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Court rules to increase flows over dams

Curly

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I just heard on the radio that Judge Redden just ruled in court that the Snake and Columbia River dams will be required to increase flows over the dams for this summer to help salmon.
 
Did a Google search and found this article from the Seattle Times:


Friday, June 10, 2005, 03:22 P.M. Pacific

Permission to reprint or copy this article/photo must be obtained from The Seattle Times. Call 206-464-3113 or e-mail [email protected] with your request.



Federal judge orders dams to spill more water to aid salmon


The Associated Press


PORTLAND — U.S. District Judge James Redden today ordered the spill over the four Snake River dams and McNary Dam on the Columbia River to be increased, a move environmentalists said is needed to increase salmon survival.

But he rejected their request to increase the flow out of the Snake River and the upper Columbia, which environmentalists had sought to lower water temperatures and speed the migration of young salmon downriver.

Redden predicted the ruling would quickly be appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The first spills are scheduled to begin in less than two weeks and affect the fall chinook run.

He indicated earlier this week he was inclined to allow the increased spill.

The environmentalists wanted about two thirds of the water in the dams to go over the spillways instead of passing through the turbines to generate electricity. That would drop gradually to about half as river levels lower through the summer.

The government had contended the environmentalists plan would cost some $100 million in lost power production.
 
Today's editorial:

Idaho salmon and Idaho water users both won in court Friday.

U.S. District Judge James Redden gave young fall chinook salmon help to migrate to the Pacific during a drought year. Redden ordered the government to "spill" more water over four federal dams on the lower Snake River in Washington and one dam on the Columbia River. Spills could begin within two weeks. He also rejected the idea of taking scarce water from Idaho reservoirs to speed up the flow of the rivers.

Idahoans should be pleased with this deal — since its benefits outweigh the costs.

A big cost will be borne by the Bonneville Power Administration, which produces about one-fifth of the electricity used in Idaho. BPA says the summer spills would cost its ratepayers $67 million, since water spilled over the dams does not go through turbines that generate hydroelectricity but kill young salmon.

We can't be naive. Idaho's rare and precious salmon and Idaho water users are facing a difficult drought year. There won't be any free fixes.

This may not be the last chapter in the courtroom battle over salmon.

The federal government could appeal the spill ruling to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. That may be inevitable but would be unfortunate. Idaho water users — and Idaho salmon — need the protection they would get under Redden's ruling.
 
Here's more news:

PORTLAND — Federal dam managers must help endangered salmon pass Snake and Columbia River dams beginning this month by spilling water over the dams that will cost Northwest electric ratepayers tens of millions, a judge ordered Friday.

U.S. District Judge James Redden granted part of a request from environmentalists, fishing groups and Indian tribes to take immediate steps to aid salmon. Redden told lawyers for the states, federal agencies, farmers and electric customers they all need to be involved in talks aimed at developing a permanent salmon plan that meets the Endangered Species Act and guarantees that struggling salmon populations recover.

"This is not an insoluble problem," Redden said. "I think I'm going to have to get help from the agencies and the plaintiffs. You are the people who are going to have to do it."

On May 26, Redden struck down the Bush administration's plan for protecting salmon and operating 14 hydroelectric dams in the Columbia Basin. On Friday, Redden called that plan "more cynicism than sincerity."

Spilling water through the spillways of dams helps direct the fish away from the hydropower turbines that kill fish or stun them so they are vulnerable to predators.

Federal dam managers don't like spilling the water because that water then cannot be used to generate electricity. Instead, they prefer to collect the salmon on barges and ship them through the dams to the mouth of the Columbia.

Redden ordered water spilled at Lower Granite, Little Goose and Lower Monumental dams on the Snake River in Washington beginning June 20 and McNary Dam on the Columbia July 1.

Redden's order to increase spill means that fewer fish will have to be barged.

The spilled water will result in a loss of $67 million in revenue for the Bonneville Power Administration, which markets electricity produced at the dams, said BPA Administrator Steve Wright.

That won't cost Idaho Power Co. customers, but it will affect the bills of about 20 percent of Idaho residents who get their power from rural cooperatives in Idaho and from the city of Idaho Falls.

Redden rejected a request from salmon advocates that could have had a much more direct effect on Idaho: increasing flows in the Snake and Columbia rivers by drawing down the reservoirs behind the dams and taking more water from Idaho reservoirs.

But Idaho may face new claims to its water to protect salmon. Todd True, an attorney for the environmental and fishing groups, said in court Friday that a plan for operating Upper Snake basin dams on the Snake, Boise and Payette rivers in Idaho relies on the same flawed assumptions Redden rejected in striking down the Columbia Basin dam plan.

True said the groups intend to file a lawsuit challenging the Snake River management plan.

That could put the recently approved Nez Perce Agreement in jeopardy. The agreement between the Nez Perce tribe, the state of Idaho and irrigators set a limit of 487,000 acre-feet of water that can be drained from southern Idaho reservoirs to aid salmon.

But the agreement allows far less to be sent downriver in drought years like this one. In fact, in their request to the judge, salmon advocates asked Redden to order only 343,000 acre-feet to aid salmon this year.

"If you need water to ensure the survival of endangered salmon, Idaho water law and a state agreement don't matter," True said.

Still, True said, he and other salmon advocates are ready to talk with the state, the tribe and the federal agencies about the issue.

Federal officials have been meeting privately with representatives of the governors of Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Montana in talks they told Redden on Friday were promising for developing a long-term salmon plan that could replace the rejected Bush plan. They provided no details, but said they have a "framework" for agreement and asked Redden to accept their summer operations plan that proposed minimal spill and minor changes to the current plan.

Redden rejected the federal-state proposal, but urged the governments to involve the salmon advocates in their talks.

"We were making progress, but we ran out of time" before Friday's hearing, said Robert Lohn, Pacific Northwest director of the National Marine Fisheries Service, also known as NOAA Fisheries.

The federal agencies will continue the talks and attempt to bring in the tribes and eventually the environmentalists and fishing groups, Lohn said.

U.S. Department of Justice attorney Fred Disheroon said the Bush administration is considering whether to appeal Redden's decision. If the government loses on appeal, he said, it might ask for the presidentially appointed Endangered Species Committee, also known as the God Squad. The panel is so nicknamed because it could rule that there are no feasible alternatives for dam operations and exempt them from the dictates of the Endangered Species Act.

Redden said he was not fearful of an appeal. "You win some, you lose some," he said. But he said he was doubtful federal agencies would find sanctuary in the God Squad.

"Even the God Squad must find there aren't any other alternatives, and I'm saying there are many
 
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