. For the Yakima River Basin (four dams), spring/summer Chinook returns averaged 2.5%.

    But the percentage of spring/summer Chinook that successfully passed the eighth and final dam on the lower Snake River averaged roughly 0.7% between 2000 and 2017 — not enough to ensure long-term survival.

    Restoration efforts are aimed at boosting the ratio to between 4% and 6%, which would not only rescue Snake River salmon from extinction but lead to “harvestable” levels of fish. But all measures to date have come up short.

    The potential for recovery if the lower Snake River is restored is enormous. Behind the dams is extensive high-quality habitat — pristine mountains and lakes that remain mostly untouched by human development.

    Crucially, much of the habitat is already protected public lands, ensuring protection from human encroachment well into the future. The salmon just need to be able to get there.

    “Billions of dollars have been spent trying to mitigate the effect of the Snake River dams on salmon. We’ve tried everything, absolutely everything. We’re at the end of the road,” says DeHart. “We’ve done everything except dam breaching.”

    In fact, the federal government, which operates the dams, has been in court for two decades trying to defend its plan to manage dwindling salmon populations that are listed under the Endangered Species Act. It has lost five consecutive times over the span of two decades.

    “It is absolutely crazy that the government has not gotten it together to comply with the law, that it’s just been operating the federal hydro system illegally for two decades through repeated court rulings,” says Todd True, an attorney with Earthjustice, who is one of the plaintiffs suing the federal government. “That is, in a word, shameful.”

    In 2020 the government came out with a new court-ordered study and found that breaching the Snake River dams would provide the biggest upside for the salmon out of all the options considered.

    Nevertheless, the trio of federal entities that co-lead operations of the dams on the Columbia River System Operations — the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and Bonneville Power Administration — warned that power prices would rise if the Snake River dams were breached, and as a result, the dams should remain intact.

    A coalition of environmental groups are taking the government back to court.

    While the plaintiffs once again have a strong case, True says that litigation is unlikely to resolve this conflict. “We think that now is the time for our elected leaders to step up and solve this problem because the solution is there. It can be done,” he says. “I don’t think we can get to the kind of comprehensive solution we need through the court.”

    Fish biologists say that without breaching the dams, the fate of salmon in the Snake River looks grim. In February 2021, a group of 68 scientists wrote an open letter to the governors and members of Congress from the Pacific Northwest, calling for the removal of the four lower Snake River dams.

    “These four dams must be removed not only to avoid extinction, but also to restore abundant salmon runs,” the letter reads.

    Climate change lurks in the background, which not only threatens warmer ocean temperatures but warmer rivers as well. The best chance for Snake River salmon is to unlock high-quality habitat by breaching the dams, connecting them with a free-flowing cold-water river that will help salmon withstand a warming world, biologists say.

    Doug Johnson, a spokesperson with Bonneville Power Administration, disputed the notion that breaching the dams would definitely lead to big gains for Snake River salmon, pointing to the federal government’s 2020 study, which found a wide range of possible outcomes for recovery, including a scenario in which salmon recover only modestly.

    “We are committed to the mitigation responsibilities that we currently have, and we plan for that in our financial structure and are comfortable with that going forward,” Johnson says.

    Idaho Congressman Mike Simpson (R-02) sent shockwaves through the Pacific Northwest in February 2021 when he came out with a proposal to breach the lower Snake River dams.

    “The current system is clearly not working,” he said in a video promoting his new plan. “There is no viable path that can allow us to keep the dams in place.”

    He proposed a grand bargain of sorts: breaching the dams in exchange for a hold on litigation and massive federal investments to compensate affected sectors. “If we do not take this course of action, we are condemning Idaho salmon to extinction,” he said.

    Rep. Simpson sketched out a proposal that included breaching the four lower Snake River dams in exchange for a 35– to 50-year relicensing for other dams in the Columbia River Basin, and a 35-year moratorium on litigation under the Endangered Species Act and other federal environmental laws.

    The crucial component, however, is the establishment of a $33.5 billion fund to assist the region for the massive changes that would result from dam breaching, including $10 billion for replacing the lost energy, $2 billion for transmission, $3 billion for watershed improvements, $1.5 billion to assist farmers, $600 million to assist barge transportation and more.

    The concept essentially calls for mothballing the Snake River dams to save the salmon, while reducing uncertainty over the other Columbia Basin dams and simultaneously reinvesting in the region to make affected parties whole.

    Not everyone is happy. Initially, some environmental groups balked at the proposed moratorium on bedrock environmental laws even though they support dam breaching overall.

    Stronger opposition comes from some of the industries that would be affected in the energy, shipping and agriculture industries.

    “The dams provide tremendous flexibility,” says Kurt Miller, executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, a trade association of electric utilities in the Northwest. He points not just to the power that the four dams provide but also to their ability to provide energy storage over a multiday period. “Hydropower is really valuable to the region,” Miller says.

    He adds that climate change is a big reason to keep the dams because they generate carbon-free power.

    According to the federal government’s 2020 environmental impact statement, if renewables, battery storage and other noncarbon alternatives replaced the dams, it would result in electricity rate increases to its public utility customers of between 9.5% and 19.3%.

    Some say that estimate is overstated. According to a 2018 study by the NW Energy Coalition, an association of utilities and environmental groups, replacing all of the power from the four lower Snake River dams could be done with a combination of renewables, energy efficiency, batteries and demand-response measures at minimal cost.

    The study estimated that the average ratepayer would pay less than $1.40 per month.

    That study is now a few years old and the price tag is probably even lower today because of the falling cost of renewables, a trend that is only expected to continue in the years ahead, according to Nancy Hirsh, executive director of NW Energy Coalition.

    “The energy services from the Snake River dams are replaceable,” Hirsh says.

    Power replacement, as challenging as it might be, at least has some obvious solutions. Other sectors face more daunting uncertainties. “The Columbia - Snake River is our highway to the world. We are a natural resource-based economy — so it’s ag and timber,” says David Doeringsfeld, manager for the Port of Lewiston in Idaho, just upriver from the Lower Granite dam on the border with Washington state.

    The dams have allowed for the shipment of commodities from the interior Northwest, mainly wheat, hundreds of miles downriver to the Pacific. Breaching the dams would “end all shipping out of the port of Lewiston,” he says, “and it would turn the Lewis Clark Valley into a stinking mudhole.”

    Breaching the dams would have “a pretty dramatic impact on the level of train and truck activity” needed to ship grain, adding costs to farmers who already “have a pretty narrow margin,” says Amanda Hoey, CEO of Oregon Wheat Commission, a trade association of wheat producers.

    She pointed to one estimate that found that more than 39,000 rail cars or more than 150,000 semitrucks would have been needed to replace the cargo volume that was shipped on the Snake River in 2019.

    For thousands of years, Columbia Basin tribes lived off the abundance of salmon. But that changed as white settlers poured into the Northwest in the 19th century. Northwest tribes signed treaties with the U.S. government ceding millions of acres of land but reserving the right to fish and hunt in their “usual and accustomed places.”

    The U.S. never really lived up to its end of the bargain, with white settlers not only taking land but also taking fish and fouling the rivers with pollution.

    The 20th-century dams were a decisive blow, obliterating traditional fishing grounds. The U.S. government’s role in the decline of salmon is “an environmental injustice due to the resources that we were promised to us in perpetuity for the bargain of the treaty,” says Shannon Wheeler, chairman of the Nez Perce Tribe.

    “My grandfather went to World War I and World War II, fought for the United States, and they came back and they destroyed his most sacred fishing place. That was the basis for him to feed his family,” says Sampson of the Walla Walla Tribe.

    “Imagine a foreign country coming in and wiping out every aspect of the economy that you relied on and saying: ‘Sorry, we’re taking over. We’re taking 90% of your land. We’re stripping you of 95% of your economic base,’” Sampson adds. “That’s the exact same situation that Indigenous sovereign governments were in and have been in.”

    Sampson has set up the Northwest Tribal Salmon Alliance, a group aimed at advocating on behalf of Northwest tribes in the pursuit of salmon recovery.

    On April 15 this year, a group of 12 Northwest tribes issued a joint statement of principles in light of Rep. Simpson’s proposal and praised him for sticking his neck out on such a controversial issue. Sampson says that was a powerful political statement.

    “We have 14 tribes coming together, which is very difficult. We hope that it’s not too late to get at least an initial start in the Senate infrastructure bill,” he says. “It’s a very key opportunity. There may be very few opportunities into the future. That’s why there’s a sense of urgency.”

    President Joe Biden has proposed a $2 trillion infrastructure package that is expected to work its way through Congress later this summer. Dam-breaching proponents see this as a unique opportunity that does not come around too often.

    Sampson and the Northwest Tribal Salmon Alliance are supporting the tribes as they press politicians to strike a deal, and Sampson says the Democratic coalition in the Northwest needs to step up.

    “This is a surprise that we would have a Republican from Idaho come out with such a progressive strategy. And our Democratic leadership is sitting on the sidelines,” says Sampson.

    Environmental groups echoed that sentiment. “Our Northwest delegation is not doing enough. We need our leadership to take action,” says Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director of Columbia Riverkeeper, “whether Rep. Simpson’s proposal, whether it’s something entirely new. There could be some real heroes when we look back in history at who took bold action to protect salmon.”

    Oregon Business reached out to Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR), as well as Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Patty Murray (D-WA), Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), most of whom issued noncommittal statements about supporting a stakeholder-driven dialogue on the issue. Sen. Cantwell did not respond to a request for comment.

    “Sen. Merkley has compared his immersion in the effort to remove four Klamath River dams to removal of the Snake River dams: With the Klamath dams, the impacts are modest, but it’s still been incredibly difficult to move forward,” Sara Hottman, a spokesperson for Sen. Merkley wrote in an email. “The Snake River dams, however, have massive impacts on transportation, power, flood control, recreation, etc.”

    Given the tight timetable for President Biden’s infrastructure bill, the odds that a major deal can come together appear unlikely. But Simpson has said that he hopes to secure federal dollars in the infrastructure package and set it aside in a fund while regional stakeholders hash out a plan.

    Whether or not he is successful, the Simpson proposal, at a minimum, has sparked a conversation.

    Meanwhile, an effort established by the governors of Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana is working to charter the Columbia Basin Collaborative, where representatives of the four states will meet to discuss the interests of all stakeholders regarding salmon recovery. But the forum will only issue recommendations at some future date, not make policy.

    Don Sampson stressed that a comprehensive solution is the right way to think about how to resolve this issue. “We’re saying we understand what it is like to have nothing. We don’t want the farmers to go through that. We don’t want the people who barge their products to go through that.

    "So how can we mitigate them and also have a win-win where salmon are restored?” Sampson says.

  • Oregon Flyfishing Blog: The battle for Columbia Salmon comes to a head in Portland courtroom

    caddisfly
    by Matt Stansberry, Oregon Flyfishing Blog
    November 23rd, 2009
    In September, the Obama Administration endorsed a flawed salmon plan or BiOp, as it has been called, for the Columbia River system. The day is here now when Judge Redden will hear final arguments in the courtroom on the legality of this plan. Today, a group of advocates and fishermen are back in the federal court room in Portland and they are fighting for you, me and for the salmon and steelhead of the Northwest. One of those passionate fishermen is steelhead guide Jeff Hickman. Jeff grew up waist deep in Columbia tribs and has made a life guiding and fishing these same great rivers. He has followed closely the Columbia salmon fight for the last 10 years and like all of us, he is ready to see this situation be resolved once and for all.
    I talked to Hickman this morning before he headed to the courthouse and asked him a few questions about today’s Court battle.
  • Oregon Public Broadcasting: Dams vs. Salmon

    Workshops Aim To Get Past 'My Study Can Beat Up Your Study' On Snake River

    By Courtney Flatt
    January 10, 2020

    Salmon need our help, but solutions aren’t going to come easy. That was the common thought from speakers Tuesday night in Clarkston, Washington.clarkston.meeting

    The panel kicked off the first of three workshops to discuss issues that bog down the fate of four lower Snake River dams in Washington.

    More than 300 people showed up to hear speakers talk about why it’s important to either keep or alter the dams. The panel stems from a Washington state study that will guide the state’s position on dam removal.

    David Johnson, a member of the Nez Perce Tribe headquartered in nearby Lapwai, Idaho, said one of the biggest issues for the tribe is to have access to treaty fishing rights – a promise he says has not been kept.

    “What really has been important is that some livelihoods have always been held as sacrosanct; whereas others have not been so, specifically with regards to tribes and the ability to harvest fish,” Johnson said.

    Other panelists said it doesn’t have to be a choice of dams or salmon – that there could be ways to make both work. But, advocating for dam removal, Nez Perce members say a lot has been tried so far, without much success.

    Dustin Aherin is an outfitter who guides trips that rely on Snake River salmon. He said people need to move beyond prickly attacks and work together to find a solution.

    “We haven’t gotten very far into the recovery process by arguing with one another, and by developing different plans, saying my study can beat up your study,” Aherin said.

    Dam advocates say the structures are integral to agriculture and the West’s most inland port in the Lewiston-Clarkston Valley. Those who want the dams breached say they’re standing in the way of healthier salmon runs.

    Task Force

    In 2018, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee convened a task force to find ways to save the dwindling orca population in Puget Sound and off Northwest coasts. Controversially, the group requested a report on the Snake River dams. It would look at people’s feelings about removing or altering them. It wouldn’t make a recommendation one way or the other.

    Of the draft report, Inslee said in a statement: “I thank all the stakeholders from all over the state for weighing in on this crucial issue. I encourage Washingtonians to get engaged in the public comment period over the next month and share their input on what should be done. We need to hear from a variety of people from different regions and perspectives.”

    Two more public workshops will take place soon: Thursday, Jan. 9 in Vancouver, Washington, and Monday, Jan. 13 in Pasco.

    People can comment on the report through Jan. 24.

    Washington’s report is separate from an environmental analysis by the federal government due out sometime this year. Removing or altering the dams would be up to Congress.

  • Oregonian, Scott Learn - April 12, 2010: Science panel opposes Obama plan for Snake/Columbia salmon

    Oregonian_Logo
    by Scott Learn, April 12, 2010
     
    An independent science panel has weighed in against the Obama Administration's plans to curtail spills over Snake River dams come May 1, setting up a showdown between the administration and salmon advocates in federal Judge James Redden's courtroom.
     
    The Independent Scientific Advisory Panel issued its report late Friday on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's plans to increase barging of young fish headed for the ocean around three Snake River dams while ending May spills at those dams designed to aid fish migration.
     
    Higher spill reduces power generation from the hydroelectric dams and could increase electricity rates. Redden, the U.S. District Court judge overseeing a lawsuit on management of salmon in the Columbia and Snake system, has favored spring spill since 2007.
     
    River flows are projected to be very low this year, and NOAA says more barging of young salmon and steelhead from the Snake River dams to below Bonneville Dam in May -- allowing them to avoid a huge stretch of the Snake and Columbia rivers -- will increase ultimate fish survival in those conditions. River temperatures are higher in low-flow years, the agency and groups such as Northwest River Partners say, a drawback for the cold-water fish. Consumption of young salmon by predators, both other fish and birds, also rises in low water conditions. But the advisory panel, which studied the issue at NOAA's request, sided with a mixed regimen of spill and transport similar to what Redden has favored in the past. That squares with the position taken by salmon advocacy groups such as Save Our Wild Salmon, who say interest groups and politicians in Washington, Idaho and Montana are pressuring the administration to cut spills and keep electricity rates lower. "Spill should be viewed as a default condition," the panel's report said, adding that spill "more closely mimics natural situations and ecological processes." A strategy similar to that ordered by Redden in the past, the report said, is "most in accord with available scientific information." -- Scott Learn, The Oregonian

  • Oregonian: Oregon closes steelhead sanctuary off mouth of Deschutes to all fishing

    By Bill Monroe

    Aug 8, 2018

    Oregon has closed all fishing in the mouth of the Deschutes River and in a safety zone of the Columbia River around the Deschutes entry.

    The closure, enacted at the request of the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission, begins Thursday and is likely to remain in effect through late September.

    The closed area includes the Deschutes bay, between the freeway bridges, the boat ramp and the state park, up to the lower end of Moody Rapids, the first whitewater above the boat ramp.

    Biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said the closure is intended to protect upriver-bound Columbia summer steelhead lingering in the Deschutes' cooler water as the Columbia warms up in summer heat.

    Wednesday afternoon, the Columbia's water was 73 degrees at The Dalles Dam (downriver from the closure) and 68 at Moody Rapids, just upriver from its mouth.

    Tucker Jones, the Oregon department's Columbia River program manager, said steelhead begin feeling uncomfortable at 68 degrees. Studies have shown higher death rates for steelhead and salmon caught and released in water warmer than 70.

    Jones said the closure - all fishing, including for bass and walleye and catch-and-release angling - will probably continue until late-September, when water temperatures typically drop back to 68. However, the department also is carefully watching fall run sizes and could consider other factors before reopening the closed zone.

    The closure is the second this year in Oregon and the first on Oregon's side of the Columbia.

    Tributaries and their mouths were closed earlier this summer in the Umpqua River.

    Washington has also closed a portion of the Columbia below the mouth of the Yakima River for the same reason.

    Sanctuary closures are likely to become much more common as summer heat intensifies.

    The Oregon department is reviewing potential sanctuary zones throughout the Columbia River and is expected to take proposals to the public for review in the fall, with decisions by the Fish and Wildlife Commission in 2019.

    A quarter million migrating sockeye salmon are believed to have died in 2015 as the Columbia heated above 75 degrees.

    https://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/bill_monroe/index.ssf/2018/08/oregon_closes_steelhead_sanctu.htmlsalmon.dead

  • Oregonian: Habitat restoration soars on Columbia River, but fish benefits are murky

    Oregonian_Logoby Scott Learn
    CHINOOK, Wash. -- This winter, restoration workers punched a 12-foot concrete culvert through the rock rip-rap that lines the Columbia River near the ocean and waited for fish to hit wetlands walled off for a century. They didn't have to wait long. On March 15, the first check, biologists counted 20 juvenile salmon. On April 29, the count totaled 723, mostly chinook and chum. That's the kind of success story operators of the Columbia basin's federal hydropower dams need a whole lot more of. Their 10-year dam operations plan, under the skeptical eye of U.S. District Judge James A. Redden, banks heavily on habitat improvements to bolster seven threatened runs of wild salmon and steelhead that begin life above Bonneville Dam. It's likely the biggest restoration effort in the nation, from the Columbia's mouth to tributaries deep into eastern Oregon, Idaho and Washington. If it works, it could help lift the fish off the endangered species list, dim the spotlight on dams and reduce demands for Snake River dam removal. But translating the effort into hard fish survival numbers that will satisfy the court is another story.
     
     
  • Oregonian: Idaho horseback riders on salmon trek pass through Portland

    By Andrew Theen, April 24, 2017

    redd.rideThree women rode horses through downtown Portland on Monday, part of a 900-mile journey to raise awareness about the plight of endangered Idaho salmon.

    The trio are traveling roughly the same path imperiled sockeye salmon do, making their way up the Columbia, Snake and Salmon Rivers to the spawning grounds in Idaho's Sawtooth National Forest.

    The trek started last week in Astoria, and the three Idaho residents opted to ride through the heart of Portland to draw attention to their cause.

    The "Ride for Redd," a nod to the term for a salmon spawning ground, is backed by the nonprofit advocacy group Idaho Rivers United. Just before noon, the three riders crossed the Hawthorne Bridge and gathered on the Central Eastside.
    Under a persistent afternoon drizzle, Kat Cannell, rode her father's horse, Hogan, past OMSI in Southeast Portland and outlined the trip's mission.

    "The Columbia produces an amazing amount of salmon, and the ones that make it to our home swim 900 miles inland and 6,500 feet in elevation," Cannell said as she plodded along the roadway. Each rider had a pack horse alongside them.
    "Our salmon are really at stake right now," she said. "Idaho is at risk of never seeing salmon again, and that's devastating."

    Cannell, Katelyn Spradley and M.J. Wright, plan to finish their trip by June 2 at Redfish Lake in Idaho's Sawtooth Range.

    Idaho horseback riders on salmon trek pass through Portland
    Environmental groups have long pushed for the removal several dams on the lower Snake River to improve salmon habitat. "This is a huge undertaking that's about bringing attention to Idaho's endangered wild salmon, which are no better off now than when they were listed as endangered 25 years ago," Greg Stahl, an Idaho Rivers United spokesman, said in a statement.  "Since dams were erected on the lower Snake River, populations of wild fish from central Idaho — where there's a motherlode of intact habitat for salmon — have plummeted."

    Last month, a federal judge ordered that more water be spilled over those dams as a way of bolstering fish survival. Last year, the same judge rejected the plan proposed by federal agencies and utilities to manage those dams and protect salmon, the fifth such dismissal of a federal management plan in a legal fight that dates more than 20 years. Environmental groups continue to call for the dams to be removed.
    The riders, Cannell said, are depending on the kindness of strangers for much of their housing along the route.  

    Cannell said the horses can handle up to 30 miles of travel in a day. Monday night, the group plans to rest in a barn near Happy Valley.
    They hope to reach Hood River in four days.

    In total, the trip may take upward of 50 days.

    "Oregonians are so sweet to us," she said, "We've been really well taken care of here. Other than being a little wet, it's been really flawless."

    While the trip is sponsored by the river advocacy group, the riders also have a GoFundMe page. The crowd-funding site proceeds will also help pay for a documentary film of their journey. You can also track their journey on their Facebook page.

    -- Andrew Theen 
atheen@oregonian.com

    
503-294-4026


    @andrewtheen

  • Oregonian: Judge's order revives movement to remove Snake River dams

    LSR.damBy Nick Geranios, AP Reporter
    November 6, 2016

    SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Conservationists and others have renewed a push to remove four giant dams from the Snake River to save wild salmon runs, after a federal judge criticized the government for failing to consider whether breaching the dams would save the fish.
    The judge earlier this year rejected the government's fifth and latest plan for protecting threatened and endangered salmon in the Columbia River system.

    Agencies must take a new look at all approaches to managing the southeast Washington dams, including breaching, said U.S. District Court Judge Michael Simon in Portland, Oregon.

    "This is an action that (government agencies) have done their utmost to avoid considering for decades," he wrote.

    His order triggered 15 public meetings in Washington, Idaho, Montana and Oregon, where the dam removal issue has percolated for two decades.

    The first meeting was held last month, and the final one is scheduled for Dec. 8. After that, a plan to save the salmon must be created.

    The Snake River, at just over 1,000 miles, is the 13th longest in the United States, flowing from the western border of Wyoming to its confluence with the mighty Columbia River in Washington. For much of its history, the river and its tributaries produced salmon runs in the millions that sustained Native American tribes who lived near its banks. The best salmon spawning grounds were in Idaho, and were hampered by the construction of the four dams.

    Environmental groups say restoring the salmon runs is impossible with the four dams in place.

    The dams provide about 5 percent of the region's electricity, roughly enough power for a city the size of Seattle. A recent report by the federal Bonneville Power Administration said if the Snake River dams are removed, a new natural gas plant would be required to replace the lost electricity.

    Thirteen runs of Columbia and Snake river salmon and steelhead remain endangered or threatened despite billions of dollars spent over decades to save them.

    Sam Mace, a spokeswoman for Save Our Wild Salmon, said the dams' benefits are not worth the loss of the iconic fish.

    "There is more than one way to get wheat to market," Mace said. "But salmon only have one way to travel, and that's in the river."

    Salmon supporters say restored salmon runs will help the economy.

    "Healthy salmon populations could support tens of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars annually in the recreation and tourism economy," said Liz Hamilton of the Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association.

    Idaho's Nez Perce Tribe also has called for removing the dams and restoring the fish to harvestable levels.

