Time to Take Action
Our Klamath Basin Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
 

 

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE WEEKLY E-MAIL NEWSLETTER 


  Now Available For Digital Download

 

Columbia Basin Bulletin Issue Summary No. 1:

 

Salmon and Hydro: An Account of Litigation over Federal Columbia River Power System Biological Opinions for Salmon and Steelhead, 1991-2009

 

This issue summary offers a historical account of the continual litigation over Columbia Basin salmon and steelhead biological opinions since the first Endangered Species Act listings and summarizes the major issues that have dominated Columbia Basin Salmon recovery since 1991.

Click Here For More Information

 

 

  http://www.cbbulletin.com:80/Issue+Summaries/default.aspx

Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife News Bulletin

See Below For Table of Contents And Links To Excerpts

Now Available For Digital Download

Columbia Basin Bulletin Issue Summary No.1:    

Salmon and Hydro

An Account of Litigation over Federal Columbia River Power System Biological Opinions for Salmon and Steelhead, 1991-2009

 

 

First Edition, February 2009

A NOAA Fisheries "biological opinion" is the federal government's primary guide for recovering13 species of Columbia River Basin salmon and steelhead listed under the Endangered Species Act . A "BiOp" must insure that these ESA-listed fish survive and thrive in the Columbia/Snake River Basin hydropower system . Yet, since the first salmon ESA-listings in 1991, these biological opinions have been the subject of continual litigation. It is in federal court where one sees most clearly the divisions and difficulties of Columbia Basin salmon recovery. This issue summary offers a historical account of this continual litigation since the first ESA listings and summarizes the major issues that have dominated Columbia Basin Salmon recovery since 1991.

 

Salmon and Hydro: An Account of Litigation over Federal Columbia River Power System Biological Opinions for Salmon and Steelhead, 1991-2009, a 77-page document in an easy-to-read Adobe PDF format, is available for digital download through our secure payment system. Price: $19.95

For purchase of bound, printed copies in volume, or for other information about this product, contact Bill Crampton at 541-312-8860, bcrampton@cbbulletin.com

Note: PDF files require Adobe Acrobat Reader for viewing. If your system is unable to view this file type you can download Adobe Acrobat Reader for free from Adobe's Web site:

-----------------------

TABLE OF CONTENTS

For Excerpts Click These Links:

INTRODUCTION

I. 1991-1995: Three ESA Listings, Four Biological Opinions, Five Court Challenges

II. 1995-1998: Reasonable And Prudent Alternatives, Spread The Risk, Long-Term Configuration, Adaptive Management; River Governance; Regional Parties Stake Their Positions; A BiOp Finally Passes Legal Muster

 

III. 1998-1999: More ESA Listings; A Supplemental Steelhead BiOp Guiding River Operations; Independent Science Advisory Board Weighs In On Smolt Transportation; Appeals Court Upholds 1995 BiOp; Supplemental BiOps On New Listings, Snake Water

IV. 1999-2004: Not Just Hydro, But All The ‘Hs’; Recovery In 48 years?; Mitigation Must Be Certain To Occur; Another BiOp Bites The Dust; A Remand; Corps Rules On Snake River Dam Removal

V. 2004-2008: A New BiOp Says No Jeopardy From Hydro Operations; A New ‘Environmental Baseline’; Redden Says No Again; Discretionary Actions vs. Non-Discretionary (Dams’ Existence); Court Runs The River; Upper Snake River Gets Own BiOp

VI. 2008-2009: A ‘Collaborative’ BiOp; New Fish Funding Agreements, New BiOp Support; Montana Finally Likes The Reservoir Plan; Earthjustice Says New Approach Inadequate; Oregon Left As Only State Opposed To BiOp; Should Independent Scientists Evaluate BiOp?; Parties To Litigation Grows; Clean Water Act Now An Issue; A New Round Of Briefings

VII. Conclusion: Rushing To Redden’s Finish Line


 

 

 

THIS MONTH'S MOST VIEWED CBB STORIES

 

Lohn Out As NOAA Fisheries Regional Director, Deputy Now Acting Administrator
 

Analysis Indicates Ocean Conditions Key Variable In Big 2008 Sockeye Return
 

Colville Tribes' Selective Fishing Gear Tests Show Low Wild Summer Chinook Mortality
 

New Decision-Making Structure Forming To Manage Salmon BiOp Implementation
 

Northwest Researchers Explore Concept Of Salmon Resilience In New Journal Issue
 

ESA-Listed Steller Sea Lions Making Meals Out Of Columbia River White Sturgeon
 

Spring/Summer Water Supply Forecasts In Past Month Slip Below Historic Averages
 

Fall Chinook Redd Counts Above Lower Granite Highest Since Surveys Began In 1988
 

NOAA Study: Climate Change From Carbon Dioxide Increase Largely Irreversible
 

Northeast Oregon May Have Best Fishing Opportunity For Spring Chinook In Years
 

Judge Denies Stay Request To Halt Lethal Sea Lion Removal Below Bonneville Dam
 

Salmon Genetic Project Aimed At Improving Fisheries, Harvest Management
 

Proposed Salmon-Tagging Study Seeks Better Info On Lower River Sea Lion Predation 

 Research: Warmer Climate Causing Huge Increase In PNW Old Growth Tree Mortality

EPA Report On Columbia River Toxic Contamination Offers 'Troubling News'
 

2008 Juvenile Salmon Hydro Survival Data, Reach By Reach, Offers Up And Down Picture
 

Study: Fish Harvests Have Substantial Impacts On Species' Body Size, Reproductive Ability
 

The Columbia Basin Bulletin, 19464 Summerwalk Place, Bend, OR, 97702, (541)312-8860 fax: (541)388-0126 e-mail: info@cbbulletin.com  
 
Produced by Intermountain Communications  |  Site Map
Home Contact

 

              Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:14 AM  Pacific


             Copyright © klamathbasincrisis.org, 2009, All Rights Reserved