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http://pacificlegal.org/view_PublicationDetail.asp?iID=266&dt=July 2004&sTitle=PLF+Vows+Court+Fight+to+
Enforce+Landmark+Hatchery+Salmon+Ruling&iParentID=9
PLF Vows Court Fight to Enforce Landmark Hatchery
Salmon Ruling
July 2004 By: Russ Brooks Pacific Legal Foundation wasted no time in putting the Bush Administration’s new hatchery salmon policy under the legal microscope. Issued on May 28, the proposed policy would leave in place 26 Endangered Species Act listings for Pacific salmon and steelhead populations and add a new one even though the salmon are not at risk of extinction.
The National Marine Fisheries Service’s (NOAA
Fisheries) newly announced policy flies in the
face of PLF’s landmark 2001 court victory in
Alsea Valley Alliance v. Evans. In that
case, federal fish managers were ordered to count
salmon that spawn in the wild together with
their hatchery-raised equivalents when
deciding whether to declare a species threatened
or endangered. Although NOAA Fisheries agreed over
two and a half years ago to develop a new policy
to comply with that ruling, the proposed policy
attempts to skirt the court order by counting
hatchery salmon, but still maintaining the bogus
listings for salmon and steelhead in Alaska,
Washington, Oregon, California, and Idaho. The new
policy is a purely political effort to accommodate
both sides of the issue.
For years, we have watched so-called “salmon
protection groups” work in the court of public
opinion and in courts of law to advance the
fiction that “wild” salmon and hatchery salmon are
altogether different fish and, therefore, hatchery
salmon shouldn’t be counted when determining the
health of the species. This is pure junk
science—no biological difference exists between
fish spawned naturally and those fertilized at a
hatchery.
Respected marine biologists have repeatedly
confirmed that hatchery salmon and “wild” salmon
are the same fish. The fact these salmon have
cohabitated and spawned together for 100 years is
only natural—they are all salmon. They interbreed,
fight for food and survive together, migrate to
the ocean together, and return to the same streams
together, to spawn together. The good news is,
there are plenty of healthy salmon. For example,
fish hatcheries release millions of salmon and
steelhead each year into the Columbia River Basin.
Nevertheless, environmental activist groups have
adulterated science to create the false impression
that federal regulation is needed to give salmon
preference over people—and they have repeated the
lie often enough to cause politicians and
regulators to doubt the truth. It’s been an
effective strategy for a long time—manipulate the
fish count artificially to keep salmon on the
endangered or threatened species list, and
therefore, maintain regulatory control over
people’s property, lives, and livelihoods.
Manufactured pessimism perpetuated by
prevarications is their only way to counteract the
telling fact that salmon in record numbers are
coming home to spawn.
Enforcing PLF’s Alsea Ruling
Pacific Legal Foundation declared war on this
cruel charade by filing its landmark Alsea
lawsuit in 1999. Last February, PLF successfully
defeated environmental activists’ appeal of the
decision at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
This huge victory for sound science and a
commonsense interpretation of the Endangered
Species Act has far-reaching implications, as
federal officials have been using the same illegal
counting methods for the salmon in the Klamath
Basin, as well as for chinook, chub, and sockeye
throughout the West. “We need to look at both wild
and hatchery fish before deciding whether to list
a species for protection,” admitted Bob Lohn,
Northwest regional administrator for the National
Marine Fisheries Service. “There was an
inescapable reasoning to Judge Hogan’s ruling; we
thought his reasoning was accurate.”
Indeed, Judge Hogan’s ruling in Alsea was
accurate because it followed the letter of the law
which requires that listings under the Endangered
Species Act be based on sound science. That is,
the only questions are whether salmon are
endangered or threatened, and whether existing
salmon ecosystems can adequately support salmon.
That millions of salmon are thriving in these
ecosystems means that the listings for salmon
cannot be legally justified.
It is regrettable that the Bush Administration has
decided to put politics before solid science, the
rule of law, and the economic and personal
hardship many people in the West are suffering as
a result of these illegal listings. We will
continue working with federal fish managers during
the time in which the proposed policy is
undergoing public review and comment, and PLF
hopes they will recognize their serious mistake.
If they don’t, they can expect to be right back in
court.
Russell C. Brooks is Managing Attorney of PLF’s
Northwest Center in Bellevue, Washington.
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