
Judge
in
Oregon
says don't count hatchery fish with
wild
By JEFF
BARNARD
The
Associated Press
August 15, 2007
GRANTS PASS
,
Ore.
— A federal judge ruled
the government does not have to count hatchery salmon along with wild
fish when deciding whether to protect a species.
U.S. District Judge
Michael Hogan in
Eugene
denied a lawsuit brought by
property-rights advocates, farm groups and development interests against
NOAA Fisheries. It challenged all 16 listings of West Coast salmon under
the Endangered Species Act.
Sonya Jones, an attorney
for Pacific Legal Foundation, which brought the lawsuit, said it was
disappointed, particularly because in 2001 Hogan ruled in favor of its
argument that NOAA Fisheries could not protect wild
Oregon
coastal salmon as a
threatened species if it did not protect hatchery fish in the same
population group.
"The debate over
hatchery fish should be considered conclusively over," said Jan
Hasselman, an attorney for Earthjustice, which represented conservation
groups intervening on the side of the government. "This judge in
2001 gave them an inch and they tried to take a mile. It didn't work. So
now the debate's over."
The 2001 ruling
ultimately led to a new federal policy on using hatchery fish to rebuild
dwindling salmon populations and taking
Oregon
coastal coho off the
threatened species list.
"We believe this is
an unlawful interpretation of way the hatchery policy was applied to
these 16 populations," Jones said of the latest ruling. "We
will be appealing it."
The legal debate is not
over. A federal judge in
California
will hear similar arguments next week on whether to take 10
populations of steelhead off the threatened and endangered species
lists, and the Pacific Legal Foundation is appealing another ruling
directing NOAA Fisheries to count only wild fish in listing
determinations.
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Source:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003837469_websalmon15m.html
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