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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
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Salmon
funds may be reduced
Lawmakers from Western states protest proposed $70 million cut
June 12, 2008
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — West Coast lawmakers are
protesting a plan by the Bush administration to take $70 million from
the $170 million approved in the farm bill as disaster relief for the
Pacific Coast salmon fishing industry.
Bush’s budget office says the money is
needed to pay for higher-than-expected costs of the 2010 census.
After the reduction, which needs the
approval of Congress, “$100 million would still be available for
payments (to salmon fishermen), which is sufficient given the estimated
economic impact of recent fisheries disaster declarations for the area,”
the budget office said in a memo.
West Coast lawmakers from both parties
called the request a slap in the face of fishermen hurting from the
collapse of the salmon fishing industry in California, Oregon and
Washington.
The collapse led to the largest salmon
closure in West Coast history and caused losses the states estimate will
total about $290 million.
California is seeking $ 208 million in
federal disaster aid, Oregon $45 million and Washington $36 million.
A letter signed by 14 Democratic House
members from the three states called the request unconscionable and a
sign that the Bush administration is not committed to helping Pacific
Coast fishing communities.
“This funding is desperately needed by the
communities and families who rely on salmon fishing, many of whom face
losing their businesses and homes due to two years of no fishing,” said
Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif., who drafted the letter, which is signed by
six House members from California and four each from Oregon and
Washington. All are Democrats.
The proposed funding cut is especially
egregious, the letter said, because Bush administration policies on
major salmon rivers on the West Coast may have contributed to the
current disaster, which stems from the sudden collapse of the chinook
salmon run in California’s Sacramento River, where the salmon return to
spawn. Scientists are studying the causes of the collapse, with possible
factors ranging from ocean conditions and habitat destruction to dam
operations and agricultural pollution.
Failing runs
Salmon runs have also failed in recent years on the Klamath River in
Oregon and California, and the Columbia-Snake River system in the
Pacific Northwest — failures that Thompson and other Democrats blame in
part on administration policies that they say did not ensure enough
water reached the fish.
Scientists expect low returns on the Sacramento River again next year
and another closed season for most of the West Coast, the letter said.
Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., said Wednesday that he will join with
Democrats to prevent the cuts. “Rest assured there will be a strong
bipartisan effort to ensure that these cuts don’t go through,” Smith
said in a statement.
“I understand that the Bush Administration frequently considers
itself above the law, but Congress assigned that money in the duly
enacted farm bill to ensure the survival of our fishing communities, and
I intend to see that they get it,” added Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
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research and educational purposes only. For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://pioneer.olivesoftware.com/Daily/Skins/heraldandnews/navigator.asp?skin=heraldandnews
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