The Associated Press
SEATTLE — A federal judge Wednesday refused to dismiss a challenge to a new Bush administration policy of considering hatchery-raised salmon and steelhead when determining whether wild stocks need protection.
The policy, which took effect in June, has been controversial, with
environmental groups and even government-appointed scientists arguing that
only wild populations of fish should be weighed in decisions about whether to
list them under the Endangered Species Act. Salmon raised in hatcheries lack
the long-term survival capabilities of wild fish that have evolved over
millions of years, they say.
“The Hatchery Listing Policy is arbitrary, capricious, contrary to best
available science,” Earthjustice lawyers Kristen Boyles and Patti Goldman
wrote in a lawsuit against the National Marine Fisheries Service this summer.
“It reverses the position taken by the agency in its prior policies without
adequate explanation; and it is not a product of rational decisionmaking.”
The Justice Department asked U.S. District Judge John C. Coughenour to toss
the lawsuit in late September, saying the environmental groups, led by
Virginia-based Trout Unlimited, did not have legal grounds to challenge the
policy. Coughenour rejected that request Wednesday and said the lawsuit can
proceed.
2001 ruling
The controversy over counting hatchery fish dates to 2001, when a federal
judge in Oregon ruled that the government could not lump both hatchery and
wild fish into one “evolutionarily significant unit” and then provide
Endangered Species Act protection only to the wild fish.
In response, the National Marine Fisheries Service — also called NOAA
Fisheries — decided to begin considering hatchery fish populations along
with those of wild fish, if the hatchery fish are genetically similar.
Hatchery numbers
The fear among environmentalists was that including hatchery numbers would
artificially inflate the salmon populations, leading to their premature
removal from Endangered Species Act protection. They argue that the fisheries
service should have simply created separate “evolutionarily significant
units” for hatchery and wild fish.
That position also was taken by a group of six leading scientists hired by the
fisheries service at $800 each per day to review salmon-recovery efforts. In
an article published in the journal Science last year, they blasted the
fisheries service and the Bush administration and said hatcheries are merely
masking the problems faced by salmon, which include pollution and habitat
loss.
Fisheries service spokesman Brian Gorman said Wednesday that scientists still
primarily evaluate the threat to wild stocks — not just the numbers of
salmon in an “evolutionarily significant unit” — when considering
whether a population deserves listing.
“It’s not just a numbers game our biologists are involved in,” he said.
“My worry is that the ordinary citizen somehow thinks that all that’s
involved ... is just a matter of counting fish.”
While that might be the government’s intent, Boyles responded, that’s not
what the policy says.
“They can’t say one thing and have a policy that says another,” she
said.
Impact statement
The lawsuit challenges the policy on the grounds that the government did not
prepare an environmental impact statement considering the effect it might have
on endangered salmon and steelhead, and on the grounds that it is not based on
the best available science.
Meanwhile, property rights groups, including the Building Industry Association
of Washington and the state Farm Bureau, are seeking to intervene in the
lawsuit to challenge the policy from the other end of the spectrum: They argue
that the Endangered Species Act demands that the government count all salmon
— hatchery-raised and wild — equally when determining whether the species
needs protection. The judge has not ruled on their motion to intervene.
So far, the Hatchery Listing Policy has not resulted in the removal of any
salmon populations from the endangered species list.
Source: http://159.54.227.3/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051201/NEWS06/51201039