U.S. Water News Online
SPOKANE, Wash. -- A bill to allow the federal government to remove four Snake River dams if other efforts to restore salmon fail has been introduced by Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash.
Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., who represents the Tri-Cities area, denounced the bill as a thinly veiled effort by environmental groups to destroy the dams.
``It is unfortunate that Eastern Washington is again hit with a broadside out of Seattle,'' Hastings said in a swipe at the Seattle congressman.
The bill's introduction came just two weeks after members of the Seattle City Council visited Eastern Washington to apologize for passing a resolution last year calling for removal of the dams. Members of the council said they did not think the measure through.
``Following the Seattle City Council's recent river tour and apology, I was hopeful our state could move beyond this divisive battle,'' Hastings said.
McDermott's bill asks the General Accounting Office to study the economic and environmental impacts of breaching the dams, and the consequences of the extinction of salmon and steelhead species. A report is due by Dec. 31, 2003.
The bill would allow the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to breach the dams if that is deemed necessary to restore Snake River salmon, meet Indian treaty obligations, or meet the requirements of the Clean Water Act.
``Since the four federal dams on the lower Snake River were constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, salmon and steelhead populations have plummeted,'' McDermott said.
Save Our Wild Salmon, a coalition of environmental groups, celebrated the bill's introduction in Washington, D.C., at a Capitol Building reception that featured smoked salmon, according to the invitation.
The four dams -- Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite -- were built starting in the 1960s and are located on the Snake River between Washington's Tri-Cities of Richland, Pasco and Kennewick and Lewiston, Idaho. They provide electricity, irrigation water, and navigation for barges. The 1,250 megawatts of power produced are enough for a city the size of Seattle.
Environmentalists blame the dams for blocking the migration of salmon to the Pacific Ocean, leaving the native populations either extinct or listed as endangered.
Business groups and many Republican lawmakers have been critical of proposals to breach the dams, and President Bush declared during last year's campaign that he opposed their removal.
McDermott said the intent of his bill is to nudge President Bush to spend the $1.2 billion needed each year to implement the Salmon Recovery Plan developed by the Clinton administration.
McDermott said he would be pleased if the plan were implemented and salmon stocks recovered without breaching the dams.
Environmental groups said the bill authorizes necessary planning in the event studies call for removal of the dams.
``The Northwest must look ahead and prepare to invest in solutions to recover this magnificent creature, our region's icon,'' said Bill Arthur of the Sierra Club in Seattle.
McDermott's bill has 20 sponsors, including some Republicans. Hastings sent a letter to House members saying that salmon runs this year are the greatest since 1938, that fish passage systems at the dams are effective, and that natural predators take a huge toll on the migrating salmon.
Environmentalists also ignore ``the fact that salmon are caught and served with a lemon dill sauce at your neighborhood Red Lobster,'' Hastings noted.
The bill also called for a scientific review of last year's decision by the National Marine Fisheries Service to delay a final verdict on dam removal.
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