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SEATTLE,
March 28 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Representatives of a
broad-based coalition of fishing businesses and
conservation groups today warned that sweeping changes
proposed by the Bush administration to regulations under
the Endangered Species Act would pose a direct threat to
salmon recovery efforts in the
Pacific
Northwest
.
Several
of the proposed changes, made public earlier this week,
appear to take direct aim at efforts to protect and
restore endangered salmon in the
Columbia
and
Snake
River basin
, as well as
recent federal court rulings that favor protecting these
fish.
Specifically,
one proposed change would allow projects by federal
agencies, such as the Army Corps. of Engineers or
Bonneville Power Administration, to go forward as long as
they do not make the "environmental baseline"
any worse. In the
Columbia
basin, this
change would include in the baseline the existing federal
dams and the harm they have already caused to salmon,
effectively making the dams a part of the environment.
This
would conflict directly with court rulings in 2005
rejecting both this approach and a dam management plan
based on it. Federal district court judge James Redden has
sharply rejected previous agency claims that, under the
terms of the Endangered Species Act, the existing dams are
an "immutable" part of the environmental
landscape. The working draft also gives agencies like the
BPA the unilateral right to decide what aspects of dam
operations, if any, it would consult with fish and
wildlife experts about.
"This
is a straight-ahead effort by the Bush administration to
end-run an adverse court ruling. It confirms that they are
not interested in making an honest effort to restore
Pacific Northwest
salmon," said Todd True, attorney with
Earthjustice. "While the states and tribes have been
working hard in the remand process to develop a legitimate
salmon plan that meets the law and is based on sound
science, it looks like the federal agencies have been
working hard behind the scenes to make those efforts
irrelevant so they can do what they want to. And what they
seem to want to do is to protect the federal hydrosystem,
regardless of the harm it is causing to salmon and the
communities that depend on them."
"This
latest attack by the administration makes recovery all but
impossible for salmon and steelhead in the
Pacific Northwest
," said
Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen's Associations (PCFFA), the
largest fishermen's organization on the
U.S.
west coast.
"These changes, if implemented, could well be the
last straw that sends salmon over the brink to extinction,
and the West Coast fishing industry along with it. That
can only result in further huge economic losses for all of
the Pacific salmon states, at a time when communities up
and down the coast are already being hard hit."
Coalition
members are united in their opposition to the proposed
changes, and urge members of Congress to vigorously oppose
any weakening of the Endangered Species Act, said Nicole
Cordan, policy and legal director for Save Our Wild
Salmon. "We applaud Rep. Norm Dicks' strong words
today to U.S. Fish & Wildlife Director Hall and we
hope to see similar leadership from the rest of our
Northwest delegation in the House and Senate to ensure we
turn back this threat to our Northwest way of life, which
includes good fishing and abundant salmon
populations," she said. "This is just another
attempt by this administration to ignore a law and a court
order it doesn't like and the Northwest delegation needs
to stand-up for our communities and simply say 'No way,
Mr. President.'"
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Save
Our Wild Salmon is a nationwide coalition of conservation
organizations, commercial and sport fishing associations,
businesses, river groups, and taxpayer advocates working
collectively to restore self-sustaining, healthy, and
abundant wild salmon to rivers, streams and oceans of the
Pacific Salmon states.
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