
Groups
ask judge to order rules for salmon-killing pesticides
11/5/2007
By JEFF BARNARD
The Associated Press
(AP) —
Salmon advocates filed a lawsuit Monday to force the Bush administration
to obey a 5-year-old court order requiring it to make permanent rules to
keep agricultural pesticides from killing salmon.
Filed in
U.S. District Court in
Seattle
, the
lawsuit asks a judge to order NOAA Fisheries, the agency in charge of
protecting salmon, to formally consult with the Environmental Protection
Agency over the use of 37 pesticides. Several are commonly found in
rivers around the country and can kill salmon at minute concentrations.
U.S.
District Judge John C. Coughenour had ordered the formal consultations
in 2002 and imposed temporary restrictions that barred crop-dusting next
to salmon streams and required home and garden stores to post warnings
for consumers.
"Apparently
what it takes to get this administration to do its job under (the
Endangered Species Act) is to have someone there enforcing the law every
step of the way," said Joshua Osborne-Klein, an attorney for
Earthjustice, the environmental public interest law firm representing
salmon advocates.
NOAA
fisheries spokesman Brian Gorman said the agency has not seen the
lawsuit and could not immediately comment.
It was
brought by the Northwest Coalition Against Pesticides and the Pacific
Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations.
"This
region has devoted far too much time and money to restore imperiled
salmon runs to allow (NOAA fisheries) to sit on its hands while
pesticides continue to contaminate streams and kill struggling
salmon," said Glen Spain of the federation, which represents
California
commercial
salmon fishermen,
For
years, federal courts have been finding NOAA Fisheries deficient in its
efforts to protect declining salmon runs, particularly the failure to
protect salmon from hydroelectric projects on the
Columbia
and Snake
rivers.
Last
August, Coughenour chastised federal agencies for failing to follow the
Endangered Species Act in licensing pesticides for sale.
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Source:
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