Related links:
Mainstem
review page
June 11, 2003
BOISE ? The Council today approved a three-year, $34 million
package of fish and wildlife improvement projects that squeezes as much
work as possible from a limited budget in a time of financial crisis at
the Bonneville Power Administration, the federal agency that pays for
the work.
Collectively, the projects continue implementation of the Council's
Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program and also the 2000
biological opinions on hydropower operations issued by NOAA Fisheries
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for threatened and endangered
fish species. The $34 million budget reflects an overall reduction in
funding for the Council's fish and wildlife program imposed earlier
this year by Bonneville. For 2003, Bonneville limited direct
expenditures for the program to $139 million in reaction to the agency's
financial crisis, a reduction of about $40 million over previously
planned spending.
?The decision on this package of projects was very difficult for
us, but we did the best we could with the budget we were given,?
Council Chair Judi Danielson said. ?For each project, we asked whether
the work is a Bonneville ratepayer responsibility or could be funded by
others. Given the current financial crisis at Bonneville, we recommended
a package of projects that will produce biological benefits and improve
scientific knowledge at the lowest possible cost.?
Research, and fiscal restraint, dominates the recommended projects.
For example, the package includes continued funding, but at a reduced
level, for a popular sportfishing bounty program that targets northern
pikeminnow, a voracious predator of juvenile salmon and steelhead. The
Council cut the budget for that program in half, from $2.8 million to
$1.4 million per year, in response to a recommendation from the Council's
Independent Scientific Review Panel (ISRP). The ISRP reviewed and
approved all of the projects recommended by the Council. After reviewing
the pikeminnow project, the ISRP concluded the bounty fishery has been
successful at reducing the pikeminnow population and that the reduction
would continue even if the fishing ? and the funding ? were
reduced.
Also largely in response to budget concerns, the Council did not
recommend continued funding for a project that tested the effectiveness
of tanglenets in the lower Columbia commercial fishery. Tanglenets,
which snare salmon and steelhead by their teeth rather than their gills,
were effective. But the nets also caught excessive amounts of steelhead.
Fixing that problem is a matter for state fish and wildlife managers who
regulate harvest, not Bonneville, the Council reasoned.
The package of projects recommended by the Council includes $31
million in direct spending and $3 million in projects that require
capital financing. Bonneville is required by the Northwest Power Act of
1980 to consider the Council's recommendations.
Here are web links to representative projects from the mainstem
package:
See the complete
list of recommended projects and supporting materials.
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.