A new federal initiative to open up streams
and rivers blocked to salmon seems almost
custom fit for a Northern California effort
that has projects lined up and waiting for
funding.
The Five Counties Salmonid Restoration
Program could quickly benefit from President
Bush’s Open Rivers Initiative. The program has
completed 40 projects and opened up miles of
habitat for salmon and steelhead -- and has
another 16 projects being designed.
Restoration program director Mark Lancaster
said the funding available for the nationwide
initiative may be $6 million to $8 million
yearly, though the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration said the funding
would be based on need.
”We’re well set up to actually be able to
work with that money,” Lancaster said. “The
timing is ideal.”
The program in Humboldt, Del Norte,
Mendocino, Trinity and Siskiyou counties has
been a model for barrier removal. Projects
have been prioritized, and the California
Coastal Commission has granted the program
nearly $500,000 to design, permit and engineer
the projects.
Most of the barriers the program deals with
are salmon-blocking culverts on county roads,
although it also deals with a range of habitat
improvement issues. It may best be known for
fixing a culvert on the Jacoby Creek tributary
Morrison Gulch, which became a poster project
for the program when dozens of salmon flooded
up the creek the year the barrier was removed.
”It’s really a jump-start for a lot of
these programs where we can just move down the
list and get some of the priorities done,”
said Leah Mahan in NOAA’s California
Restoration Center.
The Open Rivers Initiative will consider
all barriers, including small dams that
communities want torn down. But NOAA is clear
that its not interested in funding
controversial efforts.
The agency will release a request for
proposals this fall, Mahan said. The
submissions will be evaluated and a request
made to Congress. The president’s budget --
issued in February for the coming fiscal year
-- will determine the amount the initiative
will have to work with. |