[env-trinity] Klamath Basin Farmers Win Technical Victory, But Coho Listing Stays
Daniel Bacher
danielbacher at hotmail.com
Wed Feb 2 13:38:04 PST 2005
Klamath Basin Farmers Win Technical Victory, But Coho Listing Stays
by Dan Bacher
Judge Michael Hogan, in U.S. District Court in Eugene, Oregon, ruled in
January that coho salmon in the Klamath Basin were incorrectly listed as a
threatened species because of the way the federal government treated
hatchery and wild fish in the same Evolutionarily Significant Unit (ESU).
At the same time, Hogan thwarted an attempt by basin growers to collect
damages resulting from coho protections. He also left the listing intact,
subject to a major policy change by the National Marine Fisheries Service
expected to be finalized in June 2005.
This was a thinly veiled water grab to take more water and make the fish go
extinct, said Glen Spain, Northwest Director of the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermens Associations. It was a technical victory, but
they lost the war.
The case, being litigated by the Pacific Legal Foundation, is very similar
to the Alsea Valley Alliance case it previously brought. The previous case
turned on fine legal and biological distinctions between wild and hatchery
fish and resulted in a ruling by the same Judge in September 2001
judicially delisting the Oregon Coho, according to Spain.
PCFFA, the Yurok Tribe and other groups intervened in this case in order to
continue minimal protections for coho salmon. Wild coho salmon populations
have declined dramatically in the Klamath River and throughout the Northwest
in recent decades, due to bad logging and other land management practices,
water diversions and the construction of dams.
The diversion of water to subsidized agribusiness in the federal Klamath
Project of southern Oregon has resulted in dramatic declines of coho salmon,
king salmon, steelhead and other species. Because of a change in Bureau of
Reclamation water policy that favors farmers over fish, over 200,000
juvenile salmon died in the spring of 2002 and over 68,000 adult fish
perished in September 2002. These fish kills have resulted in record low
returns of wild salmon, including coho, in Klamath River tributaries such as
the Scott and Salmon rivers this fall.
In spite of the attempts by the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) and other
extreme property rights groups to strip salmon protections, NMFS has
recommended relisting the coho under that new hatchery listing in June 2005.
The PLF praised the judge for saying that fish were illegally listed, but
threatened further legal action if NOAA continues to keep the coho listing
after the review of 26 West coast salmon stocks is completed this June.
This ruling should send a message to NOAA Fisheries that they cannot
continue to circumvent the ESA to keep salmon listed when the prolific
number of hatchery fish means salmon are not endangered, Russell Brooks,
PLF spokesman said. If NOAA does not accept the reality that the ESA does
not distinguish between wild and hatchery fish before it issues its new
hatchery policy, we will wind up back in court.
Judge Hogan had stayed the case, Grange v. National Marine Fisheries
Service, pending the tribes and PCFFAs appeals of the PLF victory in
Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans (2001).
In June 2004, NOAA Fisheries proposed a new hatchery policy while
simultaneously announcing that it would result in the re listing of west
coast salmon and steelhead populations.
As long as the federal government complies with Judge Hogans ruling that
the listing is illegal, there wont be a problem. But if they try to cut off
the water again or take some other similar action, well be back in court,
Brooks explained.
In November 2004, PLF said it would file a lawsuit challenging all 26
listings if NOAA enacts the proposed policy and continues to distinguish
between hatchery and naturally spawned fish, according to Brooks.
However, Spain noted that the difference between hatchery and wild fish is
virtually irrelevant on the Klamath River and its tributaries. Whether
you put wild or hatchery fish into the Klamath, there is a high risk of a
fish kill taking place, he quipped.
Also, although the court left the door open for farmers to show damages for
relief, It is unclear that they could ever show damages, given the way the
water management has been restructured in favor of farmers, he said.
The farmers received more water in 2004 than any similar dry to critically
dry year in the last 41 years, emphasized Spain. They received their full
delivery of 310,000 acre feet of water.
The Alsea case and the latest ruling arent really about hatchery versus
wild fish, according to Spain. This case is really about water and about
whether landowners have any obligation at all to prevent the death of an
entire river system and all of the fish within it by putting water they have
taken in the past back into the river, noted Spain.
While farmers claimed that this was a victory for them, it was really a
victory for the fish, said Troy Fletcher, executive director of the
YurokTribe. Although the listing was deficient, Judge Hogan still left the
coho listing in place.
He emphasized that while alleged damages to the farmers were only
speculative because the farmers received their full water deliveries, the
tribe and the PCFFFA in court demonstrated actual damages to the tribe and
the North Coast economy caused by the fish kill. This is one of a long
series of long battles to restore the Klamath River, added Fletcher.
Tribal communities and commercial and recreational fishing communities up
and down the coast have depended upon fall chinook for their livelihoods and
sustenance. Yurok and Karuk Tribal people, who have lived on the river for
thousands of years, depend on salmon as a main part of their diet and for
their culture, their livelihoods and their health.
A Karuk Tribe-commissioned report written by Kari Marie Norgaard, a UC Davis
sociologist, shows that lack of customary salmon in the tribal members diet
has had devastating impacts on community health. The report links the
disappearance of salmon to increases in poverty, unemployment, suicide and
social dissolution, wrote Blaine Harden in the Washington Post on January
30. The same water problems forcing the coho toward extinction affect all
other salmon, including fall chinook.
With an administration in Washington that favors a small group of subsidized
Klamath Basin farmers over thousands of tribal members, recreational anglers
and commercial fishermen, the courts will be increasingly crucial as an
arena for defending the gains made by fish advocates in recent years and
defeating the wise use movement and their allies.
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