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Snake River dams enter political picture
By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS
Associated Press Writer
September 1, 2008
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- As the political season moves
into high gear, two members of Congress from Eastern
Washington are loudly defending four dams on the
Snake River that environmentalists have long sought
to breach.
The question is, what are they defending them from?
Even though no Democrats are currently calling for
removal of the dams, U.S. Reps. Cathy McMorris
Rodgers and Doc Hastings have gone on offense in the
past couple of months, loudly touting the benefits
of hydropower.
The four dams produce enough electricity to power
Seattle, and also allow barges full of grain and
fuel to operate as far upstream as Lewiston, Idaho,
reducing truck traffic. But they are also blamed for
devastating Columbia River salmon runs, and
conservationists for years have sought their
removal.
"At a time of growing energy demand, it makes no
sense to throw this energy resource away," said
McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash.
McMorris Rodgers, who represents the Spokane region,
is linking her re-election campaign directly to the
dams. Barns in rural areas of the 5th District sport
large signs saying "Save Our Dams," with even larger
campaign signs for McMorris Rodgers directly
underneath.
Hastings, from the Tri-Cities, said dams provide 75
percent of what is considered "renewable" energy,
and are a necessary backup for wind and solar power
systems that are less reliable.
"They should be more popular as clean and low-cost
power, but there's been little indication that
anti-dam activists are changing their tune,"
Hastings said.
There is no doubt that Northwest environmental
groups for the past decade have pushed for removal
of the huge dams, and have found Democratic allies
in Congress.
But with close races for the White House and for
Washington governor, the state's Democrats are not
rising to the bait. Democratic leaders - who must
balance the heavy environmental vote around Seattle
against pro-business sentiments else where in the
state - are generally ignoring the dam issue, or
staking out careful positions calling for more
salmon while stopping short of calling for dam
removal.
U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who is not up for
re-election, declined to discuss the issue.
"I think there are a lot of moving parts right now
and we are waiting for them to play out," said Alex
Glass, spokeswoman for Murray.
Even Democratic U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott, who
represents the Seattle area, has toned down the
dam-removal rhetoric in his latest salmon recovery
efforts.
A bill he sponsored in 2007 called for a study on
all the options available to restore wild salmon
runs, but stopped short of calling for dam removal.
But critics still feared the study would eventually
be used to justify dam removal.
Before global warming and $4 per gallon gas, calling
for removal of the dams to save salmon was something
of a no-brainer for environmentalists and their
political allies. They contended the fish were more
important than cheap electricity.
But the issue has become more complex. The desire to
save an iconic Northwest species from extinction is
now pitted against the desire to slow global
warming.
Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose Dam and
Lower Granite dams were built in the 1950s and 1960s
to open the lower Snake River to navigation and to
make electricity. They also provide some flood
control and irrigation for farms.
A federal judge in Portland is deciding what steps
the government must take to restore endangered
salmon runs. But only Congress can order that the
dams be breached, so politics will play a huge role.
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has
not taken a stand on the four dams, while Republican
John McCain says he wants to preserve them as power
producers.
President Bush visited Ice Harbor Dam in his first
term and declared the dams would not be removed on
his watch.
It's the fear of a Democratic White House that
McMorris Rodgers and Hastings up in arms, contends
Michael Garrity of the environmental group American
Rivers, which advocates for tearing down the dams.
"They are taking the threat more seriously than in
awhile," Garrity said.
Luke Esser of the state GOP said Democrats are
hiding on the issue because dam removal is becoming
less popular with the public.
Terry Flores of Portland, Ore., spokeswoman for
Northwest River Partners, an association of
utilities, barge companies and other river users,
said their polling shows strong support among for
the dams in the region.
"It's really clear that people are connecting the
dots between climate change and the value of
hydropower that comes from these Snake River
projects," she said.
But most environmental groups remain unequivocal.
Idaho Rivers United, for instance, continues calling
for removal of the dams, saying modest increases in
salmon runs this year do not signal that fish
species are recovered.
"We can have healthy salmon populations, a vibrant
economy in Lewiston and Clarkston, fishing
opportunities and a reliable energy supply," said
Bill Sedivy, director of the group, said. "But we
can't have all those things with the lower Snake
River dams in place."
Hydro provides about two-thirds of Washington's
electricity, a major reason the state's carbon
footprint is much lower than places where coal or
other fossil fuels are used to make power, McMorris
Rodgers said.
Hastings said removing the dams would require 70,000
more trucks to haul the grain and fuel the barges
currently move. It would also require more power
from coal and natural gas plants.
American Rivers believes the electricity produced by
the dams can be replaced by conservation and by
renewable resources. They contend that cargo
displaced from barges would mostly travel by rail
instead of trucks, Garrity said.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section
107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or
payment to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this
information for non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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