Despite
a projected $69 million in lost revenue, he ordered the Bonneville Power
Administration to execute a "summer spill" from four dams to help
juvenile salmon reach the sea. After noting that the government's best
salmon-recovery efforts have brought native fish stocks to the brink of
extinction, Redden challenged the stakeholders — the National Marine
Fisheries Service, the Bonneville Power Administration, Indian tribes,
conservation organizations and scientists — "to take advantage of this
moment" and solve the problem.
Like previous recovery plans for the Columbia River basin, Bush's is no less a
manifesto for the status quo stakeholders. Asking politicians to abandon their
short-term self-interests to solve long-term problems may be asking the
impossible. Consider the history:
• In 1994, Redden's predecessor, Judge Malcom Marsh, threw out the
Clinton administration's salmon-recovery plan because it protected status quo
stakeholders at the expense of the fish.
• President Clinton's new plan, submitted in July 2000, repeated the
omissions and violations of his first, and Redden issued an injunction against
its implementation.
• In 2001, fish counts on the Snake River were perilously low. By
then, two stocks were declared extinct, and five more were listed as
endangered.
• In 2003, Redden ordered the Bush administration to resubmit a plan
in compliance with the Endangered Species Act.
• In May, Redden declared the new Bush plan grossly inadequate and
granted an injunction requested by Columbia River Indian tribes, conservation
groups and the state of Oregon, ordering "heavy spills" of dam water
this summer.
Federal efforts to rescue threatened salmon stocks began in the mid-1980s.
Twenty years and $4.5 billion later, the largest anadromous fish runs in the
world are fast approaching the point of no return on the extinction curve. The
government's ignominious record is proof that politicians are unequal to the
task of enforcing the Endangered Species Act.
Ideally, Redden will have the final word, and he will use it to cut the
political Gordian knot so that Columbia River salmon will continue making
their extraordinary journey from the mountains to the sea.
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Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/suncommentary/
la-op-salmon19jun19,1,5046714.story?coll=la-headlines-suncomment