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http://pacificlegal.org/view_PublicationDetail.asp?iID=292&dt=December 2004&sTitle=Feds+New+Salmon+Policy+Under+Fire&iParentID=9
Feds New Salmon Policy Under Fire
December 2004 By: Russ Brooks On November 16, PLF’s Northwest Center (Bellevue, Washington) put federal fish managers on official notice that it will file a sweeping lawsuit challenging the government’s newly proposed salmon hatchery policy that illegally distinguishes between hatchery and naturally spawned fish. The misguided policy threatens small business owners, homeowners, city and rural residents who will continue to live under the threat of civil or criminal penalties for felling a tree, applying fertilizer or pesticides on their lawns, putting water to beneficial use, and a litany of other common, otherwise lawful activities associated with private property ownership.
Caving in to the heavy lobbying of radical
environmentalists, the government’s proposed
hatchery policy retains 26 bogus listings for
Pacific salmon and steelhead populations,
including the Oregon Coast coho, and adds a new
one even though they are not at risk of
extinction! This flies in the face of PLF’s
landmark
court victory in Alsea Valley Alliance v.
Evans (2001)—one of the most groundbreaking
environmental decisions of the last decade that
protects private property owners from federal
mismanagement of Pacific salmon and steelhead
under the Endangered Species Act.
In the Alsea case, U.S. District Judge
Michael Hogan ruled that NOAA Fisheries acted
illegally by counting only naturally spawned
salmon and disregarding abundant hatchery spawned
salmon when deciding whether or not to list the
Oregon Coast coho as a protected species.
(Respected fisheries biologists have repeatedly
confirmed that hatchery salmon and “wild” salmon
are the same fish.) Consequently, federal fish
managers acting pursuant to the ESA were ordered
to count salmon whether born in the wild or in a
hatchery. Last February, PLF’s Northwest Center
successfully defeated environmental activists’
appeal of the decision at the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals, and in June the court denied their
petition for reconsideration.
In addition, PLF and many others warned NOAA
Fisheries months ago that its proposed policy
would result in extensive litigation, hampering
the government’s ability to effectively implement
the ESA and protect other listed species that
truly are endangered. In July, House Resources
Committee Chairman
Richard Pombo sent a
letter to Commerce Secretary Don Evans
expressing similar concern over NOAA Fisheries’
ongoing failure to comply with court directions in
managing salmon and steelhead populations
throughout the western states.
PLF is bringing its lawsuit on behalf of a broad coalition of property
owners, farmers, and business groups representing
tens of thousands of citizens in Washington,
Idaho, Oregon, and California—e.g., Building
Industry Association of Washington, Washington
Farm Bureau, Washington Realtors’ Association,
Washington State Grange, Coalition for Idaho
Water, Idaho Farm Bureau, Idaho Water Users’
Association, California State Grange, Central
Coast Forest Association, Oregon State Grange, and
Alsea Valley Alliance.
Federal regulators are playing a shell game. No
provision of the ESA contemplates treating some
members of a species differently than other
members of the same population when they exist in
the same river, in the same natural ecosystems,
and interbreed together. Clearly, NOAA Fisheries
is replacing sound science with science fiction,
and PLF’s lawsuit will expose this.
Russell C. Brooks is Managing Attorney of PLF’s
Northwest Center in Bellevue, WA.
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