
A
new test for
Oregon
's salmon plan
Return
of coastal coho to the endangered species list puts landowners' recovery
efforts in the spotlight
February 09, 2008
The
Oregonian
Oregon
's unique state-federal partnership for salmon recovery was
left floating belly-up this week after a federal decision to return the
state's coastal coho to the endangered species list.
Collapse of the joint
program comes as a disappointment and puts a sizable blemish on an
important experiment that began a decade ago under former Gov. John
Kitzhaber. The state-federal component of the Oregon Plan for Salmon and
Watersheds was a promising and creative attempt to rebuild the dwindling
species through local and mostly volunteer efforts to restore salmon
habitat.
Now coastal coho will be
protected by more rigid provisions of the federal Endangered Species
Act. There's nothing inherently lamentable about that, but we believed
that Oregonians, particularly the thousands of landowners who toiled
voluntarily for years on restoration projects on scores of
Coast
Range
streams, deserved more time
to show that the experiment could work.
Oregon
coho have been on and off the endangered list throughout
many years of bitter court battles. The species was last delisted in
2006 after Kitzhaber's successor, Gov. Ted Kulongoski, struck a deal
with the Bush administration to give the state its unusual role in
leading recovery efforts.
Fishing and conservation
groups filed suit to relist the species and prevailed big-time last July
when a federal magistrate blasted the rosy analysis the state had used
to secure its agreement with the White House. The coho recovery report
cannot be taken seriously, she said, and three months later a higher
court upheld that view, directing the federal government to redo its
listing decision based on "best available science."
On Monday the clock ran
out. NOAA Fisheries Service, the federal agency responsible for salmon
recovery, announced the relisting of the Oregon species, saying the
tight timetable imposed by the court left it too little time to research
the state's novel and optimistic theory that coho are resilient enough
to rebound from very low numbers.
Understandably,
plaintiffs cheered the agency's decision, but it's hard to join in the
celebration. After all, the Northwest already has several federally
protected salmon species, and they haven't exactly been exploding back
into healthy populations.
Now Oregonians will be
spectators to a different kind of salmon recovery experiment. It will
show who was right -- conservationists who claim they've been highly
successful in getting private landowners to help improve habitat for
fish, or state officials who worry that federal protection of the
coastal coho will make
Oregon
landowners less willing to
participate in voluntary programs.
Everyone, of course,
should hope the conservationists are right. Winning federal protection
for coastal coho would be no win at all if it means slowing
Oregon
's on-the-ground progress in
restoring the species' habitat.
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Source:
http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/stories/index.ssf?/base/
editorial/1202516718246680.xml&coll=7
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