
Candidates
not ready to take sides on salmon, dams
Rocky
Barker
Idaho
Statesman
April 15, 2008
None of
the three remaining major-party candidates for president will rule out
breaching dams to save
Columbia
and
Snake River
salmon. But they don't
support dam breaching now, either.
Republican John McCain
made the strongest pitch for preserving the four dams on the lower
Snake River
in
Washington
, citing concerns about
energy security and climate change. Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack
Obama say they want to see stronger efforts to restore salmon habitat
before removing dams is considered.
The candidates recently
responded to questions about salmon and dams sent to the campaigns by
the Idaho Statesman.
McCain's campaign
expressed support for the dams during the Washington GOP primary. But
the Democrats have not yet been asked publicly about salmon and dams,
despite both Democrats having campaigned in
Oregon
in advance of the May 20
primary.
The lack of attention is
surprising, given the deep divisions created in the
Pacific Northwest
in the 1990s when 13
species of salmon and steelheads were declared threatened or endangered.
Salmon are a tangible and
ancient manifestation of the wild character of the region. They still
provide economic benefits to fishing communities and spiritual
sustenance to Northwest Indian tribes. The four dams, which the majority
of scientists say must come out if
Snake River
salmon are to survive, help
sustain the economy: the slackwater behind the dams allows shipping 730
miles from the coast to
Lewiston
; the dams at their peaks
generate enough hydroelectricity to power
Seattle
.
CLINTON
BLAMES BUSH
Clinton
said President Bush has
done little to help salmon during the past seven years, said Isaac
Baker, a
Clinton
campaign spokesman.
"Sen. Clinton will
make every effort to restore wild salmon stocks," Baker said.
"While she does not at this time favor breaching dams, she will
place a far greater emphasis on habitat restoration."
McCain's equivocal answer
helped George Bush beat him in the
Washington
primary eight years ago.
Asked whether he
supported breaching that year, McCain responded, "I want to see the
science first." That was interpreted as leaving the door open for
breaching the four dams, which a majority of fisheries biologists say
may need to go for
Snake River
salmon to survive. Bush
flatly opposed breaching and made preserving the dams the centerpiece of
his Columbia-Snake salmon policy.
This time, McCain wants
to be clear.
"Sen. McCain
supports preserving the role of the
Snake River
dams first, for energy security, and second, because of climate
change," said Crystal Benton, a campaign spokeswoman."
McCain doesn't see his
position as a change from 2000,
Benton
said. He supported
increased efforts to improve salmon migration. As for the listening to
the science: "He's continuing to do that," she said.
Obama said the
Columbia
and
Snake
River basins
are important economic,
energy and ecological resources for the country.
"Implementing a
meaningful salmon population recovery plan will be a key environmental
priority of my administration, and I support efforts to create a salmon
recovery plan that balances all of these important environmental,
agricultural and renewable energy interests," he said in a
statement. As president, he'd work with the region to enact a
restoration plan.
So what about dam
breaching?
"Barack Obama
believes action must be taken to protect the salmon population and
ensure its survival for generations to come," said Nick Shapiro, an
Obama spokesman. "To that end, he believes all efforts to restore
habitat must be exhausted before dam breaching is considered."
INTEREST GROUPS
HOPEFUL
The three candidates'
responses please Terry Flores, executive director of
Northwest RiverPartners
. The Portland-based group
represents Northwest businesses that get their power from the federal
dams and oppose breaching.
"It's clear that the
presidential candidates understand the issue,"
Flores
said. "In a time of
climate change concern, it is ever more important to keep our renewable
energy sources like the
Snake River
dams in place."
Nicole Cordan, the policy
director for Save Our Wild Salmon in
Portland
, believes McCain backed off
his 2000 position, and she is disappointed. But she expressed hope that
all three candidates are more open-minded than President Bush.
"I think what the
salmon community is looking for is someone to listen with an open ear,
follow the science and the law, and look for the possibilities across
the board on how to resolve this," Cordan said.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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
Source:
http://www.idahostatesman.com/eyepiece/story/352366.html
|