    "The four dams on the lower Snake River have had a devastating impact on salmon," said McCoy Oatman, the tribe's vice chairman.

    Opponents of breaching the dams say they provide irrigation, hydropower and shipping benefits, and allow grain barges to operate all the way to Lewiston, Idaho, more than 400 miles from the mouth of the Columbia River.

    Wheat from as far as North Dakota is shipped downriver by barge for export to Asia. The Snake River also is used to transport about 60 percent of Washington's wheat and barley crop to Portland. A tug pushing a barge can haul a ton of wheat 576 miles on a single gallon of fuel.

    Northwest River Partners, which represents a coalition of businesses and river users, called the dams an important part of the regional economy.

    "I think both salmon and the dams are co-existing," said Terry Flores, director of the Portland-based group. "Why would you take out dams that are providing clean energy and billions of dollars' worth of commerce?"

    However, critics note the river's barge traffic has experienced a 20-year decline because of competition from trucks and trains.
    The four dams were built in the 1960s and 1970s, roughly between Pullman and the Tri-Cities.

    Breaching them isn't something that could be ordered by a court. Since the dams are federal projects, removing them would require action by Congress.

    According to the Army Corps of Engineers, more than 90 percent of the river's young fish survive passage through each dam's fish ladders. But the total effect from dams and slackwater reservoirs adds up to mortality rates of 50 percent or more for Idaho-spawned fish as they migrate to the ocean. The fish then have to survive several years in the ocean before running the gauntlet of dams again when they return to the Northwest to spawn.

    Removing the dams would provide migrating salmon with easier access to thousands of miles of pristine rivers and streams that even with climate change remain cold enough to support salmon and steelhead spawning, environmentalists say.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2016/11/judges_order_revives_movement.htm

  • Oregonian: Salmon wars return to Portland courtroom - May 7, 2011

    by Scott Learn
    Oregonian_Logo
    For the past eight years, the champion of Northwest wild salmon and steelhead has been an 82-year-old judge with a sharp pen and a willingness to use it.
    To date, U.S. District Judge James A. Redden has sunk two plans the federal government argued would allow it to operate hydroelectric dams in the Columbia River basin without jeopardizing the region's signature fish.
     
  • Oregonian: Shielded Native American sites thrust into debate over dams

    dam.on.colThe Associated Press, January 1, 2017

    A little-known federal program that avoids publicizing its accomplishments to protect from looters the thousands of Native American sites it's tasked with managing has been caught up in a big net.

    The Federal Columbia River System Cultural Resources Program tracks some 4,000 historical sites that also include homesteads and missions in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana.

    Now it's contributing information as authorities prepare a court-ordered environmental impact statement concerning struggling salmon and the operation of 14 federal dams in the Columbia River Basin.

    A federal judge urged officials to consider breaching four of those dams on the Snake River.

    "Because of the scale of the EIS, there's no practical way for us, even if we wanted to, to provide a map of each and every site that we consider," said Sean Hess, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's Pacific Northwest Region archaeologist. "There are some important sites out there that we don't talk about a lot because of concerns about what would happen because of vandalism."

    Fish survival, hydropower, irrigation and navigation get the most attention and will be components in the environmental review due out in 2021. But at more than a dozen public meetings in the four states to collect feedback, the cultural resources program has equal billing. Comments are being accepted through Jan. 17.

    The review process is being conducted under the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, an umbrella law that covers the well-known Endangered Species Act. Thirteen species of salmon and steelhead on the Columbia and Snake rivers have been listed as federally protected species over the past 25 years.

    What to do with four controversial dams on the Snake River in Eastern Washington? That's the question federal officials will analyze over the next few years.

    But NEPA also requires equal weight be given to other laws, including the National Historic Preservation Act, which is where the cultural resources program comes in. Among the 4,000 sites are fishing and hunting processing areas, ancestral village areas and tribal corridors.

    "People were very mobile, prehistorically," said Kristen Martine, Cultural Recourse Program manager for the Bonneville Power Administration.

    Some of the most notable sites with human activity date back thousands of years and are underwater behind dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers. Celilo Falls, a dipnet fishery for thousands of years, is behind The Dalles Dam on the Columbia River. Marmes Rockshelter was occupied 10,000 years ago but now is underwater behind Lower Monumental Dam on the Snake River.

    "If we're breaching dams, it would definitely change how we manage resources," said Gail Celmer, an archaeologist with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

    U.S. District Judge Michael H. Simon ordered the environmental review in May after finding that a massive habitat restoration effort to offset the damage that dams in the Columbia River Basin pose to Northwest salmon runs was failing.

    Salmon and steelhead runs are a fraction of what they were before modern settlement. Of the salmon and steelhead that now return to spawn each year, experts say, about 70 to 90 percent originate in hatcheries.

    Those opposed to breaching the Snake River dams to restore salmon runs say the dams are an important part of the regional economy, providing irrigation, hydropower and shipping benefits.

    Meanwhile, several tribes said they are better able to take part in the review process than they once were.

    "Tribes have not had much opportunity to participate in these things because they didn't have professional staff or trained people," said Guy Moura of the Colville Confederated Tribes in Washington state, noting the tribe employed four people in its cultural resources program in 1992 but now has 38. "With growth in size, there also came the evolution of what was being done."

    The tribe at one time had a large fishery at Kettle Falls, on the upper part of the Columbia River, but it was inundated in the 1940s behind Grand Coulee Dam. Dams farther downstream on the Columbia prevent salmon from reaching the area.

    Also among the 4,000 historical sites is Bonneville Dam, one of 14 dams involved in the environmental impact statement. Bonneville Dam is the lowest dam in the system at about 145 miles from the mouth of the Columbia River. It started operating in the 1930s and became a National Historic Landmark in 1987.

    -- The Associated Press

    http://www.oregonlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2017/01/post_53.html#incart_river_index

  • Oregonian: Tribes warn of imminent fish passage crisis at damaged Wanapum Dam, ask feds to step in

    April 9, 2014

    By Ted Sickinger

    wanapum dam 660Native American tribes say not enough is being done to address an “imminent crisis” in fish passage on the Columbia River due to the drawdown of the reservoir behind the damaged Wanapum Dam in central Washington.

    In late February, the dam’s operator, Grant County Public Utility District, discovered a 65-foot-long crack in a concrete spillway pier at the dam and was forced to draw down the reservoir behind the dam to relieve pressure on the structure. The utility has hired a contractor to drill core samples in the dam and determine the extent of the problem. That job should be done by June.

    In the meantime, the spring fish run is getting started, and the reservoir drawdown left fish ladders high and dry, blocking 100 percent of the adult upstream passage of the salmon and lamprey. It also dramatically reduced the flow of water through the dams juvenile passage system, which the tribes contend will seriously compromise downstream migration as well. Resulting low water conditions are also affecting passage at the Rock Island Dam, upstream of Wanapum.

    Grant PUD says it’s working to modify the Wanapum fish ladders so they will be operational by next Tuesday. It claims all of the dam’s downstream fish-passage features can operate under the low-reservoir conditions.

    The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission has written to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration urging them to not only formally consult with the tribes on their emergency measures, but implement a variety of additional measures to ensure passage and at least two studies to track the impact of the drawdown.

    Tony Lorz, a fish passage engineer for CRITFC, said the on-the-fly modification being made for upstream passage of adult fish may not be effective, particularly for lamprey, which don’t have the same swimming strength as salmon. If the modifications don’t work as intended, he said the utility and other stakeholders face a major crisis, with far more fish than they could possibly trap and haul above the dams.

    Likewise, Lorz said the downstream system is compromised by a 75 percent reduction in water flows, and low water conditions that are likely to increase cavitation levels in the dam’s turbines and decrease survival rates of juvenile fish who pass through them.

    “This is uncharted territory,” he said. We don’t have any data. We’ve never had to do this mid-season.”    
     
    View original article here.

  • Oregonlive: Columbia, Snake river dam operators must make plan to keep waters cold enough for salmon survival

    By The Associated Press
    May 13, 2020dam.lsr

    LONGVIEW — The Washington state Department of Ecology, in a historic move, has required federal operators of eight dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers to create a plan to keep the waters cold enough for adult salmon survival.

    Conservation groups said the “game-changing decision” is needed to protect endangered salmon species, which struggle when river temperatures exceed 68 degrees. Hydropower proponents said they are concerned that meeting the temperature standards could be unattainable without costly rate hikes for utility customers in hydropower-reliant areas, The Daily News reported.

    "What this decision risks doing is saying, 'We are going to regulate the temperature of the river because there are dams there.' But the reality is even without the dams, those temperatures could be the exact same," said Kurt Miller, executive director of Northwest River Partners, a group of utility districts, ports and businesses.

    Ecology last week issued Clean Water Act 401 Certifications for four dams on the Lower Columbia River including Bonneville, John Day, McNary and The Dalles and four dams on the Lower Snake River including Little Goose, Ice Harbor, Lower Granite and Lower Monumental. The certification enables Ecology to work with federal dam operators to review studies and plans for meeting the state's water quality standards, which include a rule to keep river temperatures below 68 degrees.

    The goal is to keep the water cool enough for adult salmon to survive their migration through the river to spawning habitat.

    “Society is doing a lot of work restoring tributaries for spawning... which is all really important. But if the river is too hot for adult salmon to migrate up, we have a huge problem,” said Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director for Columbia Riverkeeper, a Hood River-based conservation group. He added that parts of the Columbia River routinely reach 72 degrees.

    Most dams are certified when they receive their operating license. But the dams were built before the rules were in place, so the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the federal dams, has been operating them without the certifications.

    Riverkeeper opened an opportunity for certification with a 2013 lawsuit that required the Corps to seek oil discharge permits from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Before the EPA could issue the permit, it had to make sure it met state standards.

    "This is the first federal action that has prompted the state's certification requirements, so it's been our first opportunity to look at the dams and put these certifications in place," said Vince McGowan, Ecology's water quality program manager.

    To lower water temperatures, the Corps could work on habitat projects to add trees to shade the river, or it could release cooler water from upstream dams, Miller said.

    It could take up to two years before federal agencies release a detailed plan to meet the state's water temperature requirements, McGowan said.

    “This is a really important first step for us to have that kind of relationship with the (federal) dams, with our state role,” McGowan said. “The other stakeholders and dam operators themselves will have opportunities to work out exactly what this means in the long run.”

    — The Associated Press

  • Out There Outdoors: Reckoning on a River

    June 7th, 2019

    By Sam Mace

    troller.rainbowFishermen, recreation businesses, and friends of Northwest rivers welcomed two recent developments in a year of little good news for Snake River salmon and steelhead. 

    Returns of wild fish up the Snake to their home in Idaho are so meager that fisheries have already closed, affecting outfitters and rural communities throughout the basin. Mere hundreds of wild salmon and steelhead are returning to rivers where thousands should be. But there is reason for hope. Some cracks have appeared in the dam of opposition. 

    In recent months the salmon crisis has spurred action in both Washington and Idaho. First, as part of a package of actions to help starving southern resident killer whales, the Washington legislature earmarked $750,000 for a stakeholder forum. The forum will explore what investments would be needed if a decision were made to restore the lower Snake River.

    The very same week, Congressman Mike Simpson, senior Idaho Republican, committed to restoring Idaho’s salmon in a keynote address at the Boise-based Andrus Center. Concerned about the future of the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) and its ability to continue providing low-cost power to the region, Simpson proposed working on a plan to save both salmon and BPA by asking the “hard questions” and putting all options on the table. 

    Neither action endorsed dam removal. Both, however, were calls for an honest conversation about what river restoration and dam removal would mean for the region if it occurs. While many stakeholders have long called for an open and creative dialogue with ports, shippers, farmers, and others who use or rely on the river in one way or another, some have fought to stop any conversation where dam removal is even mentioned. Just last month, Reps. Cathy McMorris-Rodgers and Dan Newhouse launched a full-on campaign against Governor Inslee’s support for stakeholder talks in an attempt to silence any discussion of a future without the dams.

    What are they so afraid of? 

    If, in fact, four aging dams on the lower Snake River are the linchpin of the regional economy as the opposition claims, an honest transition planning process would surely reflect that. 

    But what if transition planning shows we can affordably replace the declining transportation and energy benefits? That irrigation can continue with modest infrastructure investments? And what if it shows that a restored river, fisheries, and recreation economy would be an economic boon in towns from Riggins to Clarkston, Walla Walla to Tri-Cities, and reaching as far as Spokane? 

    We won’t know unless we, as Rep. Simpson has urged, “ask the hard questions.”

    While the status quo may be working fine now for some ports, farmers, and irrigators, it’s not working well at all for our fisheries, the businesses that depend on them, the tribes that require them, and the recreational fishermen who live for catching them. More and more, it also is not working for BPA, on which so many of us depend for reliable, inexpensive, and clean power. In short, BPA is in a financial bind and the future does not look good. 

    The Inland Northwest should jump at the opportunity to reimagine the Snake River as it once was, and what a restored river could be. Done right, a stakeholder process would look both at how we replace the benefits of the dams and how we take advantage of the resources and amenities a restored lower Snake River would bring.

    Imagine a free-flowing river coursing through a revitalized urban waterfront in downtown Clarkston/Lewiston, continuing 144 miles through the Palouse to Tri-Cities; more than 14,000 acres of riverfront land no longer under water, providing bird and wildlife habitat, hiking trails, hunting opportunities and camping; beautiful canyon walls, sweeping benches, river islands, and the Palouse River free flowing to its confluence with the Snake; boat launches supporting both motorized and non-motorized boating—and, let’s not forget the abundant fishing.

    Perhaps there is a place for long-lost agriculture to return? Many small farming communities were inundated by the dams, drowning productive fruit orchards. And, we can’t forget this land first belonged to the tribes. What lands could be returned and restored for cultural and traditional uses? What investments could we provide to towns near the river so they could take advantage of the new recreation economy, predicted by various independent economists to generate hundreds of millions of dollars and more annually in Eastern Washington alone? 

    Elected leaders in both Washington and Idaho have opened up a public space for envisioning what the largest river restoration in history could bring to the culture and economy of the Inland Northwest. However, entrenched interests are working overtime to squash any questioning of business-as-usual, of envisioning another future—one that includes abundant salmon, a restored river, and thriving local economies. We can’t let them do that.

  • Outside Magazine: Washington's Bold Plan to Save Its Orcas

    January 23, 2019

    By Bob Friel

    Orca.Scarlet.Baby.MotherThe little orca known as Scarlet is dead. Will her death be a turning point for the Northwest's endangered Southern Resident killer whales? Washington State governor Jay Inslee is proposing strong action. The last time I saw Scarlet alive, rain from a dismal September sky was pattering the Salish Sea. Despite the weather, dozens of people lined the cliff of San Juan Island’s Limekiln Point State Park, the best place to watch killer whales from land. It was as if they’d turned out to pay their respects to a funeral train. I was on a NOAA Zodiac with a team that included a University of California at Davis wildlife veterinarian who was hoping to dose the sick three-year-old orca with an antiparasitic solution. As we approached Scarlet, she was struggling to keep up with her mother and three older siblings, all members of the Pacific Northwest’s critically endangered Southern Resident killer whales. The vet shot two darts filled with medication, but up close it was obvious that this and the other unprecedented attempts to save Scarlet weren’t going to be successful. Scarlet’s once white eye patches had turned bilious orange, and instead of highlighting the Rubenesque form of a healthy killer whale, they wrapped tightly around the shape of her blubberless skull. She’d lost so much of her buoyant, insulating fat that it looked like just surfacing for air was an effort. Less than a week later, after her mother had been seen several times without her, Scarlet was officially declared dead. The little orca likely just slipped away and sank forever into the cold, green water. Losing Scarlet dropped the Southern Resident’s population to 74, its lowest level in 35 years. Since she was a female with breeding potential, her death nudges the whales that much closer to extinction. The Southern Residents are sliding toward oblivion for three main reasons: fish, fish, fish. Chinook salmon makes up at least 80 percent of their diet, but many Chinook runs are also endangered. Man-made noise from vessels makes it harder for the orcas to communicate and hunt for what few fish are left. When they do catch a fish, it’s loaded with industrial and agricultural toxics. The attention garnered by Scarlet and, last summer, by her podmate, Tahlequah, who carried around her dead calf for 17 days, spurred some government officials to action. Canada curtailed salmon fishing in several known orca feeding grounds, continued a noise-reduction program for ships heading to and from Vancouver, earmarked some funding for salmon recovery, and finally matched the U.S. requirement to stay at least 600 feet from killer whales. On the Washington State side of the Salish Sea, governor Jay Inslee formed the Southern Resident Killer Whale Task Force and challenged the group to come up with a package of “bold” proposals to save the orcas. After a series of meetings and surveys that generated more than 18,000 public comments over six months, the task force delivered its report and 36-point plan on November 16. As an in-depth primer on the Southern Residents and Chinook salmon and the complex anthropogenic impacts that both have faced for more than 100 years, the report is an excellent read. As a set of actions to save both linked species, it’s a strong push in the right direction including, as advertised, some bold and contentious ideas, such as a moratorium on whale watching the Southern Residents. Governor Inslee, who’s eyeing a run for president in 2020 on the strength of Washington’s burgeoning green economy and his attention to climate change and other environmental issues, kept up the task force’s momentum by turning its recommendations into more than $1 billion worth of items in the state’s proposed 2019–21 budget, which will be up for approval with the legislature this spring. Much of that funding would go to enforce existing regulations protecting habitat and to continue or accelerate restoration projects, all aimed at increasing Chinook salmon, because no Chinook equals no orcas. It also includes money to support the sounds-good-at-the-end-of-the-bar fixes, such as culling seals and sea lions and increasing salmon-hatchery production. Sea lions will die because they’re smart enough to take advantage of the dam bottlenecks we created that block spawning salmon, serving them up at all-you-can-eat buffets for the pinnipeds. People forget that, to protect salmon populations, Washington long had bounties on seals and sea lions ($1 and $2.50 a scalp, respectively, back in 1903; $8 a nose in later years, before the bounties finally ended in the 1960s), and all that time the Chinook numbers still crashed due to overfishing and habitat destruction. The damage and disruption we’ve done to natural systems out West means we do need salmon hatcheries in the short and medium term, even though they threaten wild-run fish via competition and genetic dilution. (It’s the wild salmon that reproduce more successfully and have the resiliency needed to better face climate change.) Along with the bounties on predators, we also forget that before we adopted the Northwest’s orcas as beloved icons, they were killed by fishermen because they, too, competed for salmon. The orcas were also shot by the military just for target practice. And we had no problem letting them be rounded up, driven into nets by explosives, calves separated from mothers, and shipped off to marine parks to entertain us. 

    Our attitudes toward orcas have evolved quickly, but only after we set in motion a clear path to extinction for the Southern Residents, who can’t evolve fast enough to save themselves from us. Reading through the task-force proposals and governor’s budget, what’s apparent is that nearly all the beneficial orca and salmon actions will also serve to create a healthier, more productive environment for humans. Cleaning up toxics, preventing oil spills, letting rivers run more naturally, rebuilding fish stocks, and other steps to restore the ecosystem are all no-brainers, even if you don’t care about killer whales. The Washington State legislature should see it that way when it votes on the budget.  This billion dollars is not going to save the orcas, though. That will take decades of continuous effort at the state level as well as federal action on dams and mixed-stock salmon fishing outside Washington State waters. But it’s definitely movement in the right direction and a sign that the people of Washington are willing to invest, and maybe even inconvenience themselves, to help save a bellwether species that’s dying in order to show us what we’re doing to ourselves. The task force’s stated recovery goal is to add ten Southern Resident orcas in ten years. Around the same time Scarlet was declared dead, aerial photos showed that one female from each of J, K, and L pods that make up the Southern Residents was pregnant. On January 11, researchers spotted what they estimate to be a three-week-old calf with one of those whales, L77, Matia. Designated L124, the baby looked healthy, and all three pods came together that day in a “superpod,” which is a gathering of the clans accompanied by lots of socializing and playing—something we’d recognize in our culture as a celebration.  Unfortunately, according to the Center for Whale Research two adult orcas, including Tahlequah’s mother, J17, look thin, and there’s serious concern whether they’ll make it through the winter. Despite the federal government shutdown, NOAA just recalled its West Coast marine mammal stranding coordinator on an emergency basis, and wildlife veterinarians are making plans to conduct a health assessment on the two whales as soon as possible. With two orcas in poor health and the Southern Residents’ recent rate of failed pregnancies, the odds are long against the population growing more this year. But then the odds weren’t good that Tahlequah would carry her dead calf around long enough for the world to take notice of the orcas’ plight, or that Scarlet could hang on long enough to ensure that the public and political will was strong enough to act. The new baby and new actions means there’s hope for the Southern Residents. Hopefully it’s not going to take a continual procession of dead whales to keep us pursuing positive steps to fix the ecosystem both we and the orcas depend on.   

  • Patagonia Blog: The Cleanest Line - Free the Snake and Restore Salmon to Honor Treaty Right

    NPE 015 web 2-1404x936Julian Matthews, February 3, 2017

    Salmon have sustained the Nimiipuu people since time began for us. Nimiipuu means “the people” and is one amongst many names the Nez Perce call themselves.

    _________________

    Take Action Now!This is our last chance to tell federal agencies to include Snake River dam removal as they begin to look at salmon restoration options in the Columbia and Snake Rivers. The deadline to comment is February 7.

    _________________

    The loss of healthy numbers of salmon returning up the Columbia and Snake Rivers to our traditional lands in Idaho and Oregon, where we have fished and hunted for generations, has been devastating to our people, families and culture. In recent decades, our tribe has dedicated resources, including expert fisheries biologists and attorneys, to restore the fisheries and fight for legal protections in court. But it has not been enough. For salmon to return in the numbers needed to sustain our tribe, our rivers and the lands around us, the four lower Snake River dams must be removed.

    Nimiipuu Protecting the Environment is a grassroots organization committed to protecting tribal treaty rights within our original ceded lands and usual and accustomed places. We also believe that with our treaty rights comes treaty responsibilities: the need to protect our salmon, wildlife, rivers and lands so that they survive and thrive for the next generations. We work with tribal members and environmental allies to push for the restoration of wild salmon to our home lands.

    Right now, we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to restore wild salmon to the Pacific Northwest’s Columbia and Snake Rivers and their tributaries—once the greatest salmon rivers in the world. We can do this by removing four outdated and expensive dams on the lower Snake River.

    View the entire post here on Patagonia's The Cleanest Line Blog

    Learn more about Nimiipuu - Protecting the Environment here.

    Take Action - Submit your official public comment before Tuesday - February 7!

    #FreeTheSnake

    NPE 017 web 2-1404x1015

     

  • Paul Lindholdt: Free-flowing rivers are essential to our region’s health

    Imagine hovering high above the drainage of the Columbia, that great river in the West. Its sprawling watershed includes all of Idaho, most of Washington, large parts of British Columbia, Montana and Oregon. Tributary rivers, streams and creeks pulse like arteries and capillaries.

    Much like arteries, the tributaries help shuttle lifeblood from the heartland out to the continent’s coast. Much like veins, clouds from the Pacific Ocean trundle wetness back to our inland core. The Columbia River is a drudge because 14 major dams congest it. In its watershed ranging north and east, dozens of upcountry dams emboss its tributary streams like bad bling on a cashmere jacket.

    Kris Johnson recently published a partisan op-ed in The Spokesman-Review (“Dams balance energy, wildlife needs,” Jan. 27). As president of the Association of Washington Business, Mr. Johnson is solicitous of business interests. He neglects sustainability to assist his constituents. That’s his job. He falsely argues that the four lower Snake River dams help salmon recover. His frail argument uses “alternative facts” and demonstrates how out of step he is with other citizens in the region.

