[env-trinity] PCFFA Alert: Rivers Need Help Now to Save Fisheries!
Daniel Bacher
danielbacher at hotmail.com
Thu Jun 23 10:57:20 PDT 2005
RIVERS NEED HELP NOW TO SAVE FISHERIES
SALMON, CRAB, OTHER RIVER AND ESTUARY DEPENDENT FISH THREATENED BY ASSAULTS
ON THE COLUMBIA, KLAMATH AND SACRAMENTO
By: By Glen Spain, Allison Gordon, Zeke Grader
Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations
June 21, 2005
Three of the West Coasts major river systems the Columbia, Klamath and
Central Valley (Sacramento, San Joaquin) are under siege and fishermen need
to act now to save these rivers and the fisheries they support. We have
provided you the addresses of the Governors fishermen need to contact
immediately to protect these critical waterways and the fishing industry
jobs they generate.
Its not just salmon fishing thats threatened. As most crab fishermen know,
the best Dungeness crab fishing tends to be around the mouths of major
rivers, since juveniles use these estuaries as nursery grounds.
Its no coincidence, for example, that the record Dungeness crab landings in
the Gulf of the Farallones, outside of the Golden Gate, occurred at a time
of high salmon production. Both owed their abundance to good water
conditions in the river (in other words, the inflows of fresh water to
theestuary), as well as good oceanic conditions. The Sacramento, and what
remains of the San Joaquin, are not simply a passageway for large runs of
fall chinook salmon between Sierra streams and San Francisco Bay and the
ocean, they supply the freshwater inflow to the whole delta and bay to
create the most important estuary on the west coast of North and South
America. This bay/estuary ecosystem supports the nations only remaining
urban commercial fishery (for herring), and provides critical habitat for
California halibut, English sole and other economically important fish
stocks.
The Columbia, too, supports a $50 million/year Dungeness crab fishery
outside its mouth and, besides being the largest salmon river on the
continent, there is still a sturgeon fishery taking place in the river. The
Klamath, whose fish kills in 2002 are the cause of the draconian salmon
season cutbacks this year offshore Oregon and California, also supports a
large Dungeness crab fishery off its mouth between Eureka and Crescent City.
So what is the nature of these assaults? Why should you be mad as hell and
decide to do something about it? Lets take a look as you sit down to call
or write the Governors.
Delta Ecosystem Collapses Due to Water Grabs
Californias Governor Needs to Terminate
New Pumping Plans
The San Francisco Bay-Sacramento/San Joaquin Delta that supplies most of the
king salmon harvested in the ocean fisheries offshore California, Oregon and
Washington is far short of its necessary freshwater inflow to maintain its
estuarine function -- on average now short about 1.6 million acre-feet (MAF)
of water annually. In fact, in some years as much as half of its inflow is
diverted, mostly by the State and Federal pumps in the Delta, to San Joaquin
Valley growers and municipal water users. This inflow shortfall has been
known about (although the scientific report documenting it was later buried)
since 1988 when the California State Water Resources Control Board prepared
a draft order to increase inflow by that amount. That draft order, however,
was quickly killed by the Legislature and Governor at that time once the
states powerful water buffaloes got wind of it and began applying their
political pressure.
In 1992, Congress recognized the shortage to the Bay and Delta and voted in
the Central Valley Project Improvement Act (CVPIA) to provide the Federal
share of that amount by allocating an additional 800,000 acre-feet of yield
from the Central Valley Project for fish and wildlife. Unfortunately, the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, charged with implementing the CVPIA, subscribes
to a culture that worships dams and views water diversions as a holy
sacrament. It was not about to let Congress undo what man had created. So,
instead of allowing the allotted water to flow downstream through the Delta
and to the Bay, it devised plans to use the fish and wildlife water upstream
and then divert it, conveniently at times when irrigators wanted it most,
when it hit the Delta pumps. In fact, since the passage 13 years ago of the
CVPIA, which formally made the protection of fish and wildlife a Project
purpose, pumping in the Delta has actually increased, further exacerbating
the inflow shortfall of the Delta and Bay and creating a huge salt water
backup. It was not surprising therefore when State and Federal biologists
announced a month ago the collapse of the Delta ecosystem. In the past four
years, four species of Delta fish have gone into severe decline, as have
copepods, the important base of the Deltas complex food web.
Yet even in the face of the sudden collapse of the whole Delta ecosystem,
the California Department of Water Resources (CDWR) is proposing to increase
pumping rates, reducing inflow even more and shipping even more water south.
Its plans are to increase pumping maximums from 6680 cubic feet per second
(cfs) to 8500cfs, an increase of 25 percent.
