Related link:
Subbasin Planning
website
December 15, 2004
Twenty-three locally developed plans that will guide efforts to
mitigate the impacts of hydropower dams on fish and wildlife in Columbia
River tributaries and parts of the mainstem river were adopted today by
the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. The plans are now part of
the Council's Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program, which
directs the expenditure of about $140 million annually. The money is
provided by the Bonneville Power Administration from its income from the
sale of electricity.
The 23 plans are among 59 that were submitted to the Council last May
following nearly two years of work by watershed councils, local
governments, and state, federal and tribal agencies. The plans respond
to direction in the Council's fish and wildlife program that
successful mitigation of the impacts of hydropower on fish and wildlife
will be accomplished through the selection and implementation of
subbasin-level goals, objectives and strategies. Each subbasin plan has
an assessment that describes historical and existing conditions, an
inventory of existing fish and wildlife projects and past
accomplishments, and a management plan that looks 10-15 years into the
future.
In addition to guiding implementation of the fish and wildlife
program, subbasin plans may be used by NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service as a component of Endangered Species Act recovery
planning. State and federal agencies may use the plans to reconcile
hatchery and harvest goals and to complete an integrated monitoring and
evaluation framework for fish and wildlife projects and research.
The Council's approval follows a 40-day public review and comment
period that concluded on November 22, 2004. Later this month, the
Council will meet in a special session to release for public comment 23
more draft subbasin plans. Comments will be accepted through January,
and the Council plans to make a decision to adopt them into the program
in February.
The 23 plans adopted today address the following subbasins and
portions of the mainstem Columbia:
- In Washington: Asotin, Lake Chelan, Lake Rufus Woods, Sanpoil,
Spokane, Tucannon, Upper Mid-Columbia Mainstem, Upper Columbia
Mainstem, White Salmon
- In Idaho: Bruneau, Coeur d?Alene, Salmon
- In Idaho and Washington: Pend Oreille
- In Idaho and Oregon: Lower Snake, Owyhee
- In Montana: Flathead
- In Montana and Idaho: Kootenai
- In Oregon: Fifteenmile Creek, Hood, Malheur, Umatilla, Willamette
- In Oregon and Washington: Columbia Gorge
Additional information regarding these and other subbasin plans is
posted on the Council's subbasin
planning website.
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.