    Federal judges and regional governors – not to mention every conservation group in the nation – regard those dams as the worst of the worst. They block 500 miles of prime spawning habitat in wild Idaho. Those dams remain in place so a few farmers can ship their grain. At the same time, billions of dollars are being spent by the Bonneville Power Administration and state agencies to recover threatened salmon downstream.

    The news from Idaho ought to alarm even Mr. Johnson and those farmers. Runs of anadromous fish in the Snake, Clearwater and Salmon rivers were so small in early 2017 that Idaho Fish and Game restricted fishing to catch-and-release. Any so-called “harvest” of steelhead or salmon, whether wild or hatchery-raised, would put their populations too much at risk. Midseason, though, yielding to business interests, IDFG reversed its hive-mind. It allowed dead fish to be toted home.

    Then an unexpected event occurred. Fly-fishing groups organized to oppose all Idaho harvests. Fishermen and -women who wade in wild waters know something the business promoters and officeholders seem unable to acknowledge: Dams impede the lifeblood of the land. That oceangoing fish are the counterparts of healthy red blood cells thronging in the planet’s body.

    The crowds of opponents to the four lower Snake River dams are growing every year. Fly-fishermen, Indians, judges, journalists, merchants and voters on the coast recognize threats those dams pose. In the Salish Sea, orca populations are at a 30-year low point. So-called killer whales depend on healthy salmon stocks to thrive. The entire food chain depends on them. Nor are fish alone at risk.

    Dams also add to climate change. An article in Smithsonian (“The Costs and Benefits of Hydropower,” Jan. 5) noted, “Aging reservoirs have become inefficient … and research suggests that hydropower reservoirs may be a much larger contributor of methane – a greenhouse gas roughly 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide – than previously realized.” Organic material gathers in dam reservoirs, consumes oxygen and discharges methane.

    Alternative facts from Snake River dam apologists notwithstanding, there is cause for hope. That hope rests with the Columbia Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, a project of the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Upper Columbia, Warm Springs and Yakama tribes. Those tribes are leading the way on salmon recovery. The tribes observe that “it will take everyone who lives in the basin to restore the salmon.” Locals need to seize control of their destinies. In a hopeful sign also this year, 21 tribes got the U.S. Supreme Court to agree to hear a case on culverts blocking fish migration in Washington state.

    Some people’s hearts get clogged from bad food. From lack of exercise or genes that make them weak. Medical providers then need to carve side channels to help those clogged hearts plug away.

    Consider dam breaching the landscape-scale equivalent of heart-bypass surgeries. Procedures that allow blood to flow free again, and the rivers to enjoy refurbished circulation. Ignore alternative facts. Vote out resistant politicians. Let’s keep the good stuff flowing, the liquids lifting off and drifting back down – the systole and diastole by any other name performing the complex circulatory work.

    Paul Lindholdt is professor of English at Eastern Washington University and the editor of “The Spokane River,” a book the University of Washington Press will publish in April.

    SOS editiorial clarification: The Columbia Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, while working on salmon recovery, has not endorsed Snake River dam removal.

  • Paul Lumley: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era

    12678556-mmmainPaul Lumley's op-ed on the Columbia River Treaty, which appeared in The Oregonian May 5, opens a subject SOS members will hear and do more about: how can Northwest people make sure that the 50-year-old Columbia River Treaty is modernized for today's, and tomorrow's, Northwest? The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, which Mr. Lumley heads, represents four of 15 Columbia Basin Tribes that have joined together inside the Treaty process to make the Treaty's purposes and provisions better serve our new century. After a recent meeting with them, SOS and others have begun working together to assist the Tribes from outside the Treaty process. Or, more accurately, the Treaty process will soon become a political process - as it should - and that's where we'll work. Lumley's op-ed helps show why we are excited to assist the 15 Tribes' efforts to improve the Columbia River Treaty.

    --------------------------------------------------------

    Oregonian Guest Opinion: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era

    By Paul Lumley. May 04, 2013.

    The Columbia River Treaty between the United States and Canada has been a hybrid of fears and profits since its ratification in 1964. Narrowly designed for flood control and optimized hydropower production, the treaty has locked in 1960s priorities that do not reflect the modern values and considerations of our time.

    Over the course of the half-century since the treaty was made, the region's measure of the Columbia River basin's benefits has evolved to encompass uses that extend beyond power production and aggressive flood control. Regional and national values, as reflected in laws such as the Endangered Species Act, have expanded to include healthy fish populations and healthy ecosystems. Ecological requirements are not included in the current treaty, but now is the time to move them into the limelight.

    Before the treaty's 50-year control of the river gives way to a new era, a progressive regional recommendation must be put forth that reflects this evolution of societal values. A modernized treaty should provide equally for ecosystem requirements, hydropower operations and flood-risk management. Working through the treaty review process, the region must look beyond the narrow approach employed 50 years ago and take a broad look at what the river needs. Equal consideration of improved spring migration of salmon, seasonal flushing of the estuary, resident fish requirements and salmon passage at all historic locations are all needs of the Columbia River basin to include in a new treaty.

    Let's move beyond our fears of flooding and begin a new conversation on flood-risk management. Flooding is a natural process that benefits the estuary and cannot always be prevented. The 1948 Vanport Flood, often used as a scare tactic to defend the current treaty, would not have been prevented even with the Columbia River Treaty dams in place. New approaches to flood-risk management can provide lower-river benefits without creating havoc in upriver reservoirs.

    The Northwest region is scheduled to make a recommendation to the U.S. State Department by year's end on the future of the Columbia River Treaty. The U.S. and Canada will address several major issues, including the sharing of risks and benefits. The Columbia basin tribes will work to include river health as a regional benefit, not something to be negotiated away.

    The United States has a monumental opportunity to do the right thing for the Columbia basin's fish populations. The tribes are steadfast in our belief that the Columbia basin ecosystem -- ignored 50 years ago -- must be incorporated this time around.

    The salmon and other natural resources are depending on all of us as stewards of their future. Let's make sure that the next Columbia River Treaty is a treaty of our time and our values.

    Paul Lumley is a citizen of the Yakama Nation and executive director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. CRITFC provides technical support and coordination for fishery-management policies of the Columbia 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.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2013/05/to_manage_the_columbia_river_w.html

  • Paul Lumley: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era (2)

    12678556-mmmainPaul Lumley's op-ed on the Columbia River Treaty, which appeared in The Oregonian May 5, opens a subject SOS members will hear and do more about: how can Northwest people make sure that the 50-year-old Columbia River Treaty is modernized for today's, and tomorrow's, Northwest? The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, which Mr. Lumley heads, represents four of 15 Columbia Basin Tribes that have joined together inside the Treaty process to make the Treaty's purposes and provisions better serve our new century. After a recent meeting with them, SOS and others have begun working together to assist the Tribes from outside the Treaty process. Or, more accurately, the Treaty process will soon become a political process - as it should - and that's where we'll work. Lumley's op-ed helps show why we are excited to assist the 15 Tribes' efforts to improve the Columbia River Treaty.

    --------------------------------------------------------

    Oregonian Guest Opinion: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era

    By Paul Lumley. May 04, 2013.

    The Columbia River Treaty between the United States and Canada has been a hybrid of fears and profits since its ratification in 1964. Narrowly designed for flood control and optimized hydropower production, the treaty has locked in 1960s priorities that do not reflect the modern values and considerations of our time.

    Over the course of the half-century since the treaty was made, the region's measure of the Columbia River basin's benefits has evolved to encompass uses that extend beyond power production and aggressive flood control. Regional and national values, as reflected in laws such as the Endangered Species Act, have expanded to include healthy fish populations and healthy ecosystems. Ecological requirements are not included in the current treaty, but now is the time to move them into the limelight.

    Before the treaty's 50-year control of the river gives way to a new era, a progressive regional recommendation must be put forth that reflects this evolution of societal values. A modernized treaty should provide equally for ecosystem requirements, hydropower operations and flood-risk management. Working through the treaty review process, the region must look beyond the narrow approach employed 50 years ago and take a broad look at what the river needs. Equal consideration of improved spring migration of salmon, seasonal flushing of the estuary, resident fish requirements and salmon passage at all historic locations are all needs of the Columbia River basin to include in a new treaty.

    Let's move beyond our fears of flooding and begin a new conversation on flood-risk management. Flooding is a natural process that benefits the estuary and cannot always be prevented. The 1948 Vanport Flood, often used as a scare tactic to defend the current treaty, would not have been prevented even with the Columbia River Treaty dams in place. New approaches to flood-risk management can provide lower-river benefits without creating havoc in upriver reservoirs.

    The Northwest region is scheduled to make a recommendation to the U.S. State Department by year's end on the future of the Columbia River Treaty. The U.S. and Canada will address several major issues, including the sharing of risks and benefits. The Columbia basin tribes will work to include river health as a regional benefit, not something to be negotiated away.

    The United States has a monumental opportunity to do the right thing for the Columbia basin's fish populations. The tribes are steadfast in our belief that the Columbia basin ecosystem -- ignored 50 years ago -- must be incorporated this time around.

    The salmon and other natural resources are depending on all of us as stewards of their future. Let's make sure that the next Columbia River Treaty is a treaty of our time and our values.

    Paul Lumley is a citizen of the Yakama Nation and executive director of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. CRITFC provides technical support and coordination for fishery-management policies of the Columbia 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.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2013/05/to_manage_the_columbia_river_w.html

  • Peninsula Daily News: Kilmer comments on Snake River dams

    By Peninsula Daily News
    Friday, June 5, 2020snake river damsjpg 0a737256e566bbe3

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Rep. Derek Kilmer said any decision on the breaching of the Snake River dams should be guided by sound science and a “consensus-driven approach” among regional stakeholders.

    Kilmer’s office released a requested statement from the 6th District congressman slightly after the Peninsula Daily News’ deadline on Wednesday. The PDN published a story Thursday about the Port Angeles City Council supporting the removal of the four dams and co-signing a letter urging Kilmer to find “win-win solutions” to benefit salmon and orca populations.

    “As a someone who was born and raised in this region, I understand the intrinsic cultural and economic value of the iconic species that reside here, and I believe we have a moral obligation to effectively recover both salmon and Southern Resident orca populations,” Kilmer said in the statement.

    “I am grateful for the continued engagement from folks in our neck of the woods on this critical issue.

    “As I have shared in discussions with our local Sierra Club members and others, I believe that decisions regarding the future of the Snake River dams must first be grounded in the best available science,” Kilmer continued.

    “However, I also recognize that the environmental review process cannot effectively evaluate the socioeconomic and cultural impacts associated with different alternatives.”

    Kilmer also supports consensus-driven approach “led by regional stakeholders to determine the best course of action for these dams.

    “Any action taken by Congress must be based on sound science and on consensus recommendations from impacted stakeholders,” Kilmer said.

    “I am firmly committed to working with folks in our communities and my colleagues in Congress to support that approach.”

  • Peninsula Daily News: Port Angeles council co-signs Snake River dam letter

    Rob Ollikainen
    June 4, 2020dam.lsr1

    PORT ANGELES — After seeing the Elwha River respond to dam removal in its own backyard, the Port Angeles City Council has voted to support the removal of four dams on the lower Snake River.

    The vote Tuesday was 5-1 with one abstention to co-sign a letter to U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, that seeks Congressional leadership in finding “win-win solutions” to benefit salmon and orca populations.

    “We believe that the science strongly supports restoring a free-flowing lower Snake River as the cornerstone of a lawful and effective recovery plan,” the letter from the Sierra Club says.

    “We also believe that working together, Northwest policymakers, sovereigns and stakeholders can develop a set of investments and actions that not only restore salmon and help feed hungry orcas, but also ensure a reliable and affordable energy system and a strong and prosperous economy in the 6th (Congressional) District and across the Northwest.”

    Kilmer’s office did not respond Wednesday to a request for comment on the letter and City Council action.

    The letter was co-signed by 206 of Kilmer’s 6th District constituents, including state Reps. Mike Chapman and Steve Tharinger and state Sen. Kevin Van De Wege of the North Olympic Peninsula’s 24th Legislative District.

    The full text of the letter is available at www.cityofpa.us/583/Meetings-Agendas. Click on the June 2 City Council agenda packet and navigate to page 135.

    Snake River dam removal has been a hotly-debated regional issue pitting salmon and orca lovers against those who feel dam removal would raise electric rates and harm an agricultural industry while providing minimal environmental benefits.

    “We have two sides that say the science is on their side,” Council member Mike French said during a robust council debate.

    Built between 1961 and 1975, the four hydroelectric dams in Eastern Washington have been blamed for declining chinook salmon runs and the starvation of the Southern Resident orcas, which numbered 73 in January.

    “The river-blocking hydro is a low greenhouse gas emissions source and is very reliable — part of the reason why we have cheap energy in the Northwest,” Council member Lindsey Schromen-Wawrin said.

    “But we also have declining salmon runs all over, and the whole marine ecosystem is beginning to melt down. So we need to address that.”

    A federal report released in February rejected the removal of the lower Snake River dams, saying the action would destabilize the power grid, increase greenhouse gas emissions and more than double the risk of regional power outages.

    Council member LaTrisha Suggs, who advocated the letter to her colleagues, said the draft environmental impact statement (EIS) was flawed like previous versions that were successfully challenged in court.

    “Now they’re on version six of an EIS, and there’s some misstatements in the EIS,” Suggs said.

    “Locally, we’ve benefited here in Port Angeles from the removal of the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams.”

    Five of the seven speakers who testified about the letter in two telephonic public comment periods said they favored dam removal.

    Council members Navarra Carr, Brenden Meyer, French, Schromen-Wawrin and Suggs voted to sign the letter. Mayor Kate Dexter voted no but agreed to the sign the letter if her colleagues endorsed it. Council member Charlie McCaughan abstained, saying he needed more information.

    Proponents of Snake River dam removal say the four lower dams generate only a small fraction — about 4 percent — of the region’s hydroelectricity. The dams have been disastrous for salmon species that struggle to navigate fish ladders and survive in warm-water reservoirs, advocates of dam removal say.

    Opponents of dam removal say they, too, want to protect salmon but aren’t sure breaching four dams would help.

    Opponents say the dams provide stability for the region’s power supply, irrigation for orchards and vineyards and a navigable waterway that allows wheat and other goods to be barged from Idaho to the Pacific Ocean.

    The city of Port Angles, Clallam County Public Utility District and other local utilities purchase wholesale power from Bonneville Power Administration.

    “We certainly recognize that this is a very complex issue,” said Nathan West, Port Angeles city manager.

    “Staff would really encourage council to dig into the facts to make sure that you all feel very comfortable with the facts.”

    McCaughan said it was “concerning” that the council had not heard from those who support keeping the dams.

    “I have questions I want answered, but I’d like to hear answers from both sides,” McCaughan said.

    Suggs said the Elwha River restoration project, which included the removal of the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams from 2011 to 2014, has allowed salmon and steelhead to return to their native habitat.

    “Eighty acres of nearshore habitat has been restored,” added Suggs, a restoration planner who worked on the Elwha project.

    “We saw Dungeness crab move back into the habitat right there at the mouth of the Elwha River.”

    Schromen-Wawrin said species are going extinct because of shifting habitat envelopes.

    “For a long time, the way that we used land or the sea was really the way that species were driven into extinction,” said Schromen-Wawrin, a constitutional attorney.

    “And then maybe a couple decades ago, scientists started to see that natural habitat variability, these envelopes of where these species can live, were starting to shift faster than species could migrate themselves because of climate change.”

    “We shouldn’t be destroying habitat to get to lower greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.

    “I’m really bothered by how we can be focused on maybe one metric such as greenhouse gas emissions and ignore the larger picture of why we’re trying to reduce that metric and ignore the ecosystem services.”

    French said the letter from the Sierra Club was asking for political leadership, not an immediate destruction of the Snake River dams.

    “My unpopular opinion about climate change is that we need an all-hands-on-deck approach to energy generation if we want to actually reverse, or get to that level of climate change, that we think is adaptable to,” French said.
    “So I don’t like removing options that are non-fossil-fuel related.”

    French said he would be “uncomfortable” removing hydroelectricity from the region’s energy portfolio but recognized that protecting habitat was a core reason to work to combat climate change.

    “Me, as a personal politician, I have no problem signing this letter and asking our Congressional representation for political leadership,” French said.

    “I do feel a responsibility to our ratepayers,” French added.

    “So I have some qualms about signing it as a council.”

    Carr said people from all walks of life and political spectrums have signed the Sierra Club’s letter.

    She added that the orca is an “iconic symbol” for the region.

    “I truly believe that we need to think about, and be the voice for, our environment and our ecosystem when they can’t speak,” Carr said.

    Meyer said the Snake River dam debate had become shrouded in fear.

    “It’s really hard to make decisions like that when people are trying to fear you into making a decision,” Meyer said.

    Dexter said she was “very torn” on the issue.

    “On the one hand, even if we got some traction, it’s going to be years before anything happens,” Dexter said of dam removal.

    “On the other hand, I don’t know how BPA negotiates. I don’t know enough about all of that to know if making this decision politically impacts staff’s ability to negotiate a fair rate for us.”

    The Tuesday council meeting can be viewed on YouTube.

     

    Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at rollikainen@peninsuladailynews.com.

  • Peninsula Daily News: Snake River dams proposal draws accolades, criticism

    By Diane Urbani de la Paz
    February 21, 202124283935 web1 web Fisherman dams 1 pdn 210221 640x4262x

    It’s a “pinch me, this is real” moment, said Amy Grondin.

    July through September, the Port Townsend resident fishes for salmon in the waters off Washington and Alaska. This time of year, she’s an activist for restoration of fish populations, which she said are critical to the North Olympic Peninsula’s economy.

    Those populations are suffering, Grondin said, as are fishermen.

    So when she heard Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho announce a proposal to breach all four Lower Snake River dams — infamous for blocking salmon passage — she saw a ray of hope.

    Titled the Columbia Basin Fund, the plan calls for replacing the dams’ hydroelectric energy production with other sources. The fund also would ensure that flood control, farm irrigation and grain transportation are addressed — all to the tune of $33 billion.

    It will take an Act of Congress to make such a plan reality, just as it took that to bring the Elwha River dams down earlier this century. In a video on simpson.house.gov, the representative asks a series of questions, including:

    “What if the dams came out?”

    “What if we created new economic engines for our communities?”

    Simpson, a member of Congress since 1999, adds he’s conducted more than 300 meetings with people on all sides of the salmon-dam issue before developing his plan.

    “I am certain,” he says in the closing seconds of the clip, “that if we do not take this course of action, we are condemning Idaho salmon to extinction.”

    Already four fellow Republicans have expressed opposition: Reps. Dan Newhouse, Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Jaime Herrera Beutler, all of Washington state, and Idaho’s Rep. Russ Fulcher have said breaching the dams will do widespread harm.

    Without hydropower, “life as we know it in our region would cease to exist,” they write in a joint statement.

    But W. Ron Allen, chairman of the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe and a leader in fisheries management in the United States and Canada, said the plan has promise.

    “Congressman Simpson is not naive. He’s been in this game a long time,” Allen said.

    “He’s been given enough reports to say, ‘OK, I’ve got to do something’” about the salmon struggle.

    “I like the vision a lot,” Allen said.

    “From my perspective, it’s a new kind of balance … I’m not against dams. There are dams designed to be more friendly to salmon. These dams just aren’t,” he said of the four barriers on the Lower Snake River. They were developed fast in order to generate cheaper power, and the time has come to develop other clean energy sources.

    “This is the heavy lift Norm Dicks did with the Elwha — times 10,” Allen said, referring to the retired congressman who pushed for removal of the two dams on that river.

    Salmon, Allen added, are keystone creatures who wield a powerful impact on the environment and on people’s lives.

    “Those of us in the Strait, in the Puget Sound, do we care? Yes. Salmon affect the fisheries and economies of tribes all the way up the coast. Those stocks go deep into Alaska; they migrate through that Alaska fishery, that British Columbia fishery.

    “Whatever we do, we have to prioritize restoring [salmon].”

    Grondin and Joel Kawahara, a commercial fisherman since 1972, noted the plummeting numbers of salmon boats and catch in the intervening years. There were once thousands of permitted fishing boats on the Washington coast, Kawahara said; today fewer than 200 work those waters.

    At the same time, Grondin said she doesn’t agree with everything in Simpson’s proposal.

    “I’m not excited about having mini nuclear reactors” dotting the landscape to replace hydropower, for example. Yet the plan could at least bring people to the table, she said.

    Grondin and Kawahara plan to send a letter of support for Simpson’s plan to the District 24 representatives in the state Legislature — who represent the Peninsula — as well as to the region’s congressional delegation.

    Salmon restoration affects not only local fishermen, Grondin emphasized, but the wider business community, from restaurants to shipwrights.

    On the North Olympic Peninsula, “we’re not a bunch of yuppies saying ‘the dams should come down,’” she added.

    “Our lives are wrapped up in fish.”

    Allen put it another way. Pacific Northwest salmon is not something that was “nice to have,” he said. The creatures have an environmental, cultural and spiritual significance to Northwest tribes.

    “A multi-ethnic society,” Allen added, “needs to learn how to be understanding and respectful to each other, and understand the things that are important.”

    ________

    Jefferson County senior reporter Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-417-3509 or durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Phys.org: Salmon deplete fat stores while stopped at dams, study shows

    salmonby University of Maine
    FEBRUARY 3, 2023

    Restoration of the critically endangered Atlantic salmon is an important issue in the rivers of Maine. Dams on Maine rivers have long been known to impact fish populations, but a new study led by the University of Maine quantifying the time and energy lost by Atlantic salmon stopped by dams indicate that the structures might have even more of an impact than once thought.

    Atlantic salmon return to the rivers of Maine from the ocean every spring to make the long, arduous swim upstream to spawn in freshwater. When the fish are stopped by dams, they are stuck in warmer waters for longer than expected, which can deplete the fat they have stored up to power their journey. The stored energy isn't just used for migration, but also producing gametes, developing secondary sexual traits and spawning.

    "Salmon limit the food they eat in freshwater, so excess energy lost during their migration doesn't get replaced," says Sarah Rubenstein, who completed her masters of science in wildlife ecology at the University of Maine in 2021. "However, spawning takes a lot of energy, so the more energy reserves salmon have left after migrating and during spawning, the more likely they will be at successfully reproducing. This is particularly important here in Maine where Atlantic salmon populations have been on the decline since the 1800s."

    For her graduate thesis, Rubenstein led a group of researchers from UMaine and the Maine Department of Marine Resources (DMR) to radio-tag adult Atlantic salmon at the lowermost dams of the Penobscot and Kennebec Rivers in Maine—the Milford and Lockwood dams, respectively—to track their movements upstream. They measured the fishes' fat stores when the fish were tagged, and then again once they had ascended the dams' fishways, which are meant to mitigate the impacts of dams by providing a detour route for migrating fish.

    The scientists found that the tagged fish were delayed on average between 16 and 23 days at the dams and lost between 11% and 22% of their fat reserves, in large part due to the temperature of the water but also due to the delay in time.

    "Delays and poor passage at dams during upstream migrations have been well-documented for Atlantic salmon across their range. We were able to show that these delays have consequences," says Rubenstein.

    One of the results of such dramatic energy loss could be the decline in repeat spawners—adults that survive the spawning process, return to sea and live to migrate another season to spawn—which have nearly been eliminated from Maine's populations.

    Moreover, warming waters as a result of climate change will likely exacerbate the energy depletion. The study suggests that restoration efforts should focus on providing migrating Atlantic salmon with more rapid access to the upstream habitats to get to cooler waters faster.

    "We studied the impact of delay at only a single barrier. However, Atlantic salmon often encounter multiple dams or other barriers along their migrations and this can increase the likelihood of a cumulative loss of energy that becomes detrimental," Rubenstein says. "Improving access to quality habitat benefits migrating fish species and is likely to promote increased spawning, post-spawning survival, and reproductive success in Atlantic salmon."