Fisheries biologists point to three suspected causes of the Delta collapse.
Degraded water quality, exotic species and massive water diversions. The
collapse of the Delta species over the last four years has in fact coincided
with the highest annual rates of water diversions from the Bay-Delta.
According to State and Federal fisheries documents, increasing diversions
will make the ecosystem collapse even worse.
Even more disturbing is that this increased stress on the Delta is not even
necessary. California is not in a water crisis. In fact, according to the
States own California Water Plan Update Public Review Draft, California can
meet water needs well into the future without taking more water out of the
Bay-Delta Estuary. This Water Plan Update even shows that water demand in
California may actually decrease over the next thirty years. In fact, the
Planning and Conservation League has identified 4.2 million acre-feet of
water that could be conserved using cheap and readily available conservation
and reuse technologies, while this Delta Damaging Plan might provide only
1 million acre-feet of additional water, at the expense of a system that is
already short more than 1.6 million acre-feet
Key elements of this massive water grab include actions by Federal and State
water agencies that reduce protections and increase water volumes for
pumping at the expense of Californias sustainable water future:
* The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) was politically pressured
into reversing their prior scientific finding that increased pumping would
jeopardize salmon and steelhead trout. Even their watered down Biological
Opinion (BiOp) stated that the project would increase the likelihood of
extinction for all listed species on most rivers tributary to the Delta.
* The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will soon gut key protections currently in
place to ensure that fish will have the cold water necessary for their
survival (e.g., by deleting the requirement that enough cold water be held
in Shasta Reservoir for release to the Sacramento River and
alteringtemperature control standards).
* The Bureau of Reclamation rushed through forty-year sweetheart water
delivery contracts with Northern California districts for more water than
they need so that those districts can sell the water to Southern California,
all at ludicrously large markups.
* The State Water Project will increase water export capacity by up to 25
percent. CDWR is currently pushing to get approval to use its pumps to
export as much as 1 million acre-feet of this water.
* The Department of Water Resources is connecting the State Water Project
canal to the Bureau of Reclamations Delta Mendota Canal so CDWR can pump
more water for Bureau water contractors such as the Westlands Water
District.
The San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary is critical for the health of the west
coast ocean salmon fishery, along with major crab and herring fisheries.
This important ecological resource should not be destroyed.
Taking Action: We need you to write a letter to Governor Schwarzenegger.
Tell him these key fisheries depend on the health of the Bay and Delta
ecosystem. It is your livelihood thats at stake.
Tell him it makes no sense to you that his Department of Water Resources is
planning to increase pumping of water from the Delta when the Delta is
already so stressed that many of its species are in serious decline.
Tell him we already have faster, better and cheaper ways to provide water
for his States future. These are outlined clearly in the just released
California Water Plan.
Tell him you want a sensible, defensible, sustainable water policy that
conserves our public resources and maintains a strong fishing industry. Send
your letters, e-mails, or make your phone calls to:
The Honorable Arnold Schwarzenegger
Governor of the State of California
State Capitol Building
Sacramento, CA 95814
Office: (916) 445-2841
Fax: (916) 445-4633
E-mail to the Governor: http://www.govmail.ca.gov
Busting the Dams and Busting Loose
With Water on the Klamath
Its Hasta La Vista Time for Low
Flows and Bad Water
Unless someone has their head where the sun doesnt shine, its no secret
the salmon fishery for Oregon and California this year is the most
restricted its been in recent history, despite some record runs, all
because of two fish kills in the Klamath River in 2002 and the impact that
has had on stocks that would have been available for harvest this year and
next.
Salmon fishermen are facing the worst season in decades in Oregon and
California, in spite of record returns to the Sacramento River this year,
because wherever those imperiled Klamath fish intermingle with abundant
runs, weak stock management principles require fishermen to avoid all
impacts everywhere. Fishing opportunities within the Klamath Management Zone
(KMZ) are pretty much closed entirely this year, but closures and
restrictions have affected ports as far south as Santa Cruz and north to the
Columbia River nearly 600 miles of coastline.
Years of federal mismanagement in the Klamath shorted water to the river
that fish needed to survive. In 2002, so much water was taken by the U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation and others from the river that fish died in massive
numbers, first a juvenile fish kill of at least 200,000 that spring,
affecting this years adult returns, and later that summer an estimated
80,000 adult spawners died before they could spawn. Rampant spread of
several fatal fish diseases in the river, which are favored by slow moving
warm water, has taken a huge toll of juvenile fish in every year since then.
