By Mike
O’Bryant
NOAA
Fisheries today corrected what it said are
misconceptions in the news about the intent and
impact of its hatchery policy and that the
agency would likely relist by May 28 at least 25
of the 26 salmon stocks that are currently under
review.
In a
letter to the West Coast Congressional
delegation, including Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
Alaska and California congressmen and senators,
Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and
Atmosphere Conrad C. Lautenbacher Jr. said he
was writing to "explain how hatcheries will be
taken into account in the (relisting) proposals,
and to correct recent erroneous accounts of how
our hatchery policy will be used."
He said
that NOAA is directing over $100 million to
salmon recovery, and other federal agencies are
making similar contributions. Along with
favorable ocean conditions, he said the efforts
are paying off and "producing dramatic increases
in nearly all salmon runs" and it is not backing
down now.
A lawsuit
regarding Oregon Coast coho salmon that required
NOAA to delist the species because it failed to
account for hatchery fish led NOAA to take the
unprecedented step of voluntarily delisting 25
more salmon and steelhead stocks while the
agency reviewed their status. Lautenbacher said
that NOAA agreed to reconsider all the listings
and "to adjust our policy for considering fish
in making those decisions -- and NOAA will be
asking the public to comment on both."
Lautenbacher sent the letter to the
Congressional delegation this morning and then
afterwards released it to media that have been
covering the hatchery issue because there was so
much misinformation and confusion about what
NOAA was doing, said NOAA Fisheries spokesperson
Janet Sears.
Lautenbacher was quick to correct some of those
misconceptions.
"The
central tenet of the hatchery policy is the
conservation of naturally-spawning salmon and
the ecosystems upon which they depend," he said.
"As our preliminary conclusions indicate,
appropriate consideration of hatchery fish does
not lead to wholesale de-listing of species as
some are claiming. Equally erroneous is the
suggestion our policy would allow the purposes
of the ESA to be satisfied by having all the
salmon in a hatchery."
He added
that hatcheries do serve purposes, including
meeting tribal treaty trust rights and
supporting sport and commercial fishing, but not
all hatcheries are successful in their
objectives.
"NOAA's
decisions are driven by science, which suggests
benefits, risks, and uncertainties regarding
salmon hatcheries," he said. "Simply put, some
well-managed conservation hatcheries are
fostering recovery of species, some hatcheries
are having little or no effect, and some
hatcheries potentially hinder recovery."
He went on
to say that after considering the science of
hatcheries, that NOAA has "preliminarily"
determined to propose relisting 25 of the 26
species it is re-evaluating. It will make the
announcement May 28, the court ordered deadline
to complete the status review of listed stocks
in Washington, and the "new hatchery policy will
be only one factor for the evaluation still
underway."
The 26
species being evaluated were previously listed
as either threatened or endangered. The letter
does not specify whether the proposed relistings
call for any of the species to move from one
listing category to the other.
The one
species still under consideration, according to
Bob Lohn, Regional Director of NOAA Fisheries in
Seattle, is the mid-Columbia River Steelhead.
More information is required to make that
determination.
"The
communities of the Northwest have set high
standards for their stewardship of land and
water and NOAA urges them to continue this
important work," Lautenbacher concluded.
Links:
Northwest
Regional Office NOAA Fisheries: http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/