    The study was published in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences in September 2022.

    More information: Sarah R. Rubenstein et al, Adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) delayed below dams rapidly deplete energy stores, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (2022). DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2022-0008

    https://phys.org/news/2023-02-salmon-deplete-fat.html

  • PNW Inlander: Into the Breach

     

    inlanderJune 11, 2009
    Unlikely voices call for a more inclusive approach to resolving the Snake River’s dam vs. salmon conundrum

    by Kevin Taylor

    Idaho’s Republican Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch have emerged as unlikely progressive voices calling for a broad collaboration to preserve endangered runs of salmon that must pass four dams on the lower Snake River. Even if it means talking about breaching the dams.

  • Portland Business Journal: Bonneville Power Administration advances controversial energy market decision

    dam.lowergranite

    By Pete Danko – Staff Reporter, Portland Business Journal
    Mar 7, 2025

    Bonneville Power Administration intends to join the new energy market Markets+, the federal agency said Thursday, a decision with potentially significant energy cost and reliability ramifications that has divided utilities and other industry stakeholders in the Pacific Northwest.

    The draft decision by the region's biggest power player was in line with a policy direction laid out nearly a year ago. Yet it came amid rising pressure to hold off on a commitment, if not opt for a rival market supported by Oregon's two largest utilities, Portland General Electric and PacifiCorp, and many renewable energy and climate advocates.

    Oregon's and Washington's U.S. senators had joined in calls for BPA to delay action.

    "This hasty draft decision by the BPA is not good news for electricity consumers in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest,” Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden said Thursday in an emailed statement.

    BPA's release of a two-page cover letter and 93-page draft policy paper opened a 30-day comment period ahead of a planned final policy declaration in May.

    "This draft policy is consistent with Bonneville's strategic goals, day-ahead market evaluation principles, and the Trump Administration's energy directives," John Hairston, BPA's administration and CEO, said in the letter.

    For nearly two years, utilities and other electricity providers throughout the West have been weighing two "day-ahead" energy market proposals: Markets+ from the Southwest Power Pool based in Arksansas, and the Extended Day-Ahead Market, or EDAM, that California's grid operator is developing.

    Each has promised efficient and robust energy trading that could help in addressing the challenges of grid congestion, reliability in the face of extreme weather events, rising rates and demand, and decarbonization.

    "As the region evolves, this draft policy reflects BPA's best opportunity to remain competitively positioned in the long-term to continue meeting firm power sales obligations and marketing surplus to maintain low rates for customers," Rachel Dibble, BPA Power Services vice president of bulk marketing, said in a written statement.

    BPA's direction is key not only because it sells power from 31 federal dams and a nuclear plant, but it owns and manages 75% of the region's high-voltage transmission system.

    Its tilt toward the Markets+ has been widely — though not unanimously — supported by consumer-owned utilities, who have first dibs on its relatively inexpensive hydropower. A key factor in their preference has been concern that EDAM's governance structure would give California politicians undue influence, putting BPA's market standing at risk.

    The agency has stood by its position through two new rounds of analysis that found that an EDAM with BPA in it would deliver greater economic benefits to BPA and the region, possibly amounting to as much as $4.4 billion over the next decade.

    EDAM advocates had called on BPA to hold off on a decision while California lawmakers consider legislation that could solve the governance issue. BPA's precarious staffing situation in the wake of Trump administration actions brought new urgency to their calls.

    'Tumult inflicted by Donald Trump and Elon Musk'

    "The needless tumult inflicted on BPA by Donald Trump and Elon Musk, along with the uncertain outcome of potential changes to the California Independent System Operator add up to serious questions BPA must answer with transparency before issuing its final market decision," Wyden, the Oregon Democrat, said. "Foremost in that decision come May is the need for an electricity market that serves everyone in the Pacific Northwest and keeps reliability and electricity prices at the forefront."

    BPA officials, in a news conference Thursday afternoon, said they had waited years for changes to the California system operator's governance and didn't want to be forced into a corner as other utilities made market choices.

    "The longer BPA waits, the more the opportunity to chart our own course closes," Dibble said.

    She also emphasized the governance advantages the agency sees in Markets+.

    "Those are qualitative elements that we hold as very high priorities," Dibble said. "We do believe in the long run they will result in positive, quantitative benefits... because we will have a seat at the table and be able to work, to collaborate, with partners on those future design elements."

    The Public Power Council, which represents consumer-owned utilities, encouraged utilities to rally around the BPA decision and Markets+.

    "With many utilities across the Northwest and Southwest already supporting Markets+, this decision signals even greater momentum toward a broad and well-structured market that delivers reliability and cost benefits," Scott Simms, the group's CEO and executive director, said via email. "We encourage additional utilities to consider joining this effort to further enhance regional coordination and market efficiencies."

    Many energy players, though, see EDAM — bringing in the massive California energy market — as the only possibility for achieving the broadest and most beneficial market footprint. They warned that a split decision in the region would introduce new costs and reliability risks by introducing "seams" into transmission operations that would have to be overcome.

    PGE, PacifiCorp positions

    "Maintaining reliability is already challenging in some circumstances, even as we've operated under the same rules," Larry Bekkedahl, a PGE senior vice president, said via email. "BPA's decision may adversely impact all customers in the PNW, including PGE's."

    PGE highlighted that EDAM builds on the California grid operator's long-standing real-time market that brings in almost all of the West, including BPA, while Markets+ is starting from the ground up.

    PGE had joined with PacifiCorp and Seattle City Light, a municipally owned utility, in a letter earlier this week making the case for EDAM and urging Bonneville to hold off on a decision.

    "This would allow BPA to explore mechanisms to better monetize its participation in (the existing real-time market), while continuing to lead on governance reform as it considers future day-ahead market opportunities," the utilities said. "Additionally, it would delay the creation of an unavoidable, not easily managed or reversible, seam and maintain the coordination in the West that is critical to keep the lights on and costs down."

    Two groups that support the clean energy transition in the Pacific Northwest expressed disappointment at BPA's decision.

    NW Energy Coalition said it puts "every power customer in the Northwest... at risk for higher costs on their monthly bills." Renewable Northwest said "we believe it will have negative economic impacts on regional customers that have not been adequately addressed."

    Both groups noted the BPA staffing challenges that have been in the headlines in recent weeks.

    "While we disagree with this proposed decision, we continue to support BPA's employees' essential work to manage the power and resources entrusted to them by the American people, to protect our fish, wildlife and natural resources, and to keep the lights on," Nancy Hirsh, NW Energy Coalition's executive director, said in a statement.

    Portland Business Journal: Bonneville Power Administration advances controversial energy market decision


    Read more news

  • Portland Business Journal: OR, WA senators question Bonneville Power Administration on 'monumental' decision

    dam.photo

    By Pete Danko – Staff Reporter, Portland Business Journal
    Jul 25, 2024

    Oregon's and Washington's U.S. senators on Thursday called on the Bonneville Power Administration to slow its roll on a "monumental" decision the regional power behemoth could soon make.

    In a letter to BPA Administrator John Hairston, the four Democratic senators avoided stating a preference among two competing wholesale energy markets that are developing in the West. But they threw a barrage of questions at the agency and called on it "to refrain from making any draft or final decisions until there is less uncertainty and BPA can prove that any decision will provide the greatest benefit to the entire Northwest."

    The issue is whether to join a "day-ahead" market being organized by California's major grid operator, or one a regional transmission organization in the Midwest is developing.

    What a day-head market could mean
    There's widespread agreement that such a market could pave the way to more efficient use of energy resources amid the pressures of load growth, decarbonization and transmission constraints. But the scale of the benefits could hinge on how united the West's dozens of utilities and grid operators are.

    That's where the decision by BPA, which sells power from 31 federal dams and owns a big chunk of the transmission grid in the Pacific Northwest, comes into play.

    BPA staff in April recommended Markets+ from the Southwest Power Pool as its best choice. The agency said then it would release a draft record of decision in August and a final decision in November.

    Meanwhile, Oregon's two big investor-owned utilities, Portland General Electric and multistate player PacifiCorp,have thrown in with the California Independent Operator's Extended Day Ahead Market. The major IOUs in Nevada and Idaho also say they're leaning toward the EDAM.

    The senators have questions
    There's some debate over how harmful the "seam" such a split could create would be, but those who fear the outcome have clearly gotten the attention of the senators — Oregon's Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, and Washington's Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell.

    Their 14 questions to BPA reflect the concerns expressed by regional energy players such as Renewable Northwest and Angus Duncan, a former Northwest Power and Conservation Council member.

    The senators' letter also lauds "real progress" by the West-Wide Governing Pathways Initiative in addressing concerns of BPA and its public power customers about whether the EDAM can operate fairly and independently of California politics.

    Still, the senators stopped short of recommending a move toward either market.

    "Given the critical importance of this decision for the region, we want to be crystal clear: this letter should not be construed as favoring one market over the other," they wrote. "We share a strong belief that any decision of this magnitude warrants thorough evaluation of all options, including joining neither market at this time."

    Asked for comment on the letter, a BPA spokesperson provided this written statement:

    "BPA understands the magnitude of this decision and is committed to ensuring we do the right thing for our customers and the region through the deliberative process we have engaged in so far. BPA is committed to fully evaluating the benefits and mechanics of day-ahead markets to accomplish this objective."

    Portland Business Journal: 'OR, WA senators question Bonneville Power Administration on 'monumental' decision' article link

  • Post Register: 'It’s about art making a statement’

    Wil WIlkinsBy LAURA ZUCKERMAN

    news@postregister.com

    SALMON — A roadside display of signs and structures underscoring the plight of salmon and steelhead in the Columbia River Basin tie together the two passions of Wil Wilkins: art and fly-fishing.

    The billboards and sculptures Wilkins erected this year on his property north of Salmon spell out — literally and symbolically — his fervent wish to see the removal of dams that challenge migrating salmon and steelhead.

    Wilkins, a blacksmith whose metal designs have shaped lighting and other architectural elements on upscale homes, lodges and resorts in the U.S. West, said he felt compelled to objectify his concerns after decades of being hooked on fishing.

    “For a number of years, I’ve been extracting without giving back,” he said. “Then I spoke to a biologist, who encouraged me to educate myself on the issues threatening the fish.”

    Wilkins’ protest is directed at the four dams on the lower Snake River in Washington state that are used to generate power and for navigation. Competing interests, including salmon advocates, power companies and farmers, are locked in an ongoing and historic debate about the value of the dams. For Wilkins, the question is settled, giving rise to his artistic and political demonstration.

    “I’m doing what I can to help raise awareness and the best way to do that is through art,” Wilkins said.

    To do so, he employs words and images to spark interest and discussion. A large sign decorated with an outsized steel fish in high relief argues for removal of the dams and exhorts viewers to “Save our wild steelhead & salmon” while supplying website addresses for advocacy groups.

    His most provocative piece is a decommissioned power pole crossed by a bleeding fish in a vertical structure that appears to elicit the gestures of cutout figures of a man and a girl.

    It is the girl that most concerns Wilkins. The child is representative of coming generations and the figure was placed in the sculpture because Wilkins worries about the fishes’ fate and whether, in coming years, he will be able to share the joy of fishing for them with his granddaughter, now a toddler.

    “We need to save these fish for future generations,” he said. He predicted greater peril for the fish if those who love them fail to fight for their survival.

    Wilkins knows his display may trigger opposition in some quarters but that is unlikely to stop him. No one has openly objected to the project on his property but Wilkins is aware not all who see the display are going to agree with his sentiments. The only negative reaction was relayed anecdotally and involved the comment that the signs and structures were “inappropriate,” Wilkins said.

    The artist welcomes the role of agitator for a cause he considers crucial — and he is not alone. Steven Hatcher, folk and traditional arts director for Idaho Commission on the Arts, said there is a long history of artists making waves in the United States for political, social and economic reasons. Examples range from Latin American wall murals in Los Angeles to the songs about social justice by Woody Guthrie, he said.

    From Hatcher’s vantage point, the power of folk art is its subtlety, creating folk life, which he describes as the art of the everyday performed by everyday people practicing their traditions.

    “A community performs something over and over again because it contains value and meaning,” he said.

    “The outward expression of value and meaning indicates a deep engagement with a subject. Deep engagement with a subject contributes, for better or for worse, to the beautiful dynamic of the human condition,” Hatcher added.

    Meantime, Wilkins is on a mission. Ultimately, he intends to expand the number of his fish-related artworks, fronting his property with a sculpture garden that just happens to double as a call to ecological care.

    “It’s about art making a statement,” he said.

  • Post Register: Dismal returns: 43 sockeye make the journey from the Pacific to central Idaho in 2021

    By Jerry Painter
    September 28, 2021

    23alaska sockeyeThis year 43 sockeye salmon completed the 900-mile journey from the Pacific Ocean to their nursery lakes near Stanley in central Idaho after braving especially difficult river conditions.

    The dismal return was helped somewhat when Idaho Fish and Game stepped in and trapped 201 of the endangered fish at the Lower Granite Dam, the last dam on the lower Snake River, and trucked them to the Eagle Fish Hatchery west of Boise earlier this summer. The extraordinary move was taken when the river water temperatures were deemed too warm to support the migrating fish.

    Despite so few fish returning to spawn, Fish and Game said it will have about 2,750 adult sockeye available to naturally spawn in Redfish and Pettit lakes or to replenish its hatcheries. The other fish will come from captive broodstock raised in hatcheries as an “insurance policy” when the sockeye returns are especially low.

    Roger Phillips, public information supervisor with Fish and Game, said 2021 was especially challenging for sockeye and he compared it to the conditions from 2015.

    “It’s not our goal to short stop these things at Lower Granite (Dam) every year,” Phillips said of trapping and trucking 201 sockeye. “That’s going to be only when we have situations that are pretty dire. Like we saw in 2015 and like we saw this year.”

    Normally, the sockeye would swim on their own to Sawtooth Basin. Biologists praise those fish who make it all the way on their own power.

    “Our preference would have been to allow those fish to complete the last leg of their journey on their own, because from a genetic perspective, sockeye that make it back to the Sawtooth Basin have a level of fitness that we want in our captive breeding program,” said Lance Hebdon, Fisheries Bureau Chief. “But based on river conditions, trucking fish from Lower Granite Dam to Eagle was a necessary tradeoff to increase survival.”

    In a normal year, about 50% of tagged sockeye who reach Lower Granite Dam make it to the Sawtooth Basin. This year, because of poor river conditions, only 6.7% of the tagged fish made it.

    For 2021, Fish and Game placed 1,112 sockeye spawners in Redfish Lake and 99 in Pettit Lake. The rest of the spawners were used to replenish hatcheries.

    “The goals for the Eagle and (other) hatcheries combined is to produce around 1.1 million eggs to replenish the captive broodstocks and transfer and rear at Fish and Game’s Springfield Hatchery, which is expected to grow about 1 million young sockeye to be released to migrate to the ocean in the future,” Phillips said. The Springfield Hatchery is west of Fort Hall.

    Idaho’s sockeye salmon were placed on the Federal Endangered Species list in 1991. The total number of sockeye that returned from 1991-99 was 23, including two years when no sockeye returned. At that time a captive broodstock program was started.

    Idaho has two hatcheries devoted to sockeye — the Eagle Hatchery and Springfield Hatchery. Of the fish that return, some go to the hatcheries for broodstock while others are released to spawn naturally. From 2010 to 2019, the annual average sockeye returning to Stanley Basin has been 558 fish, Fish and Game reports. In the distant past, sockeye returned to Idaho in the tens of thousands. Lately, the number tends to bounce up or down depending on a variety of conditions.

    “As always, it’s difficult, if not impossible, to know what challenges sockeye will face in the future,” Phillips said. “In order to thrive, salmon need good rearing and migration conditions in Idaho’s lakes and rivers, adequate food in the ocean, and cool rivers for their return to Idaho. When all three are available, the fish have shown amazing resiliency, and they are capable of bouncing back and returning in large numbers.”

    Phillips said should the drought continue into next year with warm “lethal” water conditions, Fish and Game may have to step in again to trap and truck the sockeye past Lower Granite Dam.

    “We found with steelhead that if the Columbia River is warm, they’ll tuck into the tributaries in cooler waters hanging out there until the river cools down, then they’ll come back and complete their migration,” he said. “But we don’t know what sockeye do when they’re faced with that. They’re a smaller fish and have a narrower window to get up here and spawn. We don’t know how they react to warm water. That’s why we hedged our bets this year and pulled some of these fish out so that we know that we have some.”

  • Post Register: Salmon work group closer to making recommendations

    salmonBy Jerry Painter
    July 22, 2020

    After about a year of regular meetings, officials say Idaho Gov. Brad Little’s work group on salmon and steelhead recovery is moving into a new phase of drafting policy recommendations as it works toward a
    December deadline.

    “What I told the group is that the governor is very impressed with how far they’ve come along in the year that they’ve been put together,”
    said Stan Eaton, policy director and counsel for Little. “They’ve had
    to balance two competing forces. One being that these collaboratives
    take time to develop relationships, to develop trust, to be able to get
    out any sort of recommendations. The competing issue is that everybody
    recognizes that salmon and steelhead runs are declining and time is of
    the essence.... It’s been challenging, but I think they’ve done quite
    well.”

    The work group has been tasked to collaborate on understanding the
    problem and coming up with recommendations to restore salmon and
    steelhead populations that have fallen in the recent decade to less
    than 25 percent of average. This year’s returning numbers to Idaho have
    also been dismal to the point of canceling spring salmon fishing
    seasons.

    “Work group members dug deeper to discuss areas where we agree and
    where we don’t. We have a lot of momentum around policies that will do
    much for Idaho’s wild salmon and steelhead, but there’s still a long
    way to go,” said Justin Hayes, work group member and the Idaho
    Conservation League’s executive director.

    The work group has separated into four sub-groups to consider habitat,
    harvests, hatcheries, and hydropower. Group members have been studying
    the issues and working on consensus recommendations to submit to the
    governor by year’s end.

    “They’re kind of in that transitioning phase,” Eaton said. “Over the
    last year, it has been information overload. They kind of have to
    recognize when they have to put down the paper, turn off the internet
    and start writing, because they could be learning about this issue
    because it is so complex, for the next 10 years and still not have a
    full grasp on it.”

    Eaton said policy recommendations agreed upon by the work group will
    get the governor’s backing. One idea that lacks consensus is breaching
    the dams on the lower Snake River.

    “I’m 100 percent confident that they’re going to send us
    recommendations that the governor will agree with that we can act on,”
    he said.

    “Early on the governor said he was not interested in a recommendation
    dealing with (dam) breach because he knew there would not be any
    consensus,” Eaton said. “We know that that lack of consensus still
    remains.”

    Eaton said budgeting may be an issue and some recommendations, such as
    fixes that are downstream and out of Idaho, may be out of the state’s
    control.

    Stakeholders in the meetings took time to hear input from the public on
    salmon and steelhead recovery issues. Several comments were from
    business people directly affected by a lack of fish.

    “Last summer, my wife and I bought this (rafting) business and quickly
    became aware of how severe the dwindling fishing opportunities are that
    were part of our permits for the outfitting business,” Matt Rigsby,
    owner of Kookaburra Rafting in Salmon, told the work group. “Where the
    salmon runs were once legendary and the water boiled with the countless
    numbers of salmon and steelhead, most of the young people here haven’t
    even seen a single wild-caught salmon. What was once the backbone of
    our community is quickly turning into a legend because of the dams
    downstream of us that is out of our control and we hope that we all can
    work together to eliminate these dams and let nature start to heal the
    wounds.”

    “What has become quite clear to me at this point is that salmon and
    steelhead need a river,” Idaho Adventures of Salmon owner Kristin Troy,
    said. “And as a society, we need to address an antiquated power system
    in dire need of an overhaul at the very same time that the survival of
    salmon and steelhead is at stake. Timing is everything, and this is our
    greatest opportunity to end our paralysis and reimagine a system that
    we ourselves built. We have been high centered on this for way, way,
    too long.”

    The work group is scheduled to meet next on Aug. 26 and 27 via Zoom
    webinar.

  • Post Register: Without redoubled conservation efforts 'the trajectory is clear' for wild salmon

    October 26, 2019

    By Laura Zuckerman

    Moonhouse FreeTheSnake aerials 078Salmon, ID — The decline of wild salmon and steelhead in the state and the prospect of a future with no fishing seasons for the anadromous fish would be a severe blow to the economies and identities of rural river communities, the head of the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association said last week.

    Speaking at a forum Tuesday that drew more than 100 area residents, Aaron Lieberman said strategies to recover the iconic fish have not been tainted by ill-intent or poorly thought out, yet they have proved ineffective.

    “If we don’t do something differently and bigger, the trajectory is clear,” he said, forecasting a loss of heritage and tradition in towns such as Salmon.

    “As far as the people I represent are concerned — outfitters and guides — the disappearance of these fish would be catastrophic within the industry,” he added.

    Lieberman was one of several speakers focusing on the uncertain fate of the anadromous fish during a panel discussion — “Salmon: Our Fish, Our Past, Our Future” — brought by the Lemhi County Historical Society and Museum, the Sacajawea Center and Trout Unlimited River of No Return Chapter.

    Lieberman said sport fishing in Idaho translates to hundreds of millions of dollars a year. He called for a show of hands from those in the audience who were either outfitters or guides or were otherwise associated in a demonstration that indicated a majority with such affiliations.

    Fish advocates — and a raft of scientific studies — for the most part place the blame on hydroelectric dams tied to Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) for Idaho’s declining salmon and steelhead runs, which also are the focus of a workgroup called for earlier this year by Gov. Brad Little.

    Young salmon and steelhead embark on an extended journey from their birth streams in Idaho to rivers such as the Salmon and the Snake and down the Columbia River in Oregon and Washington to reach the Pacific Ocean.

    The ancient migration of the fish — born in fresh water but which undergo a metamorphosis that allows them to live and feed in saltwater — once took just days but now requires months as the weakening, coldwater salmonids attempt to overcome such challenges as the dams, slow-moving reservoirs that make them easy prey for predators and dewatering of streams for irrigation and other purposes.

    If they successfully navigate their way to the Pacific, the fish may mature and undergo physiological changes that allow them to engage in an upstream migration to the freshwater streams where they were born in order to spawn.

    The loss in the state of robust salmon and steelhead fisheries has unfolded over the decades even as the BPA has provided more than $16 billion to help mitigate adverse effects on fish and wildlife in the region.

    BPA Idaho/Nevada Constituent Account Executive John Williams said the Pacific Northwest is facing two interconnected crises: affordable and reliable energy and reversing the decline of wild salmon and steelhead.

    The self-financed federal entity sells electric and transmission services to utilities that serve customers across the Pacific Northwest and beyond.

    “We have to balance competing needs and we hear it from all sides, including customers and conservation folks,” Williams said.

    Cleve Davis, a Shoshone-Bannock Tribal citizen and editor of the Journal of Native Sciences, urged for local campaigns designed to underscore to state and U.S. leaders the importance of saving fish that have immense cultural, spiritual and practical value to Native Americans and others.

    “Speak up, stand up and take action,” he said, adding that successful recovery efforts must involve indigenous peoples.

    Davis said the city of Salmon should develop a policy statement regarding wild salmon and its future that clearly outlines both the community’s stance and its plan.

    Wayne Johnson, owner of Salmon River Rafting Co., said in an interview after the discussion that his operation has suspended steelhead trips on the Main Salmon for the past four years due to lack of fish.

    “We’re very concerned; we’d love to see the salmon and steelhead numbers increase,” said Johnson, who estimated spending by the company and its guests at tens of thousands of dollars annually.