The cause of the disaster is well known. This was not an act of God, nor any
mystery; it was a deliberate result of current federal water policy. This
years collapse traces straight back to the intentional (and politically
motivated) spring 2002 decision by the Bush Administration, acting through
the Bureau of Reclamation, to permanently reduce flows to the lower Klamath
River to record lows. By keeping back far more water for federal irrigation
than recommended by scientists and fishermen, the government left too little
in the river for salmon to survive their journey to the spawning areas. The
Administrations Klamath water policy, whether intended or not, was a wanton
action to starve the river.
Reclamation controls all the flows that pass through Iron Gate Dam, the
lowest in a series of small dams on the Klamath that block the mid-river.
These flows can amount to half of the total volume at the estuary during
critical summer months and in dry years. 2002 was a particularly dry year.
Starting in spring of 2002, Reclamation embarked on a 10-year water
allocation plan. This plan was embodied in a Biological Opinion (BiOp)
approved by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS). That BiOp,
however, was the result of NMFS caving in to political pressure from the
Bureau and the Administration. NMFS non-scientist officials overrode the
agencys own Science Assessment Team, who said the fish needed more water,
and placed the fish clearly in jeopardy. In fact, the head of the NMFS
Science Assessment Team, Dr. Michael Kelly, would later file a
whistle-blower complaint about agency higher ups ordering the plan to be
rewritten to Bureau of Reclamation specifications, in spite of a known high
risk to fish.
That 10-year plan reduced spring and summer flows in the Klamath River to
less than half that required to protect salmon in the river, and so turned
the river into a warm-water trickle that bred parasites, produced algae
blooms, crowded the fish and deprived them of important habitat. The federal
agencies were repeatedly told by fishermen, the Tribes and their own
scientists that this would lead to disaster, but all objections were ignored
in the Bush Administrations haste to respond to heavy political pressure
from irate Upper Basin irrigators and their Congressional representatives.
As a result of the spring 2002 juvenile fish kill, the 2005 season is less
than half what it was just last year, and lost fishing opportunities may
cost our industry up to $100 million this year alone. Next year we will pay
the additional price for the fall 2002 adult spawner fish kill of up to an
estimated 80,000, with an unknown additional price tag for those losses.
PCFFA has made formal requests to the Governors of both California and
Oregon to declare a disaster, and to request the declaration of a fishery
failure by the Secretary of Commerce. The Secretary of Commerce has the
legal authority to declare a commercial fishery failure disaster
declaration under the Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Conservation and Management
Act, Section 312(a) [16 U.S.C. §1861(a)]. Independent authority for such a
disaster declaration also exists under the older Interjurisdictional
Fisheries Act (IFA), at 308(b) [16 U.S.C. §4107(b)]. Similar disaster
declarations occurred for the west coast salmon fishery following the
seven-year drought in the late 1980s, and during the severe El Niño events
of 1982-83 and 1995.
Thirty-seven members of Congress in Oregon and California have supported our
request for disaster relief. A copy of that letter is on the PCFFA web site.
Ultimately, however, the problems in the Klamath can never be solved unless
there is more water left in the river for the fish. The State of California
plays a key role in advocating for additional flows to keep these fisheries
alive and recovering. Another measure under consideration is the removal of
Iron Gate Dam and other small, now obsolete, power dams that block the river
and have cut off hundreds of miles of good spawning and rearing habitat
above them. These dams not only block fish passage, but they seriously
impair water quality.
The 50-year license for operating these dams expires in March of 2006,
present a once in a lifetime chance to restore this key river system and
bring the salmon home to the upper basin. So far the State of California has
taken the position that several of these dams should come down. This would
help restore salmon to the upper river where they were once abundant.
Taking Action: California Governor Schwarzenegger should stand firm in
supporting fishermen and in demanding more water for the lower Klamath River
to protect and restore fisheries. Drop him a letter or call his office
asking him to continue to take a strong stand on putting more water in the
Klamath River, removing dams in the Klamath that kill fish, and working
toward full salmon recovery for the Klamath Basin. You can contact his
office as follows:
The Honorable Arnold Schwarzenegger
Governor of the State of California
State Capitol Building
Sacramento, CA 95814
Office: (916) 445-2841
Fax: (916) 445-4633
E-mail to the Governor: http://www.govmail.ca.gov
For More Information on the Klamath See: Cant Fish Salmon? Federal Klamath
Water Policies Are To Blame, from the April 2005 FN on the web at:
www.pcffa.org/fn-apr05.htm. Likewise see: Why the Klamath Matters to West
Coast Fishermen, from the August 2001 FN, on the web at:
www.pcffa.org/fn-aug01.htm. Also check out the top of the PCFFA Home Page
at: www.pcffa.org where you will find the latest letters from PCFFA
requesting disaster assistance and letters from Members of Congress
supporting those efforts.
