http://www.mlive.com/newsflash/national/index.ssf?/base/national-82/1175054354189230.xml&storylist=national
Federal suit filed against
California hatchery
MLive.com 3/27/07
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — An environmental group
sued an energy company and California's wildlife
agency Tuesday over claims that a fish hatchery is
releasing pollution that is deadly to fish
downstream in a river that was once brimming with
salmon.
Klamath Riverkeeper, part of an environmental
alliance headed by Robert Kennedy Jr., filed the
lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Sacramento,
alleging that discharges from the hatchery
violated the Clean Water Act.
At issue is the hatchery at the Iron Gate Dam
located on the Klamath River near the Oregon
border. The dam is operated by the California
Department of Fish and Game and owned by
PacifiCorp, an energy company based in Portland,
Ore.
High concentrations of fish parts, excrement and
food released from the hatchery's salmon and
steelhead pens feed toxic algae blooms that have
caused the Klamath's salmon population to drop
sharply, said Regina Chichizola of Klamath
Riverkeeper.
The department is also releasing drugs given to
the hatchery's fish into the Klamath in violation
of state water regulations, Chichizola said.
The utility, controlled by billionaire Warren
Buffett, serves 1.6 million customers in six
Western states.
A PacifiCorp spokesman said a Fish and Game report
used the wrong unit of measurement, giving a false
impression that too much waste was being
discharged from the hatchery.
Fish and Game has corrected the error, company
spokesman Dave Kvamme said.
The Fish and Game department could not comment on
the litigation, spokesman Steve Martarano said.
The Klamath was once the West Coast's
third-biggest producer of salmon, but last year
federal fisheries managers practically shut down
commercial salmon fishing after the third straight
year of poor returns of wild chinook.
Klamath Riverkeeper described the lawsuit as a way
to increase pressure on the company to remove
hydroelectric dams.
=============================
The Klamath
Riverkeeper is filing a lawsuit today in
the U.S. District Court in San Francisco
against Warren Buffett's PacifiCorp for
polluting the Klamath River.
NEWS RELEASE
Contacts:
Regina Chichizola, Klamath Riverkeeper:
(530) 627-3280 or (541) 951-0126
Daniel Cooper, Lawyers for Clean Water:
(415) 440-0246
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 27, 2007
Klamath Riverkeeper Files Lawsuit to
Stop Warren Buffett's PacifiCorp
from Polluting the Klamath River
Lawsuit is the first step in
Riverkeeper's effort to restore the
Klamath
SAN FRANCISCO, CA- Today the Klamath
Riverkeeper is filing a citizens
enforcement lawsuit in U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of
California against Warren Buffett's
PacifiCorp for polluting one of the
nation's most important and
controversial salmon rivers - the
Klamath. Klamath Riverkeeper's suit
asserts that the Iron Gate Dam hatchery,
which is owned and operated by
PacifiCorp and the California Department
of Fish and Game (CDFG), is unlawfully
discharging pollutants into the Klamath
River, in violation of the Clean Water
Act (CWA). The complaint is seeking an
assessment of civil penalties for
violations of the CWA, and injunctive
relief to enjoin PacifiCorp and the CDFG
from further violating its discharge
permit and the CWA.
“The Klamath Riverkeeper sent PacifiCorp
a 60-day Notice of Intent to File Suit
on January 17, 2007, yet PacifiCorp has
failed to address these violations,”
said Regina Chichizola, the Klamath
Riverkeeper. “This left us with no other
alternative but to move forward with the
suit in order to protect the River, its
salmon runs, and the fishing economy of
the Klamath River.”
The Iron Gate Dam is just one of four
dams owned by PacifiCorp along the
Klamath River. Since the dams were
built, Klamath salmon numbers have
dropped from more than a million to less
than 8% of that. The 2006 run was one of
the worst in history, according to the
Klamath Riverkeeper. Moreover, the poor
water quality conditions created in the
Iron Gate and Copco reservoirs, have
contributed to record-setting levels of
a highly toxic algae that has been found
behind the dams during the last two
years. This toxic algae called
Microcystis aeruginosa, which is a liver
toxin and tumor promoter, has now been
detected hundreds of miles down river,
and is just one of the ways the dams
pollute the Klamath River. The dams are
also creating toxic conditions for the
salmon trapped below them because of the
release of this polluted water, which
has made this part of the river ground
zero for fish diseases and juvenile fish
kills in the Klamath.