    The event last week was the first in a series of four educational programs offered in cooperation with and sponsored in large part by the Smithsonian Institute and the Idaho Humanities Council, according to Lemhi County Historical Society President Hope Benedict.

  • Press Release: House Bill To Restore Science and Common Sense to Federal Salmon Efforts

    Capitol-Building

    Taxpayer groups, fishermen, businesses, clean energy advocates and conservation organizations applaud bi-partisan legislation - H.R. 2111

    WASHINGTON— Today, Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) and Rep. Tom Petri (R-WI), joined by 10 additional co-sponsors from across the nation, introduced the Salmon Solutions and Planning Act (H.R. 2111) in the House of Representatives. If passed, the bill would provide Congress and federal agencies with up-to-date, thorough information about how best to protect and restore wild salmon and steelhead in the Pacific Northwest’s Columbia and Snake River Basin while also supporting local communities and saving taxpayer dollars. Download the fact sheet.

    Rep. McDermott called for an approach that puts all restoration options for Columbia and Snake River salmon on the table, including an analysis of lower Snake River dam removal. Rep. McDermott stated, “The time to act is now. Billions of public and private dollars have been spent on failed recovery projects that put politics over sound science.  Failing to act would further jeopardize our struggling salmon populations that provide thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars in economic benefit for the nation.  We must work together to create an innovative restoration strategy that saves this national treasure.”

    H.R. 2111’s main purpose is to chart an effective and efficient course to restore salmon based on the best available science. The bill calls for the protection and recovery of Columbia and Snake River salmon populations to self-sustaining and harvestable levels. It also aims to address the need for development of renewable energy and an improved freight transportation system.

    "More salmon mean more jobs, for multiple industries, including both commercial and recreational fishing,” said Zeke Grader, Executive Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA). "Tens of thousands of fishing jobs have been put in jeopardy by doing the wrong things over and over in the Columbia Basin. This bill would help everyone chart a science-based pathway out of two decades of Columbia River chaos and conflict."

    H.R. 2111’s introduction comes at a critical juncture for Columbia and Snake River salmon. The Obama Administration to date has echoed the previous administration’s failed salmon policies, and wild salmon numbers remain dangerously low, with most populations hovering at about 2% of historic levels.

    Many in the Northwest, including former and current governors and senators, have called on the administration to convene a salmon solutions table that brings together key stakeholders to discuss all scientifically-credible options to help recover endangered salmon, and enhance the region’s economy while saving taxpayer dollars. The studies authorized in H.R. 2111 would provide information needed to make such stakeholder discussions even more successful.

    "The current efforts have been extraordinarily expensive for the taxpayer and are still failing to turn around the populations of these wild salmon,” said Rep. Petri.  “Given the deficits our country is facing, it's time to take a fresh look at which approaches will be both fiscally sustainable and will ensure that the wild salmon of this region are able to survive and thrive for future generations."

    The bill’s introduction occurs as parties await a court ruling by U.S. District Court Judge James Redden regarding the legality of the Obama administration’s salmon plan for the Columbia and Snake Rivers.

    Contact:
    Amy Baird, Communications Director, Save Our Wild Salmon
    (503) 230-0421, ext. 13, media@wildsalmon.org
    Glen Spain, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations
    (541) 689-2000, FISH1IFR@aol.com

  • Public News Service: Columbia River Basin Salmon in Hot Water

    September 9, 2020LCR Graph 9.2.20

    PORTLAND, Ore. -- Salmon in the Columbia River basin have been feeling the heat -- and experts say it's pushing fish species to the brink of extinction.



    Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director of Columbia Riverkeeper, said temperatures in the Columbia this summer have been above 68 degrees, a critical threshold for cold-water salmon that can lead to massive die-offs.



    "If we had a spill of oil that killed 90% of a salmon run, people would be up in arms," said VandenHeuvel. "But it's happening silently because hot water is flying under the radar."



    VandenHeuvel said the dams in the basin are the main cause of warmer water. The Washington state Department of Ecology has notified federal managers that the dams are in violation of water quality standards for temperature.



    Jay Julius is a commercial fisherman and member of the Lummi Nation. He said high water temperatures have devastated salmon runs in the past.



    The fish are an important nutrition source for Northwest tribes as well, and Julius noted they have a deep meaning for Lummi Nation members.



    "We've been farmers of the rivers and farmers of the sea since, for us, the beginning of time," said Julius. "That's really who we are, and it's our identity. Culture is fish and fish is culture."



    Julius said the rivers weren't created to be turned into lakes from the dams. He said he believes it's important to listen to the people indigenous to this region.



    "It doesn't take rocket science to figure out the solutions to fix the wrongs that we've done, and that we've witnessed," said Julius. "I think we all need to come together and just use common sense."


    VandenHeuvel added the hot water is an urgent situation, especially on the Snake River.



    "Snake River sockeye are hanging on for dear life right now," said VandenHeuvel. "And dam removal of the four lower Snake River dams is necessary to save that species from extinction."



    But an Army Corps of Engineers' Environmental Impact Statement released this summer doesn't recommend removing four dams on the lower Snake River to help endangered fish species.

    Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service - OR

    Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service - OR

  • Public News Service: Gov. Inslee Report Weighs Future of Snake River

    Eric Tegethoff

    December 20, 2019columbia

    SEATTLE - A report on the future of the Snake River in southeast Washington comes out today.



    Listen to the radio story here.

    The Lower Snake River Dams Stakeholder draft report relies on perspectives from more than 100 stakeholders and more than 3,500 online responders. While there are no recommendations, it could be an influential document on the future of the dams.



    It's designed to increase understanding on both sides of the issue. Amy Grondin, a commercial fisher in Port Townsend, was interviewed for the report and says the salmon industry continues to be hurt because of the dams' effect on fish migration.



    "Over the last 50 years, the commercial fishing fleet has been asked to compromise and to not fish and cut back their numbers, and annually we see what we're allowed to catch become less and less," says Grondin. "We're really at a tipping point for the fish and the fleets."

    

Supporters of the dams say they're important for cheap energy and shipping costs for farmers.



    Gov. Jay Inslee called for the report in response to recommendations from his Southern Resident Orca Task Force. The whales have suffered from a lack of salmon due to the dams.



    There will be three public meetings on the report in January and public comment is accepted through January 24.



    The southeast Washington dams also have effects upstream in Idaho, where salmon and steelhead go to spawn. Aaron Lieberman is the executive director of the Idaho Outfitters and Guides Association and a member of Idaho Gov. Brad Little's task force on salmon recovery.



    Lieberman says their low numbers largely impact rural Idaho.



    "Around 80% of resident outfitters in Idaho live in communities of around 450 or fewer," says Lieberman. "So the impacts of diminished returns of salmon and steelhead to Idaho are being felt and have been felt in particular in rural Idaho. And without rural Idaho, what is Idaho?"



    Tom France is regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation's Northwest programs. He notes more than 17 billion dollars has been spent over the past two decades on salmon restoration projects in the Columbia River Basin, but they haven't helped.

    

"Now we're at a point where we really need to chart a new path or we're going to lose these fish for all time," says France. "And I think most people in the Pacific Northwest want to keep fish a part of their future and their children's future, and that we're going to find a way to do that."

    https://www.publicnewsservice.org/

  • Public News Service: Historic Step Forward for Snake River Dam Replacement in WA Budget

    Salmon in waterBy Eric Tegethoff, Producer
    May 18, 2023

    Funding in Washington state's budget is pushing efforts forward to remove four lower Snake River dams in order to save salmon.

    Lawmakers committed more than $7 million to begin the transition planning process for the four dams in southeast Washington. The dams have been a site of contention because of their effects on the dwindling population of salmon.

    Tanya Riordan, policy and advocacy director for Save Our Wild Salmon, said past studies and reports have called for dam removal, and the federal government sees the new funding efforts as proof the state is ready to take action.

    "Although the decision to remove the dams will be made by the federal government -- they're federal dams -- these measures do ensure that Washington state will be prepared to effectively replace the transportation, energy and irrigation infrastructure," Riordan explained.

    Last year, Gov. Jay Inslee and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., released a report on replacement of the four dams' services, including barging, hydropower and irrigation provided to nearby agriculture. Riordan believes the new funding measure follows through on their promise. Inslee signed the budget this week.

    Erin Farris-Olsen, regional executive director for the National Wildlife Federation, said salmon are resilient and have come back to the Snake River, albeit in smaller numbers. She stressed quick action is necessary to save them.

    "We're moving at the pace of our own readiness as humans more so than we're thinking about the ticking of the clock in terms of salmon extinction," Farris-Olsen contended.

    Riordan noted more than $26 billion have been spent on mitigation efforts to recover salmon and keep the dams in place, but they have not worked, and she added there are a number of advantages to transitioning away from them.

    "We upgrade and modernize our energy system and transportation and irrigation and the state is benefited and communities will be benefited significantly through this process," Riordan asserted. "We'll save salmon, and we will uphold our treaty responsibilities to tribal nations."

    https://www.publicnewsservice.org/2023-05-18/salmon-recovery/historic-step-forward-for-snake-river-dam-replacement-in-wa-budget/a84510-1

  • Public News Service: Idaho Governor Assembles Diverse Groups to Plan Salmon Recovery

    June 27, 2019

    By Eric Tegethoff

    Ice.Harbor.DamBoise, Idaho – A diverse group of stakeholders will be in Boise on Friday to develop a plan to save Idaho's salmon and steelhead trout.  The gathering was established at the behest of Gov. Brad Little. At an environmental conference at Boise State in April, Little instructed the Office of Species Conservation to establish the Salmon Workgroup. This Friday's meeting will be the group's first.  State Sen. Dan Johnson of Lewiston is part of the newly established task force. "It's very important that we have these discussions with such a large, diverse group and try to find some collaboration,” Johnson states. “That word sometimes gets overplayed, but certainly I think we need to try to find some agreement on maybe what some of the reasons are for the decline in the populations." Groups involved include environmental organizations such as the Idaho Conservation League and The Nature Conservancy, tribal groups, Idaho Power, organizations representing grain producers and farmers and sporting groups.  Salmon numbers have been on the decline season over season, and this year is no exception.  According to the state's Department of Fish and Game, the chinook salmon count to date at the Lower Granite Dam is about a third of the five-year average at this time of year. Brian Brooks, executive director of the Idaho Wildlife Federation, is part of the work group. He says he appreciates that Little is not shying away from this complicated issue.  Brooks notes it would be devastating to see these fish disappear from the Salmon River. "It's unacceptable to allow the namesake of that river to go extinct,” he states. “I mean, people and communities rely on the return of our salmon and our steelhead, and if those fish go extinct, we are killing parts of those communities." At the same conference where Little announced the work group, U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho advocated for strong action to save salmon and steelhead, including evaluating the impact of dams on the fish species.  Brooks agrees everything should be on the table, but adds that victory isn't salmon returning at any cost. "A victory is salmon returning to Idaho and everybody impacted by the changes of Columbia and Snake river management are made whole,” he stresses. “We can't leave anybody behind in this process." The meeting is scheduled for Friday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Idaho State Museum in Boise and is open to the public.

  • Public News Service: In DC, Focus on Fish, NW Energy Grid

    Salmon Energy and Climate windMarch 7, 2023
    By Eric Tegethoff, Producer

    Northwest energy experts and conservation leaders are in Washington, D.C. to urge policymakers to invest in modernizing the region's grid. Updating the energy system will provide for increased demand in the Northwest and also help endangered species like salmon, they said.

    Nancy Hirsh, Northwest Energy Coalition Executive Director, said the Bonneville Power Administration is a key player and urges the agency to help develop new transmission and energy storage and build new renewable energy resources.

    "It's going to help the region be more resilient, create a more flexible power system and take pressure off of the federal hydro system, which is going to be better for fish," she said.

    As summers get hotter from climate change, the Northwest is expected to see a 50% increase in demand by 2050. One of the biggest impediment for salmon in the region is four lower Snake River dams. Experts in D.C. hope to build on momentum from Washington Senator Patty Murray and Governor Jay Inslee's report from last year that provided a roadmap for how the dams could be removed and the energy grid modernized.

    While some people have argued the lower Snake River dams provide valuable services such as irrigation and barge transportation, Erin Farris-Olsen, the Northern Rockies and Prairies regional executive director for the National Wildlife Federation said they do not provide much energy to the region, and called for a vision for the Northwest's future that includes modernizing its infrastructure.

    "The question is not just about recovering salmon but defining a future where both salmon and communities can exist," she said.

    Hirsh called on the Bonneville Power Administration to be more forward-thinking in its conservation approach instead of protecting the existing energy system.

    "We're interested in thinking about what's that future system look like and how do we start the investments needed today to get where we want to go so that the fish have a chance?," she said.

  • Public News Service: NW Salmon Battle Doesn't Bode Well for Other Endangered Species

    Public News Service - May 21st, 2010 public.news.logoPORTLAND, Ore. - It is Endangered Species Day and advocates for native Northwest salmon say the timing is ironic. On Thursday, the federal government submitted what it calls a "legally and scientifically sound" Biological Opinion (BiOp); a plan to protect endangered wild fish. Groups that have already challenged the previous BiOps in court say this one is not much better. In their view, the feds have ignored some studies in favor of others, and failed to take climate change into account. Jim Martin, former chief of fisheries for the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Department, says he's disappointed in the new plan. Listen to the Public News Service story here.

  • Public News Service: Sockeye Salmon: Canary in Coal Mine for Health of NW Rivers

    Eric Tegethoff
    May 26, 2020Sockeye in River

    BOISE, Idaho -- Sockeye salmon offspring are making their way from central Idaho to the Pacific Ocean.

    Many people in the Northwest see the 1,000-mile journey as miraculous. But the tiny smolt face a number of challenges and the species is near extinction.

    Andy Munter is the owner of Backwoods Mountain Sports in Ketchum and an Idaho Rivers United board member. He says sockeye are the "canary in the coal mine" for the health of the river.

    "If we know that they're coming back, we know that we have a relatively free-flowing river, relatively cool river, relatively free of pesticides and some of those other problems," he states. "But when they don't come back, we know we have problems in that whole corridor."

    Idaho's natural-origin sockeye, or sockeye born in Redfish Lake, are at drastically low numbers. Munter says only 14 returned from the ocean last year.

    He says one challenge for sockeye and other endangered fish species is the four dams on the lower Snake River, which the fish use to get to and from the ocean.

    Combined with a warming climate, Munter says water temperatures behind the dams could spell doom for more sockeye in the future.

    "They stop migrating back up when temperature gets into the high 60s and all die in some of the lower reservoirs like happened a few years ago," he explains.

    The executive director of the Idaho Wildlife Federation, Brian Brooks, says impediments such as the dams and warmer waters have drastically changed fish migration. The journey from Redfish Lake to the ocean used to take two days.

    "Now, it can take upwards to 40 days to try to find the current and get their way to the ocean," he points out.

    Brooks says even decent returns of salmon and steelhead can account for a quarter of rural river communities' income, meaning healthier rivers would support Idaho economically.

    Brooks says the fish are resilient and will return if they have the chance.

    "People in the Northwest -- we should be in the business of preserving miracles, and we have one right in front of us," he stresses. "And if we do nothing it will go away. That's what the sockeye are telling us -- that all the species are headed that way if we don't do anything."

  • Puget Sound Institute: Some orcas extend their stay in Puget Sound; others visit capture site for first time in years

    Whales in Penn Cove scaled Kat MartinL pod visits Whidbey Island’s Penn Cove, an infamous capture site, for the first time in more than 50 years. Photo: Kat MartinBy Christopher Dunagan
    November 7, 2024

    Southern Resident killer whales have been hanging out in Puget Sound much longer than normal this fall, probably because of an unusually large run of chum salmon coming into Central and South Puget Sound, experts say.

    As of today, J pod has remained in Puget Sound for 19 straight days with the exception of a two-day excursion into Canadian waters this past weekend, according to Howard Garrett of Orca Network. K and L pods also have been around, with L pod making a surprising visit to the infamous orca-capture grounds in Penn Cove for what may be the first time in more than 50 years.

    On a much sadder note, K26, a 31-year-old orca named Lobo has been reported missing and likely deceased by the Center for Whale Research. Also, there have been no further signs of an emaciated calf, designated L128 (Our Water Ways, Oct. 11). These two deaths would bring the Southern Resident population down to 72, matching the record low for this orca population, which has been the focus of unsuccessful recovery efforts.

    In a typical year, the fish-eating Southern Residents come and go, feeding on fall chum that arrive in Puget Sound after chinook salmon — their favored food — become less available. This occurs as spring and summer Chinook runs decline in northern Puget Sound and British Columbia.

    This year, J pod seems to have settled in, generally hanging out in feeding grounds within the so-called Possession Triangle south of Whidbey Island and north of a line between Kingston and Edmonds. In this area, they are able to catch and consume fish bound for streams farther south.

    “By all indications, there has been a lot of foraging,” Howie told me. “We’ve had reports from the water of chum jumping.”

    Fisheries biologists with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife recently doubled their estimates of the number of chum that will return to streams in Central and South Puget Sound. The preseason forecast, used to set fishing seasons, anticipated a return of 486,562 chum to Central/South streams. That’s more than half of the total Puget Sound chum run, estimated early this year at 818,793. The 10-year average is 1.2 million.

    The latest estimate just for Central/South is 900,000 chum, based largely on “test fisheries” conducted near Kingston. Meanwhile, Hood Canal, originally estimated at 254,900 chum, has been updated to 1.04 million. That Hood Canal estimate alone exceeds the entire preseason estimate for all of Puget Sound, and that waterway alone falls just short of the 10-year average for the entire Sound.

    The reasons for the increased numbers of chum are not well understood, but are likely the result of cooler ocean waters, increased food supply and other favorable conditions after the fish leave their natal streams. A La Niña phase in the oceanic cycle, called the El Ñino Southern Oscillation, has been reported as favorable to salmon growing to size in the ocean from August 2020 to January 2023, according to experts who thought they had already accounted for those conditions.

    “While we are getting a better understanding of what variables to look at when doing forecasts, we still have a lot to learn,” noted Kyle Adicks, intergovernmental salmon manager for WDFW, “and there are still a lot of short and long-term oscillations in salmon survival, abundance, productivity, etc., that we don’t have a handle on.”

    Increased numbers of chum have been seen moving upstream throughout the region, thanks to recent rains. As more fish home in on their natal streams, we could see the whales moving farther south. More salmon in the streams suggests that this is a good time for humans to go out and watch salmon swimming and spawning at public-viewing locations throughout the region. WDFW has produced a webpage that offers viewing tips and a map of Puget Sound with locations where salmon can be seen.

    Jon Oleyar, a biologist with the Suquamish Tribe who counts fish in the streams, confirmed that this year’s chum run is surprisingly large. Chico Creek, perhaps the largest chum stream in Puget Sound, has good numbers of fish in the mainstem and far up into most of its tributaries, he said. This may turn out to be the largest run on record.

    It appears from various accounts that the number of coho salmon also are up this year. Coho often enter the streams about the same time as chum, but they may go upstream earlier or later depending on streamflows, to which they seem to respond more readily than chum.

    While resident killer whales prefer Chinook salmon, studies have shown that they will eat chum and coho when these fish are plentiful. So far, the whales seem to be finding enough salmon in the Possession Triangle, although J pod made at least one trip as far south as Seattle in October. In past years, the whales have been known to go south in search of food, occasionally passing under the Tacoma Narrows Bridge into South Puget Sound.

    To watch the whales from shore, check out reports on Orca Network Community Group, which gathers sighting information from all sorts of observers. Locations to view whales when present are shown on the sighting map.

    Orca observers were pleased and somewhat amazed this past Sunday when L pod went up Saratoga Passage and entered Penn Cove near the Whidbey Island town of Coupeville. This is where seven orcas were captured for the aquarium trade in 1970, with an additional three captured there in 1971. Among them was a young whale named Lolita or Tokitae, who was taken to an aquarium in Miami, where she died last year. She was the last of the many Puget Sound whales in captivity.

    Until Sunday, the whales had never returned to Penn Cove, as far as anyone knows, although they have been seen in nearly every other bay and inlet throughout Puget Sound, according to Howie, who noticed that L pod’s behavior in Penn Cove was noticeably different from the foraging activity of J pod in the Possession Triangle.

    “L pod seemed to be exploring Penn Cove in large groups with multiple spy hops and breaches, and high speed porpoising from place to place.” Howie wrote on Orca Network’s Facebook page. “Typical foraging behavior wasn’t reported or photographed.”

    Among the L pod whales was L25, a female named Ocean Sun estimated to be 96 years old. She is said to be the only orca still alive who could have been among the whales that were rounded up in Penn Cove years ago.

    “So, I wonder,” Howie continued, “what were they doing there? Did L25 share her memories of those traumatic chases with bombs into Penn Cove and the many nets and removal of their young, never to be seen again? Were the others, all of whom were born after 1971, aware that those terrible events happened there? We can only wonder.”

    Kat Martin, who photographed the whales from shore, said she was happy to witness history in the making. Watch a video she made of the experience on YouTube.

    “For the first time in over 50 years, the southern resident orcas made their way into Penn Cove,” she wrote on Facebook. “L Pod gave us a lovely look as they came in. We were all in complete shock with each minute that passed with them inside the cove… We will never forget this! Nearly one year ago to the day, I was watching J Pod travel through Quartermaster Harbor on Vashon Island, another place the whales are not known to travel to. How incredible that I got to witness history once again!”

    After Sunday’s visit to Penn Cove, the L pod whales returned on Tuesday, according to observers. As of this morning, a number of J pod whales left the Possession Triangle, swam south past Kingston and were off Bainbridge Island, where they were seen from the shore and from at least two state ferries.

    Puget Sound Institute: Some orcas extend their stay in Puget Sound; others visit capture site for first time in years

  • Q13 Fox: Calls to breach Snake River dams to save Northwest orcas grow louder

    October 18th, 2018

    Watch the Q13 Fox story online here.

    screenshot.Q13breachdamsTACOMA, Wash.  — Calls to breach four hydroelectric dams in Washington state have grown louder in recent months as the plight of critically endangered Northwest orcas has captured global attention.

    Some argue the best way to get more salmon to the starving whales is to tear down four dams on the Lower Snake River, a tributary of the Columbia River, to help migrating fish.

    But federal agencies and others have pushed back, saying the dams provide benefits to the region in low-cost hydropower, navigation and recreation.

    Breaching the dams has long been contentious, but it's gained renewed attention as the orcas have hit the lowest numbers in more than three decades. The whales struggle from pollution, boat noise and lack of chinook salmon, which have been declining because of dams, habitat loss and overfishing. Just 74 animals remain in the small group.

    A task force called by Gov. Jay Inslee is prioritizing a list of potential solutions to address those three threats. At a meeting Thursday, there was little consensus on whether the group should recommend that the governor convene stakeholders to discuss issues related to possible future removal of the dams.

    Ken Balcomb, a scientist with the Center for Whale Research, who supports dam breaching, told the group that punting on the issue won't help the orcas. "They're reaching the bottom of their barrel," he said. "We have to move the ball forward. The time is now."

    A number of whale and fisheries scientists have urged the task force to recommend breaching the dams and spilling more water over Columbia and Snake river dams to help salmon. Many who have commented have also supported the idea.

    But dam supporters say the structures provide carbon-free electricity and support barging on the Snake River that moves millions of tons of cargo.

    "The dams along that river are the lifeblood of those communities," Tom Davis, government relations director with the Washington Farm Bureau. He called the talk over dams "a distraction" that continues to divide the state.

    Some say dam removal could be part of a long-term solution but note that more immediate actions could boost salmon, such as removing smaller dams or increasing habitat protections.

    "Everything has to be on the table," said state Sen. Kevin Ranker, an Orcas Island Democrat who supports dam removal but said more discussions would need to take place. Meanwhile, he said the state can move quickly on other actions, including creating a "no-go zone" that restricts vessels around feeding whales.

