November 13, 2002
The Council today accepted delivery of a management plan that is
intended to guide future fish and wildlife projects in the Clearwater
River subbasin of Idaho. After further review and public comments, the
plan will become part of the Council’s Columbia River Basin Fish and
Wildlife Program.
“This plan is the result of years of hard work by a wide variety of
individuals within the Clearwater subbasin,” said Vice Chair Judi
Danielson, an Idaho member of the Council. “Because this is the first
subbasin plan to be submitted to the Council, it will help the Council
develop processes for consideration of plans from the remaining 60-plus
subbasins in the Columbia River Basin.”
The Clearwater Subbasin Plan is the first to be completed since 2000,
when the Council called for development of subbasin plans to guide
implementation of its Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program in
the future. The Council’s program is designed to mitigate the impact
of hydropower dams in the Columbia River Basin. The program guides
development of fish and wildlife improvement projects that the Council
approves and recommends to the federal Bonneville Power Administration
for funding.
Subbasin plans will include assessments of fish and wildlife
populations and habitat conditions as a baseline for identifying needs
and designing projects. The plans will not be static, but will be
reviewed and changed over time as change occurs to fish and wildlife
populations and habitat conditions.
“The Clearwater subbasin plan provides an extensive assessment of
fish and wildlife populations in the basin and a clear inventory of
existing projects and past accomplishments,” said Jim Kempton, who
serves with Danielson as an Idaho member of the Council. “It meets the
technical requirements established by the Council for subbasin plans,
and we look forward to the Council’s deliberative review.”
The Clearwater plan was developed by the Clearwater Policy Advisory
Committee, which includes representatives of Idaho County, Potlatch
Corporation, Nez Perce National Forest, the Nez Perce Tribe, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Idaho Department of Environmental Quality, Idaho
Department of Fish and Game, Idaho Department of Lands, Idaho
Association of Conservation Districts, Clearwater National Forest and
NOAA Fisheries.
The Council’s acceptance this week is the first step toward
amending the plan into the Council’s fish and wildlife program. Next,
the plan will be reviewed by the Council’s Independent Scientific
Review Panel (ISRP). The Council then will conduct its own review and
undertake a formal rulemaking process, including a public comment
period, to adopt the plan into the fish and wildlife program.
Ecovista,
a Pullman, Washington firm, provided technical assistance in developing
the plan.
The Council is an agency of the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington and is directed by the Northwest Power Act of 1980 to prepare
a program to protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife of the
Columbia River Basin affected by hydropower dams while also assuring the
region an adequate, efficient, economical and reliable power supply.