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The
government plan rejects the only good news to come out of the
The plan
was prepared by the Bonneville Power Administration, which sells the
power, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation, which operate the dams. The document released today --
called a biological opinion -- is NOAA Fisheries' draft approval
of that plan.
National
conservation, fishing, and taxpayer advocates are urging Congress to
step into the fray.
"This
plan buys us nothing but dead fish, ghost towns for river and coastal
communities, and invisible results from taxpayer money spent on phantom
methods that will haunt us for years," said Dan Ritzman, Northwest
Regional Director of the Sierra Club. "We need Congress and
our governors to step in now to provide oversight and leadership to
ensure this plan is dead and buried once and for all."
"This
administration has had multiple opportunities to come up with real
solutions to restore
The new
draft Biological Opinion, released today by NOAA Fisheries, is the
result of a court-ordered rewrite of the 2004 federal salmon plan that
was ruled illegal by federal court Judge James Redden, a decision
emphatically upheld by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in April.
"Three
years ago, this administration came up with a salmon strategy based on
the ridiculous premise that man-made dams are a permanent part of the
natural environment. The courts sent the agencies back to the drawing
board, in part because they refused to consider major changes to the
dams," said Todd True of Earthjustice. "Based on what we're
seeing today, they apparently didn't get the message -- or chose to
ignore it. This 'new' plan is about little more than protecting the
dams, regardless of the harm they do to salmon and the communities that
depend upon them."
The new
plan, which would guide salmon recovery efforts in the
"The
administration's plan not only deliberately ignores science, it also
ignores economics and the tens of thousands of people from the Pacific
salmon states who rely on these fish for their livelihoods and have for
generations. By abandoning salmon recovery and pushing these fish closer
to extinction, the new federal plan is allowing four obsolete, outdated
dams to limit our jobs, our fishing, and our very way of life,"
said Zeke Grader, executive director Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Associations.
"This
administration needs to stop pushing science aside when making decisions
that impact
A final
version of the plan is expected by the end of January, 2008.
Contact:
Todd
True, Earthjustice, (206) 343-7340, ext. 30
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Source: http://www.earthjustice.org/news/press/007/congress-urged-to-act-
as-bush-administration-again-fails-pacific-northwest-salmon.html