    Other ideas being weighed by the group include reducing boat noise around the orcas; creating a permit system for commercial whale watching trips; protecting habitat for chinook salmon and the smaller forage fish that they eat; boosting production of hatchery fish; and spilling more water over Columbia and Snake river dams.

    "There is no one magic solution to recovery of southern resident killer whales," said Rob Williams, a Pew Fellow in marine conservation and co-founder of Oceans Initiative. "The three main threats that the whales are facing are inextricably linked, so recovery actions need to be linked too."

    Federal agencies are currently studying dam breaching as one of many options to aid salmon recovery in the Columbia River basin after a federal judge in 2016 ordered a new plan and told the federal government to consider breaching one or more of the four lower Snake River dams. That environmental review won't be complete until 2021.

    Officials with the Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the four dams, and Bonneville Power Administration, which markets the power, said the structures provide low-cost electricity and adds reliability to the entire system.

    The dams produce an average of 1,000 megawatts of power a year, or about 5 percent of electricity generated in the Pacific Northwest, and account for about 12 percent of BPA's power.

    A number of conservation, fishing and other groups say dam removal represents the greatest opportunity to boost salmon runs and that planning must begin now. They note that the two Snake River runs are among 15 priority stocks of chinook salmon for orcas, and increasing those runs would be a big step forward.

    Michael Milstein, a spokesman with NOAA Fisheries, said those Snake River runs are important but not in isolation. The whales "depend on a number of stocks up and down the West Coast over the course of the year and they're all important," he said, adding that returns to the Snake and Columbia rivers have been up in the last 10 years. "We do think that the whales have access to the same volume of fish that they would have otherwise," he said.

    Jeff Friedman, U.S. president of the Pacific Whale Watch Association, said "the dams are not everything but it's a big piece."

    He said there are interests in eastern Washington that would need to be addressed but "it's time we have that conversation to find out what it is going to take for everybody."

  • Q13 Fox: Endangered orca J17’s health in dramatic decline

    May 17, 2019

    By Simone del Rosario

    ocra J17 BadHealthSEATTLE -- The health of an endangered southern resident orca is in rapid decline, a stark reality captured by drone images this month.

    NOAA Fisheries first sounded the alarm on J17's health last September, but new aerials from May 6 show how much worse she has gotten since then. Now, NOAA says her three-and-a-half-year-old daughter, J53, is also declining.

    Endangered orca J17's health is getting far worse. Drone images show just how bad her health has declined, even since NOAA sounded the alarm in September 2018.

    In the latest image, you can see the outline of J17's skull, commonly referred to as 'peanut head.' It's when an emaciated whale has burned through its fat storage trying to survive. Back in September, J17 was "very lean but had not yet developed such an obvious 'peanut head,'" according to NOAA.

    The image on the far left shows when J17 was pregnant with J53 and, according to NOAA, in peak condition.

    NOAA Fisheries will monitor both J17 and J53's conditions throughout the summer with aerial visuals and by collecting feces and breath samples and scraps of the whales' prey when possible. Scientists say that information can help determine the whales' diet, potential pregnancies and exposure to any diseases.

    J17's family has had a particularly difficult year. J17 is also the mother of J35, the southern resident orca who carried her dead calf on her head for 17 days last summer in a so-called "tour of grief."

    At this time, NOAA Fisheries says it has no plans at this time to intervene with either whale. Last summer, NOAA took unprecedented measures to save a young, severely emaciated whale, J50, including dart injections and live feeding trials. Still, the orca did not survive.

    NOAA is asking the public to give the southern residents more space on the water so they can better forage. A new Washington state law mandates all vessels stay at least 300 yards away from southern resident orcas on the sides and 400 yards away in front or behind the whales. The law also states boats must travel at seven knots or less within a half nautical mile of the endangered orcas.

    In Canadian waters, a new policy of staying 400 meters, or 437 yards, away from all killer whales will go into effect in June.

    A whale warning flag flown by any vessel in the U.S. or Canada is a signal to other boats to slow down, watch for whales and keep your distance.

    If you see a whale warning flag being flown by any vessel in the U.S. or Canada, it's a signal that whales are in the area and to slow down, watch for them and keep your distance.

    The southern resident orca population is in critical decline as a whole. There are only 75 whales left. The species has been listed as endangered since 2005. Scientists cite lack of prey, contaminants and vessel disturbance as the three main threats contributing to the population's decline.

  • Q13 Fox: Orca task force finalizes plan to save endangered southern resident killer whales

    November 16, 2018

    By Brett Cihon and Q13 News Staff

    Orca L92OLYMPIA, Wash. -- The state's southern resident killer whale task force handed its plan to save the endangered animals to the governor Friday.

    The plan consists of 36 recommendations - decided after months of debate and compromise - that may represent the best hope of ensuring one of the state's most iconic species survives.

    Southern resident killer whales' numbers are the lowest they've been in more than three decades, with only 74 left in the Puget Sound. Lead researchers say there are only about five years left until the current southern residents lose their reproductive abilities.

    The recommendations are wide-ranging and include ways to boost the Chinook salmon population, reduce boat noise and decrease pollution - all factors detrimental to resident orcas.

    No recommendations were made to breach the Lower Snake River dams, considered by some advocates as the only solution left to get enough salmon to the orcas. More than 600,000 people have signed a petition to breach the dams.

    Ten of the plan's recommendations will require state legislation to move; a harrowing prospect in a state Legislature not always known for action.

    The task force hopes the state increases Chinook abundance by restoring salmon habitat, boosting hatchery production and adjusting spillover rates on Columbia and Snake River dams in hopes of helping young Chinook. The task force also recommends the governor establish another task force to discuss breaching the Snake River Dams.

    Joseph Bogaard of the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition called the recommendations a good first step, and he looks on the Legislature to act.

    "We appreciate this initial set of recommendations from the task force," Bogaard said in a release. "But now all eyes are on the Governor and the legislature; they need to move quickly to fully fund and implement these actions. We are playing catch up today, and there is no time to waste."

    The task force also hopes the state will "more effectively manage" sea lions and other predators, and adjust catch limits for non-native fish like bass.

    Limiting boat interaction with southern residents is also a priority.

    In perhaps the boldest recommendation, the task force asked the governor to suspend viewing of southern residents by "all boats" in the Puget Sound for the next three to five years. This would require a vote by the state Legislature.

    Members also want the governor to ask the state to ask the Navy to limit exposure to sound from Navy aircraft.

    The task force received more than 18,000 written comments about the proposed plan during the draft period from the public.

    Some wildlife advocates said the plan didn't go far enough. Rob Krehbiel, a member of the task force's prey working group, said the recommendations laid a foundation, but weren't bold.

    The full report is posted on the governor's web page.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Q13 Fox: To help salmon migrate, state looks to spill more over dams

    February 19, 2019

    By Simone del Rosario

    sr.damVancouver, WA - While federal officials consider breaching one or more dams in Washington to increase salmon survival, state officials are considering increasing spill over the dams to help more smolts survive in the meantime.

    If there is too little spill at hydrodams, more young, vulnerable salmon are sent down more dangerous turbines to get past them. If there is too much spill, they can die from the pressure, with gas bubbles suffocating their gills. It's similar to "the bends," a decompression illness that happens to scuba divers who come to the surface too fast.

    At the direction of the governor’s orca task force, Washington is trying to strike a balance by increasing spill thresholds so more smolts can make it through.

    "How much recovery value it has has always been the subject of debate, but pretty much everybody has agreed that more will help," said Michael Garrity, Columbia River and Water Policy Manager for Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    At a public hearing in Vancouver, Washington, the Department of Ecology heard testimony from people who wanted to weigh in on a measure to increase spill.

    "This is one of the few things the state can do to provide more salmon for orcas in just a few years," said Sristi Kamal of Defenders of Wildlife. "The more fish that are spilled, the more fish that return to the river as adults to spawn."

    The department is considering an increase on 'total dissolved gas,' or TDG, on the lower Columbia and Snake rivers from April to June. TDG measures spill around dams, relating it to normal river flows.

    For example, a TDG reading of 110 percent means that there is 10 percent more pressure in the water than normal. While Washington has a statewide TDG cap of 110 percent, it's higher around the Columbia and Snake River dams to help fish passage.

    While the governor’s orca task force mulls over effects of breaching dams on the lower Snake River for salmon survival, they recommended increasing spill over the dams up to 125 percent TDG. The increased spill would apply to eight federal dams, four on the lower Snake River and four on the lower Columbia.

    The Department of Ecology, however, is recommending a more minor increase to 120 percent in front of the dams, called the forebay. The water after each dam, the tailrace, is already allowed to reach 120 percent.

    "So 120, for sure we're comfortable with," said Heather Bartlett, program manager for Ecology's water quality program. "With 125, we would want to be able to evaluate the effects on other critters."

    Some scientific models estimate spill up to 125 percent could help stabilize Chinook salmon populations, but critics worry about the effects on other fish that are not as capable of avoiding the pressure.

    In addition, the state has signed on to a flexible spill agreement with operators of the hydrodams, allowing Bonneville Power and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to spill even less than that threshold for eight hours a day, when power is in high demand.

    Some people testifying in Vancouver argued these measures don't go far enough.

    "At a time when the governor asked us to be bold and when the governor puts a $1.2 billion budget out for orca, we really wanted to see more than a tweak," commented Liz Hamilton, executive director of Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association.

    Consistent increased spill may help salmon populations reach minimum targets for recovery, something biologists have struggled to achieve for years. Still, it might not be enough.

    "Additional spill is good, lower Snake River dam removal is another increment better," Garrity said.

    While dam breaching continues to be debated in a National Environmental Policy Act process, increased spill is close to a decision.

    The Department of Ecology is holding an online webinar and hearing Tuesday night for people to weigh in. The public has until February 28, 2019, to submit comment on the proposal.

  • Q13-FOX: Snake River dams drive wedge between farmers and orca champions

    OCTOBER 11, 2018

    BY SIMONE DEL ROSARIO

    Watch Simone Del Rosario's Q13FOX story online here.

    q13.barging.copyNEAR TRI-CITIES, Wash. -- Despite many improvements, the four dams along the lower Snake River in Eastern Washington still threaten the survival of endangered salmon that the critically endangered orcas eat.

    Salmon advocates believe the only solution left is to breach the dams. It is one of the most controversial actions being considered by Gov. Jay Inslee's southern resident killer whale task force.

    But in Eastern Washington, the agricultural community told Q13 correspondent Simone Del Rosario that losing the dams would threaten their livelihood. They use the dammed river to transport wheat on barges.

    In Paterson, Del Rosario met with Nicole Berg, a fourth generation farmer. Berg Farms has 21,000 acres and grows wheat, bluegrass, sweet corn and more. Along with being ingrained in the local farming community, Berg also serves on the board of the National Association of Wheat Growers, a lobbying group.

    "We feed the world in the Pacific Northwest," Berg said.

    How breaching the Snake River dams would impact irrigation in Eastern Washington:

    How barging works

    Many wheat farmers near the river rely on the river barge system to get their product to market.

    Farmers pay for the transportation costs, from trucking wheat to a grain elevator on the river to barging it down the river to Portland, Oregon.

    "We have some of the least expensive transportation costs in the United States," Berg said. "It’s 40 cents for me to get my wheat to Portland."

    Berg said she takes her wheat to a grain elevator on the Snake River. Del Rosario visited one 45 miles away in Pasco called Tri-Cities Grain and met with Randall Ward, a grain merchandiser.

    Grain merchandisers buy the wheat directly from farmers and load it up on barges to head down the river for export. The wheat they buy is grown in multiple states.

    "We'll take wheat from farmers in northeast Oregon, south Idaho, sometimes as far away as Montana and then all the way up Highway 2 in Washington," Ward said.

    Barging is possible because of the Columbia-Snake River System, a 465-mile river highway connecting Lewiston, Idaho, to the ocean. Eight federal dams have turned these rivers into a series of reservoirs to allow for transportation. Four of those dams are on the lower Snake River.

    As of 2016, roughly 9 percent of U.S. wheat exports barged through the Snake. It's a system that is now facing uncertainty with growing calls to breach the dams.

    One side of the story

    "I do think the people that are like, 'Dam, dam, dam, dam, let’s take them down,' I’m not sure, are you listening or are you wanting to listen to the science or both sides of the story?" Berg said.

    On this side of the story, in and around Tri-Cities, people see these dams as their economic lifeblood.

    Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse recently invited a congressional committee to Pasco to defend the dams' benefits.

    "The dams have provided so many things that have allowed this area to grow and develop, to provide food for not only those in this area but people around the country and around the world," he said.

    But those benefits are waning as shipping trends change.

    Salmon survival

    Pressure is growing with every orca death to breach the dams and give endangered fish a greater chance of survival.

    This summer, NOAA Fisheries ranked the most important chinook stocks for the critically endangered orca. Two of the top 10 come from the lower Snake River. Three more stocks are from the Columbia.

    In the first few months of the year, the southern resident orca can be found at the mouth of the Columbia River to feast on spring chinook as the salmon migrate upstream to spawn. Historically, adult salmon returns to the Columbia Basin were believed to be between 10 and 16 million fish per year. Today, the returns are a small fraction of that.

    Years before the government listed the southern resident orca as endangered, salmon advocates were already fighting to breach the dams.

    In 1995, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which operates the dams, began a study looking at ways to increase juvenile fish survival.

    Even though that study found that dam breaching had “the highest probability” of fish recovery, the corps instead opted to make major dam improvements, in part, because the chosen option had “minimal economic impacts.”

    River economy

    The river economy is changing. Since the start of that study in 1995, total tonnage shipped on the Snake River has dropped 50 percent.

    The decline is largely because of two major trends: Portland stopped accepting container shipments, and new, high-capacity rail-loading facilities drew customers away from the river.

    But for some, the dams are still an integral part of their lives, from the grain merchandisers above the dams that might have to change their businesses if the Snake becomes too shallow for barging, to the farmer who might have to truck farther to get to a river barge on the Columbia or turn to rail.

    "If I can even get it there," Berg said. "Sometimes the rail system, for lack of a better word, is just plugged up. You can’t even get the rail cars."

    One four-barge tow carries the same amount of grain as 140 railcars or 538 trucks. Farmers are concerned that if the Snake River dams are breached, they'll face backups for barging on the Columbia River or burden the roads with more trucks.

    Still, Jim Waddell, an advocate for breaching the dams and a retired civil engineer with the Army Corps of Engineers, claims the Snake River transportation function can easily be replaced.

    "We’re not gonna put, like the pro-dam people say, hundreds of thousands of trucks on the roads," Waddell said. "It’s the same number of trucks; the only difference is instead of going to a grain elevator that goes to the river, some of those farmers will be taking it to a grain elevator on a railroad siding."

    The railroad would need some improvements to handle the load. The corps had previously estimated that would cost about $50 million. Grain elevators would also need multi-million-dollar adjustments.

    What cannot yet be accounted for is decline in competition. Pro-dam advocates argue that affordable barging on the Snake keeps rail costs low, even if barging has steadily declined the past two decades.

    Cost-benefit analysis

    For both sides of the dam breaching debate, the question is simple: Is it worth it?

    Salmon advocates point to the roughly $16 billion already spent on fish recovery in the Columbia-Snake River Basin.

    "What we can’t afford to continue to do is continue to put money in the kinds of programs that we’ve been doing for the past 20 years that have cost so much and yielded so little," said Joseph Bogaard, executive director of Save Our Wild Salmon.

    Because of that investment, fish survival has improved but it hasn’t been enough to delist the many stocks from the Endangered Species Act.

    As a result, many fighting to breach the dams argue that major investments to the dams have not worked and breaching is the only option left to consider for fish recovery.

    "I would have to disagree because I do think it has worked," Berg said. "I have seen salmon levels increase. I have seen us make strides forward. Now how big are your strides forward do you want to make?"

    Farmers argue that with the dams, there’s too much to lose. Conservationists argue the same.

    There is no one silver bullet to saving the orca. Science shows breaching dams give salmon the best shot at survival, but if the decision to breach were simple, the Snake River would already be a free-flowing river.

    This is the second installment of our series on the complex issue of breaching. In the next few weeks, Q13's Simone Del Rosario will look at the regional impact on power with and without the dams and cover the federal fight that has already started.

  • Radio Boise: Judge Redden Supports Dam Breaching for Salmon

  • Recent Economic Analyses of the Lower Snake River Dams

    Below are links to a series of five recent reports and analyses examining, and in some cases re-examining, the costs and benefits of the lower Snake River Dams.

    Introduction: On May 4, the U.S. District Court in Portland invalidated the federal government’s  new plan for protecting endangered salmon and steelhead in the Columbia/Snake rivers for the fifth time in a row since 2000. The Court was clear: the government’s proposed measures did not comply with the Endangered Species Act (ESA) nor the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The Court is requiring federal agencies to produce a new Biological Opinion informed by a full NEPA process: information development and analysis, full consideration of all recovery options including lower Snake River dam removal, and public participation and input. This memo summarizes a number of reports completed in the last several years by different Northwest experts that reflect the dramatically changing economic landscape inhabited by the four federal dams on the lower Snake River. These reports do not purport to offer the final word on these dams’ ledger, but rather provide a substantive, informed insight into their likely costs and benefits today.

    I. Lower Snake River Dam Navigation Study
    Rocky Mountain Econometrics. September 2015.

    •    Rail’s flexibility to go to alternate destinations, the lower Snake River navigation channel’s lack of reliability, and shipping benefits dropping from $19.4 million per year to about $7.6 million have all contributed to reduced demand for commercial navigation, an expanding rail network and increased use of rail.
    •    The cost of maintaining the four lower Snake River dams and mitigating their impacts has risen significantly. It is now approximately $227 million per year representing an annual increase of roughly 4.5 percent in recent years.
    •    Maintaining the lower Snake River navigation now costs around $18 million per year.
    •    The Benefit-to-Cost Ratio of navigation on the Snake is now at a shutdown level of .43:1, and this figure excludes the cost of mitigating the lower Snake River dam’s adverse fish and wildlife impacts.
    •    The $7.6 million benefit of lower Snake commercial navigation is now dwarfed by the $24+ million it costs to maintain and mitigate the channel.

    II. Restoring wild salmon: Power system costs and benefits of lower Snake River dam removal. NW Energy Coalition. August 2015.

    •    The costs to maintain the four lower Snake River dams and associated infrastructure are far greater than the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ 2002 estimate of $56 million per year. A more realistic estimate is nearly five times as great - $269 million annually.
    •    The costs (net of avoided expenses for maintaining those dams) of replacing the power from the lower Snake River dams with a mix of utility-scale solar and market electricity purchases would be nearly imperceptible to the average public power consumer – close to $1 per month.
    •    This does not investigate the economics of navigation, flood control, irrigation, fisheries, or the outdoor industry nor the costs of physical dam removal.

    III. Lower Snake River Dam Alternative Power Costs.
    Rocky Mountain Econometrics. June 2015.

    •   The lower Snake River Dams (LSRD) account for less than 3 percent of the total system-wide energy generation. The system is currently running at about 84% of capacity with approximately 4,600 aMWs of surplus energy. If these dams were decommissioned today and their energy not replaced with alternatives, capacity utilization would increase slightly – to roughly 86.5%.
    •   Jim Waddell, recently retired Army Corp of Engineers (ACOE) engineer, calculates that it will cost $312.9 million annually to maintain these four dams, 90 percent of which, $281.6 million, is attributable to power generation.
    •   The simplest way to replace the lower Snake River dam power would be through purchase on the open market. If this had been done from 2009 through 2014, ratepayers would have experienced a net annual savings of about $19 million.
    •   If utility scale photovoltaic energy were developed and used in combination with market purchased energy to replace the power from the lower Snake River dams, Northwest ratepayers could expect to enjoy an annual savings of $21.7 million.

    IV. National and Regional Economic Analysis of the Four Lower Snake River Dams: A review of the 2002 Lower Snake Feasibility Report/Environmental Impact Statement Economic Appendix (I)
    Earth Economics. February 2015

    •   The current state of the four Lower Snake River dams yield a yearly benefit-cost ration of 0.15, well below a positive return on investment.
    •   A free-flowing river yields a yearly benefit-cost ratio of 4.3 in terms of National Economic Development (NED). These benefits are not realized with the current state of the river.
    •   With the possible exception of navigation and irrigation water supply, the current benefits would not be lost, but rather increased, if the dams were breached.
    •   Wild salmon are keystone species in trophic webs from the North Pacific Ocean to the far reaches of the Lower Snake River and tributaries. They are important for food provision, cultural value, and for sustaining other key species throughout the Pacific Northwest.

    V. The Costs of Keeping the Four Lower Snake River Dams: A Reevaluation of the Lower Snake River Feasibility Report
    James Waddell and Linwood Laughy. January 2015.

    •    A professional reevaluation of the 2002 report—correcting earlier cost projections with now available actual costs and addressing omissions, errors, miscalculations and faulty assumptions—demonstrates the Walla Walla District understated the true cost of keeping the dams in place by a staggering $160.7 million on an average annual basis.
    •    The reevaluation corrects the assumptions and cost estimates used in the Lower Snake River Juvenile Salmon Migration Feasibility Report (LSRFR) and confirms the estimates based on actual cost over the past 15 years. It then projects the costs over the entire life-span of the project.
    •    If the ACOE’s Walla Walla District had conducted a thorough, honest economic analysis in its 2002 LSRFR, the four lower Snake River Dams would likely have been removed by now.

  • Red Road to DC: Sec. Haaland welcomes totem pole commemorating sacred sites

    Tribes urged Biden administration to take immediate action on sacred site protection

    July 29, 2021redroad2

    Washington, DC – Tribal leaders and Native American grassroots activists today delivered a totem pole honoring sacred Indigenous sites to Washington, DC, to the Biden administration. In an event on the National Mall, the totem pole was welcomed by Secretary of the Interior, Deb Haaland; President Biden’s Chair of the Council on Environmental Quality, Brenda Mallory; and PaaWee Rivera (Pojoaque Pueblo), Senior Advisor for Intergovernmental Affairs and Director of Tribal Affairs at the White House.

    Tour organizers were also joined at the final stop of the Red Road to DC, a cross-country tour highlighting Indigenous sacred sites at risk, by tribal leaders from across the country.

    Leaders and activists brought the totem pole carved by the House of Tears Carvers of Lummi Nation to places sacred to Native peoples that are at risk from infrastructure projects and resource extraction. A permanent location for the totem pole will be announced at a later date.

    “The totem pole holds the prayers of all who blessed it along its journey to DC,” said Jewell James, a member of the Lummi Nation and master carver at House of Tears Carvers. “Across Indian Country, our places where we pray, gather food and medicine, and hold our ceremonies, are being threatened by the greed and carelessness of corporations. We wanted to bring attention to this crisis.”

    With stops in Snake River, Bears Ears, Chaco Canyon, Black Hills, Missouri River, Standing Rock, Line 3 in Minnesota, and Line 5 in Michigan, the tour organizers say their ultimate goal is to see a significant change in policy.

    “Native people must have a seat at the decision-making table if we are to see real change happen,” said Judith LeBlanc (Caddo), executive director of Native Organizers Alliance, one of the tour hosts. “We need a system of consultation that engages our tribal nations and gains their consent at every stage of projects that impact the wellbeing of our land, water and communities.”

    Fawn Sharp, president of the National Congress of American Indians agrees.

    “When the federal government considers any action that impacts tribal communities, the United States must acknowledge and recognize the political standing and equality of Tribal Nations to be at the table and heard in good faith government-to-government negotiations," said Sharp. “We possess the inherent right as sovereign nations to speak decisively in all matters which affect our citizens and lands before any action by the United States is taken. Free, prior, and informed consent must be the governing policy for all federal agencies.”

