
Northwest
Salmon: Dam science
SEATTLE
POST-INTELLIGENCER EDITORIAL BOARD
April 10, 2007
A federal court ruling on
salmon should provoke soul searching within the Bush administration and
searching in Congress for systemic solutions. Science needs to be
restored to an honest place in the federal government's decision making.
In strong and appropriate
terms, a federal court has rejected the false ways the administration
tried to revise science and the law to ignore the role of four lower
Snake River
dams in destroying salmon
runs. The administration claimed the dams had to be treated as part of
the natural landscape. A 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled
the feds had indulged themselves in "sleight of hand,"
manipulation and a uniquely "cramped view" of their ability to
protect endangered species.
Despite the
administration's tendency to abuse the facts, science has a large role
to play in protecting salmon. Congress should act on a proposal for
major studies of the salmon's condition and the costs of partially or
fully removing the dams. Seattle Democratic Rep. Jim McDermott and
Wisconsin Republican Jim Petri sponsor the proposal.
Congress and the
administration (assuming it might want to act more credibly in its
remaining 21-plus months before
1-20-2009
) ought to seek a better system for joining science and policy.
Despite the existence of a White House Office of Science and Technology
Policy, the administration seems to have launched science and policy
into separate dimensions.
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Source:
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/311018_damsed.html
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