“The constant fish kills and toxic algae
resulting from PacifiCorp's management
on the Klamath River have devastated the
Klamath River economy and put downriver
tribes and fishermen at serious risk,”
stated Chichizola
Recently, PacifiCorp's corporate profile
has been raised due to its acquisition
by MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company,
which is owned by Warren Buffett's
Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Buffett is
known for his philanthropic endeavors
and concern for low-income and health
challenged communities around the world;
however the Riverkeeper asserts that the
current dam issue is inconsistent with
Buffett's reputation. “Mr. Buffett owns
PacifiCorp, yet his ideals are not being
reflected in his company's practices in
operating a dam that is polluting the
Klamath River,” noted Chichizola. “We
call on Mr. Buffett to scrutinize
PacifiCorp's operation of these dams and
take action to prevent further
devastation to the River and the salmon.
Hopefully, our citizens enforcement suit
will be the first step in resolving
these issues and restoring the Klamath
River and the communities that rely on
the River to what they once were.”
Spokespeople information provided below
KLAMATH Regina Chichizola, Klamath
Riverkeeper: (530) 627-3280 or
RIVERKEEPER (541) 951-0126
SPOKESPEOPLE:
Daniel Cooper, lead attorney for Klamath
Riverkeeper,
Lawyers for Clean Water: (415) 440-0246
SPOKESPERSON ON Craig Tucker, Media
Spokesman, Karuk Tribe:
KLAMATH DAMS ISSUE: (530) 627-3446 ext.
3027
Regina Chichizola has been the Klamath
Riverkeeper for the past six months. She
has lived on, and worked for, the
Klamath River for nine years. In this
time she has greatly expanded the work
of four environmental groups and a
tribal restoration group. Her skills
include legal research, public comment
field documentation, grass roots
organizing, preparing litigation,
campaign strategy, and media. She has
helped to stop dozens of public lands
old growth timber sales and toxic spray
projects through lawsuits, political
pressure, and community organizing. She
most recently has focused on the efforts
to save the Klamath salmon and Un-dam
the Klamath before taking on water
quality issues through the Klamath
watershed as the Riverkeeper.
Daniel Cooper is a 1990 graduate of
Golden Gate University School of Law.
Since being admitted to the Bar in 1991,
Mr. Cooper has maintained an
environmental litigation practice
representing a variety of non-profit
groups. His primary clients have been
the Keeper organizations. Mr. Cooper has
been co-counsel on more than 100
successful Clean Water Act enforcement
actions in his career. Through his
litigation, Mr. Cooper has helped
develop the model for citizen
enforcement of stormwater regulation
under the Clean Water Act. Mr. Cooper's
litigation has helped secure broad
compliance with environmental laws,
penalties for non-compliance, industry
conversions to cleaner and more
environmentally sound technologies, and
several million dollars in mitigation to
redress harms caused by violators.
Additionally, he participates directly
with state agencies by commenting on
various stormwater, industrial, and
construction permits throughout
California, as well challenging permits
issued by the Regional Board and the
State Water Resources Control Board,
both administratively and in Superior
Court. While in law school, Mr. Cooper
worked as an extern at the Natural
Heritage Institute, an environmental
advocacy organization, and at the
California Attorney General's Office,
Environmental Enforcement Section.
Craig Tucker received his B.S. in
biochemistry from Clemson University in
1993. He went on to get a Ph.D. in
biochemistry from Vanderbilt University
in 1999. After graduate school he gave
up laboratory science for a career as an
environmental and social justice
activist. In 2000 Craig joined Green
Corps, the field school for
environmental organizing. While in Green
Corp, Craig learned fundamental
grassroots organizing skills. After
Green Corps he worked as Outreach
Director at Friends of the River,
developing grassroots campaigns on a
variety of California water issues. Each
campaign was based on the connection
between sustainable environmental policy
and social justice. Currently Craig is
the Campaign Coordinator for the Karuk
Tribe's 'Bring the Salmon Home'
campaign. The goal: removal of four dams
on the Klamath River which would
represent the largest dam removal
project in history.
|
|