    Leaders say the absence of this policy has not only threatened sacred places, but exacerbated the climate crisis.

    “It is time for the United States to honor treaties with sovereign Tribal Nations,” said Whitney Gravelle, president of the Bay Mills Indian Community in Michigan. “For too long tribal concerns have been brushed aside in favor of companies like Enbridge Energy [Line 5] that have abysmal track records not only where the environment is concerned, but also for violating, threatening, and harming long-standing treaty-protected rights and treaty-protected resources. Enough is enough. As my ancestors long before have taught my people, if we do not protect the land and water, we risk destroying a way of life for our people and we risk destroying the heart of Turtle Island [North America].”

    Dozens of speakers on the National Mall, representing tribes across the nation, shared a similar sentiment. They called on the Biden administration to take immediate action to protect Indigenous sacred sites.

    “The places where our ancestors once walked, fished, and prayed is what sustains us as Native people,” said Daniel Tso, member of the Navajo Nation Tribal Council. “But oil and gas companies look at our land like it’s there for the taking. It’s just Indian land, not anything important. But this is our way of life. And until the federal government changes how it does business, you will keep seeing gatherings and rallies like this one today. We have an obligation to defend this sacred landscape and we won’t stop until it’s protected.”


    Contact:
    Brad Angerman, Pyramid Communications
    bangerman@pyramidcommunications.com
    702-218-4490

    Jaline Quinto, Pyramid Communications
    jaline.quinto@gmail.com
    206-550-7252

    More info: For additional information, photos, and a full list of tour stops, visit redroadtodc.org.

  • Renewing the Columbia River Treaty: a-once-in-our-lifetime chance

    From the desk of Pat Ford

    June 20, 2013

    CRT.logoSave Our wild Salmon is joining with several other groups to make sure salmon and their habitats benefit from re-negotiation of the U.S.-Canada Columbia River Treaty that is now underway.  This is a 50-year opportunity to re-align water, salmon and energy management in the Columbia Basin to flexibly respond to climate change, restore salmon where they have been extirpated, bring flood control into the 21st century, and do long-delayed justice to Columbia Basin Indian Tribes.

    The original 1964 Treaty contained just two purposes:  hydroelectric development and flood control.  This has privileged those two uses over all other Columbia uses and values, including river health, for 50 years.  In addition, the Treaty was signed without consultation with Indian Tribes, yet they have been the people most negatively affected by it.  The Treaty has done good for the Northwest, but it needs fundamental change if it is to keep doing good in the very different next 50 years awaiting us.

    Fifteen Columbia Basin Indian Tribes have joined together to seek changes to the Treaty, notably:  
    - inclusion of a third purpose, called ecosystem-based function, co-equal with power and flood control.    
    - addition of a third treaty co-manager to represent ecosystem function (as Bonneville Power today represents power and the Army Corps flood control).  Ideally, this should be the 15 Tribes themselves, with one vote.
    - a significant forward turn of the Columbia hydrograph back toward the natural template prior to its dams, as the surest way that its waters, salmon, people and communities can respond effectively to the hot water challenge that has now begun. 
    - experimental salmon reintroduction and passage above the major salmon-impassable dams in the region, such as Grand Coulee and the Hells Canyon Complex.

    We think these changes will be good for the entire Northwest and all its people, not just for the Tribes. They will certainly be good for the Basin's imperiled salmon and steelhead.  So SOS is supporting these four Tribal proposals.  The Tribes are focused primarily on the inside game - the complex Treaty process in which they have sovereign standing.  SOS will focus primarily on the outside game - the public and political arenas where, in the end, final decisions on the next Treaty will be made.  SOS' supporters will hear more about this work in coming months, on our website and in this newsletter.

    Download the June 27 Columbia River Treaty Working Draft and the accompanying Cover Letter (PDF).

    Read Paul Lumley's op-ed in the Oregonian: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era

  • Revealing new data shows killer whales' affinity for the Columbia River mouth

    orca eating salmon CFWRFrom the desk of Howard Garrett, co-director of Orcanetwork

    Seeing orcas cruising by seems to bring out the best in people, and many residents around Puget Sound and beyond are often thrilled to see members of an extended family known as the Southern resident orcas (J, K, and L pods) foraging and playing in the waters of the Puget Sound. Watching orcas is like a drug-free mood lifter. People seem to open their eyes wide, smile and share their excitement when viewing the huge, graceful whales travelling in tight family groups, rising up to look around, or leaping clear out of the water in a mighty breach. Since the mid-1970s this tight-knit orca community has been the most watched and studied population of cetaceans on the planet. Researchers and fans alike have learned to recognize each individual whale, year after year, including their family histories.

    This particular clan of orcas is precariously close to extinction, however, largely due to the scarcity of chinook salmon, their primary, traditional food source. Chinook comprise about 80% of their diet, along with a side dish of chum salmon during fall months. These orcas refuse to deviate from that menu even when faced with starvation, as was shown by the drastically ramped up mortalities between 1995 and 2001 that correlated closely with region-wide declines in chinook numbers. The resulting 20 percent drop in the population to only 78 individuals in 2001 prompted the listing of this distinct population as endangered under the ESA in November, 2005. The most recent official count shows only 84 individuals.

    Most of the dietary studies have been done in summer months around the San Juan Islands, where these orcas are easily found chomping on Fraser River chinook from late spring to early fall. They tend to spend winter and spring at sea, however, and until recently there was very little clear data on where they go or what they are eating in the open ocean waters.

    It is known that the famed upper Columbia/Snake River chinook - the ones that began life far, far upriver and must climb the highest mountains in order to return as adults to spawn themselves - were generally the biggest and most plentiful fish. Many of those famous populations - like the fabled "June hogs" have disappeared as a consequence of the construction of dams like Grand Coulee, but a few still remain. They start their journey home early, gathering first in the salt water at the mouth of the river in the winter and spring, to be able reach their far-flung streambed destinations before winter returns. Historically, these were the most bountiful runs of chinook found anywhere in teh world, but are now at just a few percentage points of their former numbers largely as the result of dams and other forms of habitat destruction.

    Since 2006, winter data has trickled in indicating Southern Resident orcas eating upper Columbia and Snake River chinook. But the best evidence is just in from a young adult male orca from K pod, K25, (Scoter). On December 29, 2012 NOAA researchers tagged him with a satellite transmitter off Vashon Island. K25 always travels with his K pod family, and as of February 22 the tag was still broadcasting location data. A look at NOAA’s maps of his travels show that at least five of the maps, between January 21 and February 8 (to date) show that they consistently milled around, presumably foraging, near the mouth of the Columbia.

    orca.video.mapTake a look at this 90 second video showing the travels of K pod so far this winter. They are seen off the coast of Washington State, northern California, and everyone in between - but with a clear preference for the waters just off the mouth of the Columbia River, and just to the north along the Washington State Coast.

    These initial tagging data strongly reinforce previous data and logical assumptions that upper Columbia and Snake River chinook are vital for the survival of Southern Resident orcas, and that restoration of abundant runs of those chinook represents an essential opportunity to help this struggling orca clan get through the lean winter months.

    (video courtesy of NOAA's Northwest Fisheries Science Center)

  • Ridenbaugh Press: Shifts of Market and Region

    From Randy Stapilus, 1June2018

    FDam on Columbia riverorty years ago one of the big ongoing news stories, and one of the big serious issues, facing the Northwest was the impending shortage of energy supply. We just weren’t producing enough electricity, we were told, to satisfy the growth needs of the region.

    All sorts of things happened in those years in an attempt to deal with this problem, not least the massive nuclear power building in Washington state (remember the wonderfully-acronymed WPPSS?) that resulted in economic collapse and massive debt.

    What never did happen was this: The Northwest never did run out of power.

    Idaho, Washington and Oregon have kept on growing, economically and demographically, in the years since, and adequate supply of electric power has never been a significant problem. Neither, for that matter, has cost; juice has been about as inexpensive in the region through these years as it has anywhere in the country.

    One of several reasons for that has been the existence, for 80 years so far, of the Bonneville Power Administration. Headquartered at Portland, the BPA has the job of taking the immense amount of electric power generated by the federal dams in the Columbia River system and selling it to customers, mainly regional and local utilities. Idaho utilities get some of this power, and the state benefits more broadly from the way the cheap hydropower has helped keep electric rates low.

    Political threats to BPA’s existence have surfaced from time to time – there’s been a rumbling from the Trump Administration most recently – but the most immediate and maybe most intractable threat right now is economic. It comes not from anyone trying to do it in, but from broader conditions.

    These are laid out in a fascinating short report by Idaho economist Anthony Jones and activist Linwood Laughy (he was involved in the Highway 12 megaload battle), who with several others began looking into the economic changes surrounding electric power in the Northwest. Their report (you can see it at http://rmecon.com/examples/BonnevillePower%20May%202018.pdf) concluded that BPA could be facing extinction unless something dramatic changes.

    They’re not alone in issuing warnings. Elliott Mainzer, BPA’s current administrator, warned in March, “We’ve taken huge hits in the secondary revenues market just like every other hydro provider up here, with cheap gas, low load growth, and the oversupply conditions. It’s been a bloodbath for folks in the wholesale market. I’m not in a panic mode, but I am in a very, very significant sense of urgency mode.”

    That concisely lays out some of the issues. Oversupply – of electric power – has become real, as solar, wind and other power sources have become major factors in the Northwest. As supply has grown, prices have fallen. The big drop came around 2008 and 2009, when “the open market price of power dropped from $90 to $25.” It has not much rebounded in the years since. The declining need for additional power already has reduced the use of coal-fired plants in the region.

    BPA has been protected somewhat by long-term contracts with many of its utilities, but some of those utilities are agitating for lower prices from other sources, and negotiations are likely to be fierce as contracts come up for renewal. Traditionally, BPA has made money by selling excess power to California, but California also is seeing a massive increase in renewable energy: It is being flooded with additional power as well. Meantime, BPA has a number of costs, from environmental requirements to pension funds to compensation for dam maintenance, that it cannot reduce. It is being squeezed, hard.

    That started about a decade ago, and there’s an easy way to measure it. In 2008 BPA had financial reserves of almost $1 billion; now, only about $5 million of that is left, the rest of it gone to pay for costs when income hasn’t kept up.

    The Northwest energy world has been turned on its head since those energy-shortage days of 40 years ago. It may look a lot different a decade from now.

  • Righting Historic Wrongs: A conference on ethics and the Columbia River Treaty.

    ethics.conference.2014One River. Ethics Matter.

    Earlier this spring, people gathered in Spokane with a diverse set of leaders and thinkers from the Columbia Basin, from the United States and Canada, including Native American and First Nations' people, to talk about the opportunity and imperatives as we begin an international process to bring the U.S. - Canada Columbia River Treaty into the 21st Century.

    The day-long conference included discussions of history and policy, story-telling and remembrance, disruption and dislocation. The conference and speakers helped to set a context for the needs and challenges of modernizing the Treaty.

    The following 20 minute video concentrates comments from many of the speakers and provides an excellent sense of the conference's tone and tenor.

    Speakers include Matt Wynne, John Osborn, Bishops William Skylstad and Martin Wells, Virgil Seymour, Pauline Terbasket, Pat Ford, and many others.

  • Salmon Groups: Let’s Try Something Totally Different

    public.news.logoSALEM, Ore. - The federal government has rejected the offer to try something new and different for resorting wild salmon and steelhead in Columbia and Snake Rivers.

    From Brett Brownscombe, a policy adviser from Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber's Natural Resources Office: "There's a real opportunity here to, once and for all, resolve the decade-plus litigation. We feel the government is missing this, asking the region to walk down the same path that has led to multiple court decisions against the government's position."

    Read / listen to more at the Public News Service.

  • SALMON NEWS: Court tells Obama Administration to Go Back and Get it Right.

    Here is some good news to take home with you over the long weekend.salmon.media.logo

    Earlier this week, Judge James Redden, who is hearing the long-running legal challenge to the Columbia Basin salmon plan,, sent a letter rejecting the federal government's proposal to shoehorn some additions into the 2008 Bush Salmon Plan and call it "good." The judge offered several suggestions to the federal agencies, and has given them until February 19 to decide what they will do.

    Last year, as you may recall, Team Obama added a dubious "salmon insurance policy" to the (politically-driven and unscientific) plan crafted by the Bush Administration, adopted the whole package, and submitted it to the judge for approval. This week's letter and order is his response. Judge Redden identified both procedural and substantive shortcomings of the Obama Plan that will need to be addressed in order for the plan to pass legal muster. In his letter, for example, the judge emphasized that, in order to comply with the Endangered Species Act, this plan must be based on "the best available science. They [federal agencies] cannot rely exclusively on materials that support one position, while ignoring new or opposing scientific information." For more on the science behind the Obama Salmon Plan. For more on the science behind Obama's Salmon Plan, go HERE. Salmon and fishing advocates, as well as the Nez Perce Tribe of Idaho, the Spokane Tribe of Washington, and the State of Oregon, are greatly encouraged by the judge's action. We are hopeful that the Obama Administration will decide to make a sharp break with past failures on this issue and sit down with the people of the Northwest to develop a plan that works for both people and salmon, for our economy and our environment. Have a great weekend and happy President's Day!. Thank you for your support, and look for some additional news on this and other developments early next week - and how you can help! Joseph Bogaard
    Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition
    206-286-4455, x103

  • Salmon or political games? Obama administration makes its choice

    crosscut.logo

    A federal judge repeatedly warned the federal government that only big changes to proposals for hydro dams would guarantee approval. Instead, the Obama administration has presented a plan that looks very much like the Bush strategy.


    By Daniel Jack Chasan
     
    May 26, 2010 - Isn't it nice when new information proves you were right all along? The Obama administration has had that happy experience, and it shared the good news on May 20, when NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service unveiled its Supplemental Biological Opinion on operation of the federal Columbia River system dams. The government looked at some new science. It looked at the old BiOp. And... what do you know? Touch the old document up a little, and it's good to go — just as the feds had thought.

    "Feds tweak Columbia salmon plan," says the headline on the Idaho Statesman's web site. "Obama Administration backs Bush-era plan for Columbia Basin salmon," says the equivalent headline in the Oregonian. "While there are verbs among the 'actions,' " says Todd True, managing attorney of Earthjustice's Northwest office, "there is no action."

    Earthjustice attorney Steve Mashuda dismisses the new document as "a book report." Not even the government's own press release pretends that much has changed.

    Federal courts have been tossing Columbia River BiOps since the Seattle Mariners had Alex Rodriguez at shortstop and Randy Johnson on the mound. The federal agencies are already 0-for-4. U.S. District Judge James Redden, who has thrown out two biological opinions and has had the current version in his court for two years, has made it clear that his patience has pretty well run out. It's hard to predict his next step in a case that has already dragged on into almost unchartered waters.
     
     
  • Salmon recovery plan before U.S. judge

    oregonian_logo2
    Posted by Matthew Preusch, The Oregonian
    March 05, 2009
     
    Attorneys will take their seats Friday morning in a ceremonial court in downtown Portland's federal courthouse. There, they will make their case to the man who, more than anyone, commands the Northwest's multibillion-dollar salmon-recovery effort.
    The hearing before U.S. District Judge James Redden is the latest milestone in a two-decade legal battle over how best to balance the needs of salmon, a regional icon in long-term decline, with federal hydropower dams producing cheap, relatively clean power.
    The outcome could have far-reaching impact, affecting such things as Portland's power bills and Montana's reservoir levels.
     
    Under scrutiny is the federal government's recovery plan, called a Biological Opinion, for Columbia River and Snake River salmon. Redden has twice thrown out such plans, calling the 2004 plan an "analytical sleight of hand," and signs indicate he may again be at that point.
    "It appears that the judge is running out of patience with this continued cycle of putting out a biological opinion that's flawed under the Endangered Species Act, and that he would prefer at this point to structure some sort of final resolution," said Mike Carrier, natural resources adviser to Gov. Ted Kulongoski. Oregon has joined conservation groups and the Nez Perce tribe in challenging the plan.
    Attorneys, activists and others involved in the case said two letters the judge sent out last month provide some clues. In one of the letters, Redden hints that the discussion may be moving past the current plan and toward how to proceed if he rejects it again. "My goal is to have enough time at oral argument to discuss how to resolve this matter if the 2008 BiOp fails," he wrote last month.
    Redden highlights three areas of concern: the federal government's standard for salmon survival; the proposed reduction of water spilled at dams to aid fish passage; and the uncertainty and assumptions made about habitat improvements benefiting salmon.
    On the first point, the federal plan redefines the "jeopardy standard" -- the benchmark for deciding whether an action reduces the likelihood of the fish's survival or recovery -- to say the fish only need be "trending towards recovery."
    "His questions appear to signal that he has serious reservations, as does Oregon, about the latest jeopardy standard, and that he appears poised to reject that jeopardy standard and the jeopardy analysis," Carrier said.
    In the weeks leading to the hearing, Redden has asked the government some tough questions. He points out that the director of science and research at National Marine Fisheries Service, the agency in charge of fish recovery, said two years ago that his agency's own plan for improving estuary habitat was inadequate.
    Did the government "disregard their own scientists' criticisms regarding the estuary plan?" Redden wrote.

    But he also praised the government for working with Northwest tribes to develop the plan and for committing to spending $1 billion over the next 10 years for hatchery and habitat programs throughout the basin.
    The 2008 plan responds to Redden's concerns over the rejected 2004 plan, said Terry Flores, executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, a coalition of ports, farmers and others who have sided with the government in the case.

    "We think this plan is enough," she said.
    Nonetheless, Redden raises the specter of removing four lower Snake River dams by asking the federal government why it isn't considering that feasibility. Dam removal, which many consider the surest step toward salmon recovery in the Snake, is anathema to the groups Flores represents because of the dams' importance to transportation and agriculture.
    The federal government needs Redden to sign off on its biological opinion so it can legally operate the dams on the Snake and Columbia rivers. When he's rejected biological opinions in the past, he nonetheless left the plans in place while sending them back for changes.
    He's said he has no interest in remanding the plan again. His options include:
    Reject the plan and don't leave it in place. Most consider this unlikely because the government could theoretically be considered to be killing salmon without a permit, a violation of the Endangered Species Act that carries a criminal penalty of up to $50,000 per incident and a year in jail.
    Approve the plan outright or with certain stipulations. Redden has before taken steps toward overseeing the rivers, such as ordering the government to alter dam operations to aid migrating fish. He could make similar demands this time.
    Order a settlement. Most are pointing to this outcome. In his questions, he asked the federal lawyers if they would be comfortable including some of the things salmon advocates have asked for in legal documents, and he asked the salmon interests if they could live with such an amended plan.
    But whatever his ruling after today's hearing, one thing appears likely: The loser will appeal, and the litigation will continue.
    -- Matthew Preusch; mattpreusch@news.oregonian.com
  • Save Our wild Salmon submits comments on the Columbia River Treaty

    Columbia River GorgeAugust 13, 2013

    The 1964 Columbia River Treaty between the U.S. and Canada is being re-negotiated over the next two years.  A modernized, 21st Century Treaty is essential to SOS' mission of restoring abundant salmon and steelhead throughout the Basin for use by people and ecosystems.  It is also essential for our two nations and the great Northwest we share to navigate the unprecedented rapids of climate change over our next 50 years.  The "Working Draft" of the U.S. negotiating position, released a month ago by Bonneville Power and the Army Corps, falls well short of the modern Treaty that Northwest people and salmon need.  SOS is working with others to change that.  

    SOS and the NW Energy Coalition co-signed a letter this week highlighting our serious concerns re: the "June 27 Working Draft". This letter was submitted to the Bonneville Power and Army Corps as our official public comment. You can read our detailed comments (in pdf) on the "Working Draft" here.

    See article #4 in our June 2013Wild Salmon and Steelhead News for further information and links to the "Working Draft" released by Bonneville Power and Army Corps of Engineers on June 27.

  • Save Our wild Salmon submits comments on the Columbia River Treaty (2)

    Columbia River GorgeAugust 13, 2013

    The 1964 Columbia River Treaty between the U.S. and Canada is being re-negotiated over the next two years.  A modernized, 21st Century Treaty is essential to SOS' mission of restoring abundant salmon and steelhead throughout the Basin for use by people and ecosystems.  It is also essential for our two nations and the great Northwest we share to navigate the unprecedented rapids of climate change over our next 50 years.  The "Working Draft" of the U.S. negotiating position, released a month ago by Bonneville Power and the Army Corps, falls well short of the modern Treaty that Northwest people and salmon need.  SOS is working with others to change that.  

    SOS and the NW Energy Coalition co-signed a letter this week highlighting our serious concerns re: the "June 27 Working Draft". This letter was submitted to the Bonneville Power and Army Corps as our official public comment. You can read our detailed comments (in pdf) on the "Working Draft" here.

    See article #4 in our June 2013Wild Salmon and Steelhead News for further information and links to the "Working Draft" released by Bonneville Power and Army Corps of Engineers on June 27.

  • Saving Salmon to Save Orcas

    orca eating salmon CFWRcredit: Center for Whale ResearchIt may seem obvious, but orcas (especially the Southern Resident Killer Whales in Puget Sound and other inland marine waters of Washington and British Columbia) eat a lot of fish. And salmon comprise a large part of their diet. With many species of salmon threatened, and the orcas endangered, there is a lot of debate about how best to address this issue. Orcas are a major source of tourism dollars for the Northwest, which makes this about more than preserving two critical species of our ecosystem – it’s also about enhancing our regional economy.

    A draft report was released in May by an independent scientific review panel assessing options for how to handle the complex issue of the effects of salmon fishing on orcas. The solution, it turns out, is not as complex is it may appear. While some may argue that we should further limit already drastically reduced salmon fishing (and thus hurt salmon jobs), the report finds it doubtful that that reduced fishing would have much impact on the health and success of the Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW).  Instead, the report concludes that “promoting salmon recovery is vital to long-term persistence of SRKW.”

    In other words, rather than be distracted by the marginal impacts of ocean fishing or sightseeing vessels on SRKW, we should instead be focusing our efforts on increasing the amount of salmon available to orcas in the first place. (See the comments submitted by SOS on that draft report here.)

    We must do more to restore the salmon runs that maintain our majestic orcas – and that means sitting down together and assessing the best available science and all options to create solutions not just for salmon, and not just for orcas, but for our economy as well.

    Show your support for endangered species and for a collaborative approach to salmon restoration.

    Watch our 2009 video featuring Ken Balcombe of the Whale Research Center on the connection between orcas and salmon:

  • Saving Snake River salmon will save Puget Sound killer whales

    The ecological connection

    Download the fact sheet.

    LATEST: An unpublished report by NOAA scientist Dr. Brad Hanson et al documents predation by Southern Resident Killer Whales of Snake River and Upper Columbia chinook salmon in the Winter-Spring 2009. Feces collection from the L pod occurred several miles west of Cape Disappointment just north of the mouth of the Columbia River. NOAA scientists have determined that “perhaps the single greatest change in food availability for resident killer whales since the late 1800s has been the decline of salmon in the Columbia River basin.”

    Read the study from NOAA scientists.

    Research shows that orcas are hungry, need more chinook:Hormone research by scientists at University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology have found the “data most strongly supports the reduced prey hypothesis” and concludes that  “it seems clear that mitigation efforts to increase number and quality of available prey to Southern resident killer whales will be an important first step towards assuring SRKW recovery."

    Read more from the Center for Conservation Biology.

