Activists may
sue fish hatcheries
H&N May 16, 2003
GRANTS PASS (AP) -- Environmentalists have
warned the state they intend to sue over
pollution discharged from fish hatcheries around
Oregon.
Hatcheries have committed 1,500 violations of
the U.S. Clean Water Act and are discharging
fish wastes, fish food tainted with toxic
materials, and various chemicals used in the
hatcheries into rivers, said Mark Riskedahl,
executive director of the Northwest
Environmental Defense Center.
A coalition of six conservation organizations
sent a letter to the Oregon Department of Fish
and Wildlife on Thursday warning they intend to
file a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in
Portland unless the problems are addressed to
their satisfaction within 60 days. Riskedahl
said the violations came despite a notice in
2001 from the Department of Environmental
Quality of systematic violations of water
quality standards in state-run hatcheries.
"We are in the process of reviewing it," said
Steve Williams, assistant administrator for the
department's fish division. "Our intent always
has been to follow the law. We are going to
evaluate the information here."
The notice included a list of 15 of the state's
34 fish hatcheries with 14 pages of alleged
violations. Riskedahl said more then 5 million
pounds of commercial fish feed passed through
state-run hatcheries into state waters last
year.
Other plaintiffs in the case are Oregon Trout,
Trout Unlimited, the Native Fish Society,
Pacific Rivers Council and the Oregon Natural
Resources Council. Riskedahl said the notice
was focused solely on the Clean Water Act, and
had nothing to do with the new policy adopted by
the department last week for managing hatcheries
without harming wild fish populations.