Its Either a Recovered Salmon Fishery for the
Columbia or Preserving Obsolete Dams.
The Governors Cant Have it Both Ways.
The mighty Columbia was once the largest salmon-producing river in the
world, with runs estimated at from 10 to 16 million adults. Today the number
of wild salmon and steelhead is down to about 2-3 percent of those historic
runs, and nearly every run is federally protected under the Endangered
Species Act. Today the Columbia and its major tributary, the Snake River,
are the most heavily dammed rivers in the nation.
Fishermen have been the lead is decades of struggle, first to secure fish
passage through the Columbia at all (the original plan provided for no fish
passage of any sort), and today the struggle is to reopen parts of the river
once again to spawning and rearing, primarily with the removal of the lower
four Snake River dams (Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower
Granite).
As we have written before, these four dams have been a disaster for the
Northwest economy, killing far more economic wealth in the form of
devastated Snake River salmon runs (once 50 percent of the Columbias
productivity) in return for very few public benefits.
Access to a huge amount of pristine spawning and rearing habitat is on the
other side of the lower four Snake River dams. Blocking spawner access to
that habitat, plus making it that much harder for outmigrating smolts by
forcing them through four more banks of turbines just makes no sense.
The four lower Snake River dams were not built because of either good
science or sound economics, but as a result of decades of persistent
Congressional lobbying by Idaho development boosters and land speculators.
Even the Army Corps of Engineers, in a comprehensive report in 1933, and
then again in 1938, concluded that additional projects proposed for the
Snake River would never even pay for themselves as projects, even ignoring
major losses to fisheries damages.
The lower four Snake River dams generate relatively little power (less in
fact than could be saved by reasonable conservation measures), provide
little or no irrigation water (only one provides any at all, and then only
for about 36,000 acres that could just as easily be supplied by wells), and
no flood control whatsoever. The only major benefit any of these four dams
ever provided is heavily subsidized river barge transportation, and then
only between Pasco, WA (the original barge terminal before the dams were
completed in 1974) and Lewiston, ID. Even these transportation benefits can
be cost-effectively replaced by railroads which, were it not for the large
federal barging subsidy, would actually be much cheaper.
In fact, fisheries managers from Washington and other states warned
repeatedly that the planned construction of more dams would be a disaster
for the Columbias salmon runs. This is a typical example, from the State of
Washington Department of Fisheries Annual Report for 1949:
Another serious threat to the Columbia river fishery is the proposed
construction by the U.S. Army Engineers of Ice Harbor and three other dams
on the lower Snake river between Pasco., Wash., and Lewiston, Idaho, to
provide slackwater navigation and a relatively minor block of power. The
development would remove part of the cost of waterborne shipping from the
shipper and place it on the taxpayer, jeopardizing more than one-half of the
Columbia river salmon production in exchange for 148 miles of subsidized
barge route.... This policy of water development, the department maintains,
is not in the best interest of the over-all economy of the state. Salmon
must be protected from the type of unilateral thinking that would harm one
industry to benefit another.... Loss of the Snake River fish production
would be so serious that the department has consistently opposed the
four-phase lower dam program that would begin with Ice Harbor dam near
Pasco.
Unfortunately, what fisheries managers had predicted in 1949 came true
once abundant runs of salmon spawning in the Snake River were all but
destroyed, leading to the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars each year
in economic benefits to the entire Northwest and well into Southeast Alaska,
which is also heavily dependent on Columbia-origin stocks.
The four lower Snake River dams were constructed by Congressional fiat, over
the intense objections of commercial fishermen, Tribes, state agency
biologists, coastal communities and even the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Salmon can apparently survive the impact of the four lower Columbia main
stem dams, but these four additional Snake River dams were truly a
short-sighted boondoggle that can no longer be justified.
Why does the Columbia matter to fishermen all over the west coast? First,
there are direct losses of harvest opportunities from massive fish losses
from the Columbia itself. This collapse has impoverished the lower river
gill-net fleet which once plied the lower Columbia from Astoria, but also
dramatically affected fisheries in Southeast Alaska, which is more than half
dependent upon Columbia stocks for its harvests.
Second, since Columbia basin salmon are so widely migratory, and thus a
component in many mixed-stock ocean fisheries, Columbia and Snake
River-driven weak stock management constraints on all west coast salmon
fisheries are not uncommon. When this happens, harvest opportunities on many
otherwise abundant stocks must be curtailed and ocean fisheries closed.