    “This new baby will not have a life without salmon. Salmon make up the majority of their diet and they are good at finding and catching them; but, what happens if salmon populations continue to decline?"- Ken Balcomb of the Center for Whale Research reacting to the recent identification of a new member of the K-pod from the Salish Sea and Puget Sound, June 2010

    Scientists Call for Lower Snake Dam Removal to Help Endangered Orcas

    Full Text of the Letter from Scientists

    The Threats Facing Endangered Puget Sound Orcas

    orca.star

    Killer whales, or orcas, are found all over the world.  And yet their geographically distinct populations are actually genetically distinct populations. That is, the Southern Resident orcas found during the summer in Washington’s Puget Sound do not travel with other orcas, will not breed with other orcas, have a highly particular diet, and exhibit a variety of social and family traits that are completely distinct from any other orcas on the planet.

    But this endangered population faces several dangerous threats. Their food is very often contaminated with long-lived poisons (PCBs and PBDEs).  Being dependant on a form of sonar called echolocation, they have suffered with the increased noise that accompanies increases is the size and number of vessels on Puget Sound. Their population is so tiny (fewer than 90 whales) and their reproductive rates are so slow that it takes them a long time to add to their population.  And, perhaps most importantly, these giant marine mammals require a lot of food – and they aren’t getting enough.  

    The federal agency responsible for trying to recover these whales won’t say which problem is “primarily” responsible for their decline, but clearly these five-ton mammals cannot recover without enough food to eat.  Insufficient prey leads not only to starvation, but to increased mortality from disease and increased susceptibility to toxins, increased calf mortality, and drastically lower reproductive rates.

    Smoltinpipe2That’s where Columbia/Snake salmon come in. 

    Southern Residents feed primarily on chinook salmon. In fact, the government estimates that even at its current depleted population level, this population of fewer than 90 animals may require 1.75 million chinook each year.

    When the Southern Resident orcas are in the San Juan Islands off the northwest coast of Washington, they feed overwhelmingly on salmon from Canada’s Fraser River. But when they leave this area and head into the Pacific each winter, they must rely on chinook salmon from the other major salmon rivers – the Sacramento, the Klamath, and the Columbia. None of them is a shadow of what it used to be.

    At the turn of the last century, up to 30 million salmon returned to the Columbia-Snake River Basin, making it the most productive salmon-producing river system in the world. But today, only than one percent of that historic number returns to spawn. Chinook (like other salmon populations) have plummeted, due largely to dam construction and habitat degradation on the Columbia and its largest tributary, the Snake, which have wiped out entire runs and severely limited the food supply of Puget Sound orcas. All species of chinook salmon on the Columbia- Snake are either listed as endangered or already extinct. This has proved devastating for the salmon, the fishermen, and now the killer whales.

    Restoring Orcas’ Food

    Leading Northwest scientists and orca advocates have called for the government to remove the four outdated federal dams on the lower Snake River. They say this will restore Columbia-Snake River salmon and renew a critical food source for endangered Puget Sound orca populations.

    The science is clear that removing the four lower Snake River dams is the key to saving the Snake River’s four distinct salmon populations, including the chinook that are so important to the Southern Residents.  Coupled with appropriate harvest controls, sound land-use regulations, renewable energy alternatives and hatchery reform, lower Snake River dam removal could restore salmon abundance to 15 million acres of forest, high-desert and wilderness areas, for productive use by people, communities and iconic predators like the Southern Resident orcas.

    orca.smThe Southern Resident Recovery Plan

    The government initially opposed listing Southern Residents as an endangered species. After a federal court rejected the government’s position, Southern Residents were listed in 2005. The government then developed a plan to help guide efforts to recovery Southern Residents to a healthy population.  Prepared with input from the leading orca scientists in the United States and Canada, the plan contains two findings that should remain front and center as we contemplate the perils facing these spectacular icons of Puget Sound:

    - “It is vital that meaningful increases in salmon abundance be achieved above and beyond those associated with periods of favorable ocean productivity.”  SRKW Recovery Plan, p. V-8 (emphasis added).

    - The SRKW population must increase by an average 2.3 percent per year for 28 years – that is, to 164 whales – in order to be removed from the Endangered Species list. The population today is 88, the same as it was when it was listed as endangered five years ago. p. IV-4.

    For more information, contact:

    Save Our Wild Salmon206.286.4455 joseph@wildsalmon.org

    Orca scientists and advocates sound off

    “Restoring Columbia River chinook salmon is the single most important thing we can do to ensure the future survival of the Southern Resident Community of killer whales. We cannot hope to restore the killer whale population without also restoring the salmon upon which these whales have depended for thousands of years. Their futures are intricately linked."

    — Dr. Rich Osborne, research associate with The Whale Museum in Friday Harbor, Wash.

    "The new Federal salmon plan for the Columbia and Snake rivers is no better than previous plans in providing access to the basin’s best remaining salmon habitat in the upper reaches of the Snake River. The resulting declining salmon runs have a very real impact on the 88 endangered southern resident orcas that depend on these fish, as they have for centuries. As the salmon disappear, the orcas go hungry."

    — Howard Garrett, co-founder of the Orca Network.

    "Our leaders must look for solutions not only in Puget Sound, but also in the rivers that bring the salmon to the sea throughout the Northwest. The great salmon rivers like the Columbia and Snake can once again produce the healthy runs of chinook, on which our majestic orcas feed, but only if we recover salmon habitat. We must act quickly to restore clean water, abundant, sustainable salmon populations, and a safe home for orcas. The scientists tell us there is no time to waste."

    — Kathy Fletcher, executive director of People for Puget Sound

  • Scientists to Administrator Will Stelle: NOAA must act on climate change and salmon

    October 28, 2015

    letter.to.stelle.oct.2015 copyContacts:
    Rod Sando, rosando@mindspring.com  /  503-982-3271
    Joseph Bogaard, joseph@wildsalmon.org  /  206-300-1003

    Northwest Fisheries Biologists Raise Serious Issues re: NOAA, climate change, and Columbia-Snake River salmon recovery efforts in letter to West Coast Administrator Will Stelle.

    Please find the “Oct. 2015 Fisheries Biologists’ Letter to NOAA’s West Coast Regional Administrator Will Stelle RE: Columbia Basin Salmon and Climate Change”. It was delivered earlier today.

    This Letter was drafted in large part in response to Mr. Stelle’s op-ed in the Seattle Times on August 29 (link below). Mr. Stelle’s op-ed was itself a response to an Aug. 2 op-ed (also below) by Pat Ford charging that NOAA has taken/is taking very little meaningful action to help ensure the survival of Columbia/Snake River salmon and steelhead faced with intensifying climate impacts.

    This past summer, for example, the Northwest experienced high, prolonged temperatures in June and July and low stream flows (due to low snowpack) in the Columbia Basin. These conditions, in combination with the dam-created reservoirs on the Columbia  and Snake Rivers, raised water temperatures above the survival range for many salmon and steelhead. An estimated 250,000 adult sockeye were killed by these hot water conditions in the Columbia and Snake Rivers this summer. Other species were also harmed and killed in large numbers, including scores of imperiled sturgeon, chinook, and others.

    While Summer 2015’s conditions may have been unusual, they were not unexpected. They are exactly the types of conditions long predicted by scientists in and out of NOAA-Fisheries. Despite these predictions, NOAA’s Columbia Basin salmon plans have contained virtually no meaningful strategies or measures to address or mitigate these types of hot water episodes. Last summer, NOAA and other agencies did respond on a last-minute ad hoc basis in an effort to assist struggling fish populations. The benefits of these efforts so far appear to have been very limited.

    The attached “Scientists’ Letter to Mr. Stelle”, signed by eight accomplished and well-respected Northwest salmon biologists (listed below) representing approximately 250 years of salmon, fish and wildlife science and policy experience in the Northwest, outlines a number of specific ways in which NOAA’s current strategies for Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead are inadequate. The letter urges Mr. Stelle and NOAA to change course, follow the best available science, and take meaningful actions to protect Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead populations facing intensifying climate impacts.

    Here are links to the two op-eds that appeared in the Seattle Times this past August that helped spur these 8 scientists into action in the form of a letter to Regional Administrator Stelle.

    Seattle Times Guest Opinion by Pat Ford: Dead salmon, climate change and Northwest dams (Aug 2)

    Seattle Times Guest Opinion by Will Stelle: NOAA Fisheries embraces — not ignores — climate research (Aug 29)

    Coincidentally, this letter is being sent just after the following article on NOAA’s report on the extremely poor survival of juvenile salmon in Summer 2015: Preliminary 2015 Spring Juvenile Survival Estimates Through Snake/Columbia River Dams Dismal – the main conclusion of a recently released NOAA Fisheries report on juvenile salmon survival this summer in the Basin.

    Thank you.

    Joseph Bogaard
    Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition
    206-300-1003 (cell)
    www.wildsalmon.org

    Letter Signers:

    Rod Sando
    Former Chief Executive of Natural Resources for Minnesota                                                           
    Former Director of Idaho Fish and Game Department
     
    Don Chapman, Ph.D.
    Fisheries Biologist (Retired)
     
    Douglas A.  DeHart, Ph.D
    Former Fisheries Chief, ODFW
    Former Senior Fisheries Biologist, USFWS
     
    Daniel H. Diggs
    Former Assistant Regional Director for Fisheries
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
     
    Jim Martin
    Former Chief of Fisheries
    Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
     
    Steve Pettit
    Fisheries Biologist (Retired)
    Idaho Department of Fish and Game
     
    Bill Shake
    Former Assistant Regional Director of Fisheries
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
     
    Don Swartz
    Fisheries Biologist (Retired)
    Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

  • Seattle PI: Orca whales need Chinook salmon, losing same

    orca.w.calfBy Joel Connelly

    November 3, 2017

    The Southern Resident Orca whale population, beloved by ferry and tour boat passengers, is in a decline that can be reversed only if its endangered food source˜Chinook salmon˜is put on a path to recovery.

    "The spawning population sizes of Chinook salmon are dangerously below federal recovery goals and our not improving," the Puget Sound Partnership said this week in a somewhat gloomy annual report.

    The PSP has hoped the Southern Resident population would rise to 95 by 2020, from 89 of the marine mammals in 2014. Instead, it is 76, the lowest number in 30 years.

    The causes discussed are multifold. One is declining biomass of Pacific herring, on which Chinook salmon feed. Another is the pressure of 1,000 people moving into the Puget Sound Basin each wweek. "Toxic chemicals are concentrating in the water and entering the food chain," the PSP argued.

    The Southern Resident Orcas have, curiously, never taken to the still- abundant sockeye salmon populations that return to spawn in British Columbia's Fraser River.

    Puget Sound has seen some habitat recovery. A once-great Chinook salmon stream, the Elwha River on the Olympic Peninsula, is experiencing recovery now that two old, salmon destroying dams have been removed.

    A coalition of 25 Northwest sport and conservation groups on Thursday called on Gov. Jay Inslee to support and enhance another major food source for the Southern Resident Orcas, the Chinook salmon runs of the Columbia-Snake River system.

    They wrote Inslee asking him to direct more spill over Columbia and Snake River dams, the so-called spring "fish flush" that speeds juvenile salmon on their migration to the Pacific Ocean.

    "Spill keeps migrating juvenile salmon safer by sending water over federal dams in the Columbia and Snake Rivers rather than through the powerhouses," said Liz Hamilton of the Northwest Sport Fishing Industry Assn.

    Dam operators and federal agencies have spent $10 billion in the last three decades, but not one of the Columbia River Basin's 13 populations protected under the Endangered Species Act has recovered.

    Federal judges have rejected five separate plans by the National Marine Fisheries Service and other agencies, as inadequate to restoring Columbia and Snake River runs.

    The state of Oregon has strongly backed recreational, commercial and tribal fisheries interests. Washington, with far more industry,
    agriculture and power production, has been far less supportive despite its "green" governors.

    "Salmon returns to the Columbia Basin reflect a new downward trajectory that fisheries experts predict is likely to continue for the foreseeable future without new and meaningful action to stop and reverse," the 25 groups told Inslee.

    Why is this important?

    "Washington State's wild salmon and steelhead play a defining role for our identity, culture, economy and ecology."

    http://www.seattlepi.com/local/politics/article/Connelly-Orca-whales-need-Chinook-salmon-losing-12329706.php

  • Seattle PI: Urgent, controversial orca whale recovery steps go to Inslee

    November 16, 2018

    By Joel Connelly

    Orca ShippingContainersUrgent recommendations for orca whale recovery, conveyed Friday by a task force he created, will test the depth of Gov. Jay Inslee's commitment to be America's greenest governor.

    The Southern Resident Killer Whale Recovery Task Force wants a three- to five-year moratorium on whale watching, "lethal and nonlethal" reductions in sea lion and seal populations, and more spill out of eight federal Columbia and Snake River dams.

    The task force recommended the creation of a panel that would consider consequences if four Army Corps of Engineers dams on the lower Snake River are removed, a proposal backed by conservation groups but anathema to agribusiness and barge operators.

    The proposals on dams are predicated on eating habits of the orcas: The great marine mammals feed almost exclusively on chinook salmon, listed under the Endangered Species Act. Sea lions and seals compete for the dwindling chinook population.

    "These whales are on (their) last leg," State Sen. Kevin Ranker, R-Orcas, a task force member, has said of the southern resident orca population, now to 74 marine mammals at last counting.

    Inslee praised the task force, but took a careful wait-and-see approach to the task force recommendations landing on his desk.

    "We heard from thousands of people from all over the state, region and world who are very passionate about saving these animals," Inslee said in a statement, and then added in "governmentese":

    "I will review these recommendations over the coming weeks and my staff and I will assess each more for the most impact in the short and long terms. I will roll out my budget and policy priorities in mid-December for consideration during the 2019 legislative session."

    Ten of 36 recommendations from the task force would require action by the Legislature.

    So far, Inslee has been most outspoken about a threat to the orca whales coming from north of the border.

    The Governor has spoken forcefully against a giant oil pipeline project, linking Alberta to an oilport just east of Vancouver, that would send 34 laden tankers a month through waters of the San Juan and Gulf Islands and the Strait of Juan de Fuca -- prime habitat for the southern resident population.

    Conservation groups seized on the spill recommendation, and potential removal of the Snake River dams.

    "The science is clear and the public strongly supports increased spill at the federal dams on the Columbia and Snake Rivers and removal of the lower Snake River dams," said Bill Arthur of the Sierra Club.

    "These are essential actions to rebuild salmon populations in the near and long-term. With its recommendations, the Orca Task Force has called for urgent action in the Columbia Basin. We call on Governor Inslee to prioritize these actions."

    Part of the public does not strongly support spill from the dams -- commonly known as the "fish flush" -- or removal of the dams.

    President George H.W. Bush first promised to defend the dams during a 1992 speech in Colville. Soon-to-be-President George Bush took up the theme in Spokane during the 2000 campaign, declaring: "The man and the fish can coexist."

    U.S. Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., tried to stop the "fish flush" in Congress earlier this year, after a federal judge ordered that it continue.

    Spill from the dams cuts into their power production, and cuts down on electricity that the Bonneville Power Administration can sell to California during the spring. The federal agency has long complained about what it must do for salmon.

    Upstream in the Snake River system, however, Idaho has a miles of unspoiled rivers in which salmon can spawn, much of it on the namesake Salmon River. A famous sign at the weir on Redfish Lake read: "Spawn your brains out."

    The late, great Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus suggested that his state print a bumper sticker saying: "Idaho has habitat, needs fish."

    Inslee did intervene earlier this year, opposing Republican lawmakers' efforts to curtain spill from the dams. Since the four Snake River dams are in Washington, however, the state's Democratic governors have never joined calls for their removal.

    The task force had other recommendations.

    It would reduce, by "lethal" and "non-lethal" means, the population of seals and sea lions that compete for the orcas' main food supply.

    The panel proposes to reduce limits on the catch of non-native predatory fish that compete for chinook salmon, such as bass walleye and channel catfish.

    The moratorium on orca watching is complicated by the fact that Southern Resident whales divide their time in the Salish Sea between waters of Washington and British Columbia.

    A moratorium here would not apply to both countries. Travelers on B.C. ferries through Active Pass, linking Vancouver Island with the B.C. mainland, frequently watch as whale watching boats get close -- too close -- to orca whales.

    Whatever is done, time is short, for both marine mammals and their prey. "We're playing catch-up today and there is not time to waste," said Joseph Bogaard of Save our Wild Salmon.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Seattle Time: Orca task force recommends whale-watching moratorium, studying dam removal to help endangered mammals

    November 16, 2018

    By Lynda V. Mapes

    Tagged whaleFrom dam teardowns to a temporary moratorium on whale watching of southern residents by any boat, a governor’s task force on orca recovery released its first round of recommendations Friday.

    Task-force members said at a news conference at the Seattle Aquarium that bold action is needed to save the critically endangered population of killer whales from extinction. Only 74 southern resident orcas remain.

    The recommendations will depend on significant new funding from the state Legislature as well as new legislation to take effect, so the wish list is a long way from becoming reality for the whales.

    Among the biggest changes called for is a 3- to 5-year moratorium on whale watching by any boat of the southern residents, to provide quieter waters for them.

    Some of the most controversial issues considered by the task force were put off, including breaching of the Lower Snake River dams.

    The busting of those dams — to support bigger returns of chinook salmon, orcas’ primary food — was the most broadly supported ask put forth in public comments to Gov. Jay Inslee’s task force.

    The task force demurred, putting the issue to a study committee, but did single out two dams for removal within two years in Puget Sound: a dam on the middle fork of the Nooksack River and a dam on the Pilchuck River.

    The task force also called for better enforcement of existing regulations to protect the whales.

    A total of 36 recommendation after six months of work are intended to increase chinook abundance, decrease noise from vessels and reduce exposure of orcas and the salmon they eat to contaminants.

    The task force also called for increasing the spill of water through the Columbia and Snake River dams, widely regarded by scientists as one of the best early steps that can be taken to help boost salmon survival.

    The task force also supported funding to determine how to re-establish fish passage above the Chief Joseph and Grand Coulee Dams on the Columbia River and on the Tacoma Water Diversion, Howard Hanson and Mud Mountain Dams in Puget Sound.

    Boosts in hatchery production also were supported by the task force, where that doesn’t impede wild chinook recovery.

    The focus on prey was driven by the orcas’ biggest need: access to adequate, high quality food, especially chinook, the orcas’ preferred fish.

    Rob Williams of Oceans Initiative, a Seattle-based biologist who studies orcas on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, said he can’t tell because of a lack of modeling of the initiatives whether they go far enough to help the whales with a serious lack of food.

    His recent paper published with other colleagues shows the southern residents need about 662 big fat chinook every single day to meet their calorie requirements and a return to salmon abundance near the highest levels since the 1970s to help the orcas recover through prey abundance alone.

    Taking other steps to help the whales — such as reducing noise by 50 percent — combined with increasing chinook by at least 15 percent would allow the population to recover.

    Lack of modeling in detail in the scientific assessment of the task force recommendations makes it impossible to know whether if enacted they will result in recovery, Williams said. He said he hopes a deeper dive into science-based predictions will help policy makers understand if they go far enough.

    Other experts said the task force fell short. Ken Balcomb, a member of the task force and founding director of the Center For Whale Research abstained from voting on the report and panned its recommendations.

    “Frankly, I am embarrassed for the conveners and participants of Orca Task Force who had to endure blatant and ill-informed political manipulation of a process launched with the good intention of doing something bold to help recover the Southern Resident Killer Whales,” Balcomb wrote in a statement.

    He criticized the partial moratorium on whale watching as an ineffective political ploy, saying the “meaningless moratorium of a benign activity while skirting THE major problem for these whales — salmon population crashes throughout their range — is appalling.

    “Honesty was crushed by politics and vested interests, even within agencies whose responsibility it is to manage natural resources sustainably. The whales are on their own in their downward spiral toward extinction along with the natural wild runs of chinook salmon the we used to call “King.”

    Other task force members were more encouraged by the outcome, which they called a strong beginning on which policy makers must now build.

    “The orca urged us on … to achieve what many said was impossible,” said task force co-chair Stephanie Solien.

    Among the recommendations that will require legislative action are a half-mile go-slow zone around all southern residents, reducing vessel speeds to 7 knots or less, and an increase in the distance kept from the whales to 400 yards from the current 200.

    The moratorium on whale watching of the southern residents by all boats also will require legislation. The moratorium, already opposed by whale-watch representatives on the task force, promises to be a fight in Olympia, if it gets that far.

    Call Governor Inslee today. Ask him to move forward quickly to increase spill, to convene a lower Snake River dam removal planning forum, and fund and implement the Task Force recommendations. Click here to find out how.

  • Seattle Times Editorial: Columbia River Treaty works, but needs thoughtful updating

    Time for the U.S. and Canada to move ahead on talks about modernizing the Columbia River Treaty. Get started on negotiations.

    columbia.r-largeMay 19, 2016

    By Seattle Times editorial board

    CANADIAN Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is new to the job with a busy agenda. High on his list should be appointment of a chief negotiator to formally launch talks on the Columbia River Treaty.

    Like much of the treaty signed in September 1964, that imperative begs definition. Separate regional U.S. and Canadian teams have spent years drafting recommendations to update an agreement grounded in hydropower generation and flood-risk management.

    The Canadian review team was composed and shaped by British Columbia’s provincial interests, apart from the federal government in Ottawa.

    The U.S. recommendations were drafted by the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bonneville Power Administration in a review process that included four states, 11 federal agencies and 15 Native American tribes and other stakeholders.

    In 2015, the U.S. State Department appointed Brian Doherty as chief U.S. negotiator for the trans-border talks. Its counterpart, Global Affairs Canada, has yet to name a negotiator.

    Time is slipping by. The treaty has no formal expiration date. But after 2024, either side can cancel the agreement with 10 years’ notice. That made September 2014 significant.

    What does go away in 2024 is a formal, predictable flood-risk management regime that has protected the U.S. for half a century.

    Modernizing the treaty means updating language on flood-risk mitigation and hydropower generation, and adding ecosystem-based functions.”

    Unless it is officially extended, ensured flood control would be replaced with a “called-upon” system that involves U.S. reservoirs and a spooky ad hoc, real-time assessment of flood danger and requests for Canadian help.

    From the U.S. perspective, modernizing the treaty means updating language on flood-risk mitigation and hydropower generation, and adding ecosystem-based functions. The original document did not directly address fisheries.

    Climate-change realities and considerations must be part of a revised Columbia River management plan.

    A key sticking point for the U.S. side will be redefinition of the Canadian Entitlement, a claim for half of the power produced at U.S. dams with the storage benefit of three Canadian dams, already paid for by the U.S.

    Northwest utilities are adamant the existing formulation is outdated and does not represent the actual value attributable to the streamflow created by the Canadian dams. Nor does the Canadian Entitlement reflect the subsequent expense of U.S. environmental regulations imposed on the hydrosystem and borne by ratepayers.

    Expect Canada to respond that the value to the U.S. of irrigation, navigation and recreation benefits are not accounted for in the entitlement payment.

    Northwest utilities argue the original formulations were based on assumptions that did not play out, and they want to end the existing payment structure.

    One option raised is a two-part payment to Canada: one for the value of the flood-control protection provided. The U.S. knows about the massive disaster-relief bills it has paid for floods and storms elsewhere. Let Uncle Sam make a vastly smaller insurance payment to Canada for flood-risk mitigation here. Maintain, and appreciate, a system that works.

    Separate and apart would be the power-generation payment. Redo the arithmetic and base the future Canadian Entitlement on revised, relevant numbers.

    This past March, U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., adroitly used a visit by Prime Minister Trudeau with Secretary of State John Kerry to lobby for fast tracking U.S.-Canadian talks. Trudeau agreed. Cantwell needs to remind him and the U.S. State Department.

    Editorial board members are editorial page editor Kate Riley, Frank A. Blethen, Ryan Blethen, Brier Dudley, Mark Higgins, Jonathan Martin, William K. Blethen (emeritus) and Robert C. Blethen (emeritus).

    To see full editorial with graphics go here.

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