Contact: Dawn
Collier
Phone: (916) 419-7111
Seattle,WA; May 28, 2004: Pacific Legal Foundation criticized the Bush
administration today for its proposed policy that would leave in place 26 Endangered
Species Act (ESA) listings for salmon throughout the West, and add yet
another listing, despite the fact that salmon are not at risk of extinction.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) newly
announced policy
flies in the face of PLF’s landmark 2001 court victory in Alsea
Valley Alliance v. Evans, where the federal court ordered NOAA
Fisheries to stop illegally excluding millions of hatchery spawned salmon in
order to justify listing naturally spawned salmon as threatened under the
ESA. Although NOAA agreed over two and half years ago to develop a new
policy to comply with the ruling, the proposed policy attempts to skirt the
court order by counting hatchery salmon, but maintaining bogus ESA listings
for salmon and steelhead in Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California, and
Idaho. The new policy is a purely political effort to accommodate both sides
of the issue.
“We’re very concerned that NOAA’s proposed policy violates the federal
court decision that we won in Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans,” said PLF
attorney Russ
Brooks. “At issue is what the ESA is meant to protect, and what NOAA
Fisheries is authorized to do under the ESA. There is absolutely no legal
basis on which NOAA can count the millions of hatchery salmon and steelhead
in fish runs throughout the West and, at the same time, somehow keep these
ubiquitous fish listed as endangered. Under the ESA, the administration
can’t have it both ways.”
“We will continue working with NOAA during the comment period and we hope
they will recognize their serious mistake, but if they don’t, they can
expect to see us right back in court,” said Brooks.
In 2001, Pacific Legal Foundation won a landmark federal court decision
in Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans, where Federal Judge Michael Hogan
determined that the plain language of the Endangered Species Act did not
legally authorize NOAA Fisheries to subdivide a distinct population segment
of a species into smaller units such as naturally spawning and hatchery bred
fish. As a result, Judge Hogan found that NOAA’s practice of excluding
hatchery bred salmon from fish counts to justify ESA listings for Oregon
coastal coho salmon was arbitrary and capricious, and ordered NOAA to
include hatchery fish in future counts. Shortly after the decision, the Bush
administration, through NOAA, agreed to review its hatchery policy for all
26 listings of salmon and steelhead. Environmental groups appealed the
ruling, but Judge Hogan’s decision was upheld by the U.S. Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals in February.
“The administration is trying to straddle this issue, but legally, they
don’t have a leg to stand on,” said Brooks. “Under the ESA, the
federal government has the authority to protect salmon species that are at
risk of extinction, but Pacific salmon are not at risk. Millions of fish
from each of the five Pacific salmon species are flourishing from Alaska to
California. The fact that you can buy salmon for $3.99 a pound in your local
supermarket should make that pretty clear. No other ESA listed species is on
the dinner menu at your local restaurant.”
Over the last several weeks, a public relations campaign by
environmentalists and resulting media reports have wildly distorted the
issues surrounding the anticipated policy, glossing over the court-ordered
mandate to count hatchery fish, and instead attacking the quality of salmon
hatcheries and hatchery fish. These reports in large part rely on a recent
article, published in Science, by several scientists with no actual
hatchery expertise or experience. Their criticisms are ill-founded and based
on outdated information about hatchery management practices.
Fisheries scientists agree that modern hatchery practices clearly benefit
salmon ecosystems. Hatchery salmon spend only the beginning of their lives
in a hatchery and live the overwhelming majority of their lives in the wild.
When released, the instincts Mother Nature provided them take over and they
do everything naturally spawning salmon do. Hatchery salmon then live their
lives side-by-side with naturally spawning salmon in the same ecosystems:
They forage, feed, and avoid predators and fishermen while making their way
to the ocean. Their instincts eventually instruct them to return to their
native streams and spawn—just like naturally spawning salmon. They would
spawn naturally if left alone and large numbers do. In fact, many hatchery
salmon spawn with “wild” salmon.
“It is regrettable that the administration has decided to put politics
before solid science, the rule of law, and the economic and personal
hardship many people in the West are suffering as a result of these illegal
listings,” said Brooks. “Under the ESA, the only questions are whether
salmon are endangered and whether existing salmon ecosystems can adequately
support salmon. Quite simply, millions of salmon thriving in these
ecosystems mean that the ESA listings for salmon cannot be legally
justified.”
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To arrange interviews on this issue, journalists and
producers may contact PLF's Media Director, Dawn
Collier, at (916)362-2833.