Fishing for dollars
Is this
story an example of the Republicans who refuse to follow reality-based
liberals? Ignore the scientific data and just kill off the
agency?Senator Aims to
Kill Agency That Tracks
SalmonCraig Angry About Court
Order to Allow Water to Spill Over Dams to Save Endangered
FishBy Blaine
Harden
Washington Post Staff
Writer
Friday, June 24, 2005; Page A11
SEATTLE, June 23 -- Angered by a
federal court order that spills water over federal dams to save endangered
salmon in the Pacific Northwest, Sen. Larry E. Craig (R-Idaho) has inserted
language into a Senate energy bill that would kill an agency that keeps score on
the survival of fish as they swim through the heavily dammed Columbia and Snake
rivers.
The federal government has spent far
more money trying to prevent the extinction of Northwest salmon than it has on
any other endangered species. Craig's move would eliminate the Fish Passage
Center, which for more than two decades has been collecting and analyzing data
that document how effective that multibillion-dollar federal effort has
been.
A spokesman for the Idaho senator
calls the rider -- attached to an energy appropriations bill that moved last
week to the Senate floor -- "a shot across the bow" to challenge what Craig
believes is an agency that advocates a "controversial and one-sided" approach to
salmon recovery.
"Power rates are going up, we think
ratepayers ought to have some answers for how their money is being spent," said
Sid Smith, a spokesman for Craig. The Northwest depends more on hydroelectric
dams for power than any other part of the country.
The manager of the Fish Passage Center,
Michele DeHart, said her staff collects "data that is accurate and, yes, it does
show that the federal hydro system kills fish."
The federal court order that requires
summer spill over dams in the Snake River means that some of the electricity
that could be generated by those dams is being forgone -- at an estimated cost
of about $67 million over the three summer months. Much of the data on fish
survival that supported the order, which was made last month by a federal judge
in Portland and has been appealed by the Bush administration, was gathered and
analyzed by the Fish Passage Center.
"Maybe this is one of those deals where
when you don't like the message, you kill the messenger," DeHart
said.
At the heart of the dispute over salmon
is a disagreement about how to increase their survival as they negotiate federal
dams that have transformed the Snake and Columbia from the world's premier
salmon highway to a series of slow-moving lakes separated by huge slabs of
concrete.
Indian tribes, many state fish
biologists, fishing organizations and environmental groups say the best way to
increase survival is to keep the fish in the rivers while increasing their flow
during migration months and spilling water over dams. These groups have long
supported the Fish Passage Center, which has published many reports calling for
more spill and increased flow -- programs that can cost millions of dollars by
reducing electricity generation and disrupting irrigation and river
transport.
"We all have to rely on some mutually
agreeable data in order to figure out what is happening to the fish and, to
date, that has come from the Fish Passage Center," said Charles Hudson, a
spokesman for the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission.
On the other side, are federal agencies
that built the dams and sell the power, along with irrigation, barging and
utility interests that depend on the dammed-up Columbia and Snake for their
livelihood. Their side has received considerable support from the Bush
administration, which concluded last year that federal dams should be viewed as
part of an "environmental baseline" when it comes to saving salmon. U.S.
District Judge James Redden rejected that analysis this month, saying that it
was made "more in cynicism than in sincerity."
The Bush administration did not help
initiate the rider to stop funding the Fish Passage Center and had no comment on
the proposal, according to Brian Gorman, a spokesman in Seattle for the National
Marine Fisheries Service.
Hydropower interests generally support
taking salmon out of the river and transporting them around the dams, an
approach that allows maximum electricity production without interrupting river
barging or irrigation. They also have been denouncing DeHart and the Fish
Passage Center for years, accusing her and her staff of releasing distorted and
inaccurate information.
None of these accusations, however, has
been documented, according to Melinda Eden, chairman of the Northwest Power and
Conservation Council, a group that oversees the operation of the Fish Passage
Center. At the request of the council, an independent panel of scientists
studied the integrity and value of the center's work two years ago and
recommended continued financial support.
"We have been asking for years for
people with hard evidence of irregularities [in the fish data] to step up, and
nobody has brought a single piece of concrete evidence," Eden said.
The Fish Passage Center gets its money
from the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), which sells electricity produced
by federal dams in the Northwest. Stephen J. Wright, administrator of the BPA,
said through a spokesman that he would neither fight for the survival of the
Fish Passage Center nor work to eliminate it. He said, though, the BPA does need
data about fish and is willing to pay for it.
BPA spending on the Fish Passage Center
began after passage in 1980 of the Northwest Power Act, a law that requires that
federal dams be operated in a way that places salmon "on a par" with power,
navigation and irrigation.
The rider that bans funding for the
Fish Passage Center will have to get through a House-Senate conference and be
signed by President Bush before BPA can hold back the money.
Posted: Fri - June 24, 2005 at 10:19 PM