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For salmon, dammed or
undammed makes no difference
Water seminar
attendees hear another side of issue
Patricia R. McCoy
Capital Press Staff Writer
November 24, 2006
BOISE -
Environmentalists want dams removed to save salmon, ignoring one fact:
The runs are in the same condition on undammed rivers as in those with
dams.
Saving anadromous fish runs in the Pacific Northwest requires doing
something about harvest, said Gary Loomis, president and founder of
Fish First, Woodland, Wash.
Addressing the 23rd annual Water Law and Resource Issues Seminar here,
Loomis called for selective harvest.
That would involve catching and sorting salmon, releasing wild and
native fish to spawn. Hatchery fish only would be harvested, he said.
Historically, ocean harvest continues until a species is extinct,
Loomis said.
"Around 1933, sardines were harvested until that population
collapsed. It happened again in the 1970s. Commercial fishing started
in on them again in 2002. The targeted sardine harvest off the coast
of Washington state, Oregon and California for this year is 118,937
metric tons, an increase of 22,000 metric tons over 2005."
Processing plants at Astoria handle about 20 boatloads a day, dumping
about 160,000 pounds of crushed and undersized sardines as they go, he
said.
"This doesn't include the by-catch they discard in the ocean,
about 40 to 150 fish per net. Most of the by-catch are salmon and
bottomfish. Could this be why our jack salmon count has been off for
the last couple of years and we have so few returning?" he said.
"One processor told me he remarked to a harvester that the
sardines are getting smaller, asking the fisherman when he would ease
up on these fish. The harvester replied, 'When the last one's in my
net.'
"Sardines are one of the main food sources for Pacific Northwest
salmon," Loomis said.
Avid fisherman
Loomis, a self-avowed avid fisherman his entire life, founded Fish
First to work on declining fish populations in the Lewis River system.
The organization started with five men who called themselves Friends
of the Lewis.
"As we worked, it became obvious that there were many issues with
recovery, and many special interests involved. Being successful
required unwavering focus on what's best for the fish," he said.
Loomis was one of the few non-lawyers or water managers addressing the
annual seminar, sponsored by the Idaho Water Users Association.
Attendees included numerous attorneys specializing in water law,
irrigation company managers and state legislators. Most topics
revolved around such issues as the debate between groundwater and
surface water users in the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer, litigation
swirling around salmon recovery efforts, and similar topics.
A backlog of water rights transfers is swamping the Idaho Department
of Water Resources, and the agency simply doesn't have the staff or
resources to catch up, said Director Karl Dreher.
"The backlog is especially high in Southern Idaho, where water in
most areas is fully appropriated, and where there's often a moratorium
on new development," Dreher told the seminar. "The only way
to get water is to purchase an existing right and transfer it."
Transfers complex
One thing slowing the process is that transfers are becoming more and
more complex. Most involve pieces of multiple water rights, adding to
the time involved to complete them. If they're protested, a hearing
follows, he said.
"Apply early. Too often we're finding people take care of
obtaining all the other permits first. Water transfers are
comparatively cheap, but if you're already starting construction and
other development but don't get a water right, it becomes much more
costly. If your other approvals fail, it's far easier to unwind a
water transfer," the director said.
Idaho's Snake River Basin Adjudication is coming to an end, 20 years
after it began. As that winds down, Dreher pledged to transfer 11
employees assigned to that project to water administration and
transfers to help untangle the backlog.
He also asked for support from the water user industry for increasing
the salaries in his department.
"Some engineering positions are 60 percent below market. We have
an employee in Eastern Idaho working a second job, painting houses at
night, so his wife can stay home with their children. That shouldn't
be for someone with his education and experience. We hired a
hydrologist fresh out of college at entry level. Six months later he
left us for a job in private industry paying him 60 percent more than
we could offer," the director said. "We had a bureau chief
position open for months before finally filling it with a retiree. He
wants to live in Boise and has a subsidy with his retirement. He can
afford to take the position."
Dreher has submitted his fiscal 2008 budget request to Gov. Jim Risch.
It includes an increase to help him bring at least some department
salaries closer to market levels, he said.
Pat McCoy is based in Boise. Her e-mail address is pmccoy@capitalpress.com.
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