Thishappened most dramatically in 1997 when large portions of the
Sacramento-San Joaquin chinook harvests were closed to protect weak Snake
River fish, causing losses in the many tens of millions of dollars in
California and Oregon. In earlier years, whole chunks of the Southeast
Alaska salmon fishery were also closed, all to prevent impacts on these
extremely weak Snake River stocks. Snake River-driven constraints stand
right behind the Klamath as a likely cause of future closures.
Third, more depletion of the Columbia River north-migrating stocks could
once again destabilize the hard fought Pacific Salmon Treaty, intended to
put an end to past fish wars between the U.S. and Canada over salmon that
migrate back and forth between the two countries. That Treaty rests on the
assumption that for every salmon originating in a British Columbia stream
that is later caught by Alaska fishermen, at least one U.S. fish originating
in the Columbia River, most of which are north-migrating, can be caught in
British Columbia. This one-for-one equation, however, quickly breaks down
when stocks from the Columbia are in deep decline, as has happened in recent
years. Just a few years ago, the Treaty broke down completely over these
issues, resulting in a renewed fish war with Canada and the imposition of
transit fees for fishing vessels routinely moving (as many do) between
summer waters of Alaska and over-wintering in Seattle or Bellingham,
Washington.
Fourth, your taxpayer dollars are going toward an increasingly preposterous
$500 million/year menu of salmon recovery measures that are not actually
intended to truly recover the fish, not going to do anything about impacts
of the four lower Snake River dams, and not going to, in the end, solve any
of the problems of the river. The latest such 2004 Biological Opinion
recovery plan, for instance, courtesy of the Bush Administration, actually
abandons salmon recovery as a conservation standard in favor of merely
maintaining museum runs of fish, and likewise totally ignores Columbia River
dams by attempting to reclassify them as part of the environmental
baseline, as though they had been dropped there by Ice Age glaciers and not
the Army Corps of Engineers.
That latest 2004 Salmon Plan has once again been challenged in U.S. District
Court by PCFFA and many other fishing groups and fish advocates, and is
likely to be entirely invalidated as seriously flawed. Under the current
plan, 2005 spring chinook returns have deteriorated to less than 15
percenttheir abundance even in 2004, and all lower Columbia commercial and
sport fishing has been closed on an emergency basis. Members of Congress are
calling for a declaration by the Secretary of Commerce of a fisheries
failure parallel to that asked for the Klamath, and fishery closures are
now migrating up the Washington coast and far inland to Idaho.
Taking Action: Write to your Northwest Governors and tell them to make every
effort to recover salmon in the Columbia to full harvestable levels,
including rethinking the need for the lower four Snake River dams which have
been a disaster for once-abundant Columbia River salmon fisheries and
Northwest fisheries economies everywhere:
The Honorable Ted Kulongoski
Governor of the State of Oregon
160 State Capitol Building
Salem, OR 97310-4047
The Honorable Christine O. Gregoire
Governor of the State of Washington
PO Box 40002
Olympia, WA 98504-0002
The Honorable Dirk Kempthorne
Governor of the State of Idaho
700 West Jefferson Street, 2nd Floor
Boise, ID 83720-0034
For More Information on the Columbia See: Why the Columbia Matters to West
Coast Fishermen, from the July, 2004 FN. A copy of that article is on the
Web at: www.pcffa.org/fn-jul04.htm. Also see the Proposed Columbia Salmon
Plan Protects Dams, Imperils Salmon, from the October 2004 FN, on the Web
at: www.pcffa.org/fn-oct04.htm; and Ending the Era of Big Dams: Why Some
Dams Must Go, from the August 1999 FN at: www.pcffa.org/fn-aug99.htm.
If You Dont Act, Who Will?
What needs to be done to protect these rivers is pretty clear. Its also
clear that a lot of different fisheries depend on the health of these
rivers.
So dont just sit there in your wheelhouse fuming over the radio or cell
phone with your code group about there being no fish, or about regulations
stopping you from fishing. Dont just sit there in front of your PC
kibitzing with your blog group. Get off your ass and make a phone call or
write a letter to the Governors and tell them your livelihood and your
fishery is at stake and youre mad as hell and you want the problems fixed
now! Youll feel better for it and it will do some real good.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Glen Spain is the Northwest Regional Director for the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermens Associations (PCFFA) and the Institute for
Fisheries Resources (IFR); Allison Gordon is a salmon watershed volunteer on
staff with IFRs office in San Francisco; and Zeke Grader is the Executive
Director for the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens Associations
(PCFFA). PCFFA can be reached by email to: fish1ifr at aol.com. Check out the
PCFFA web site at: www.pcffa.org.
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