Court won't stop spill over four Snake and Columbia river dams
Jun. 22-By Hal Bernton, The Seattle Times Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
A federal appeals court yesterday declined to block a summer spill of water over four Snake and Columbia river dams, a major change in hydropower operations ordered earlier this month to help endangered salmon migrate to the sea.
Tribes and environmental and sport-fishing industry groups say the spill is
an important new effort to help an endangered run of Snake River fall chinook
salmon. Most of these fish are now barged around the dams.
But U.S. District Court Judge James Redden in Portland, Ore., earlier this
month ordered federal dam operators to keep more of the salmon in the river.
That is now being done by flushing water over Lower Monumental, Little Goose and
Lower Granite dams on the Snake River in Eastern Washington, and water next
month will be spilled over McNary Dam on the Columbia between Oregon and
Washington.
Officials with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration fisheries, the
Army Corps of Engineers and Bonneville Power Administration contend the spill is
a costly, risky experiment that may do more harm than good and put an unneeded
burden on irrigators, industries, communities and other big hydropower
consumers. Last week, their attorneys asked the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
for a stay that would put the order on hold.
But in yesterday's decision turning down the stay, the appeals court found
that federal agencies had failed to demonstrate a "likelihood of success
[in their appeal] and a possibility of irreparable injury" if they didn't
prevail.
Instead, the appeals-court judges opted for an expedited review of the case
that, in the weeks ahead, gives the federal government another chance to make
its case to end the spill.
The fight in appeals court is part of a broader, high-stakes battle over
management of the basin's hydropower system, which supplies electricity to much
of the Pacific Northwest region, including Seattle. Fishery scientists have
cited the hydropower system as a major obstacle to recovery of the basin's
wild-salmon runs listed under the Endangered Species Act.
In a spring decision, Redding ruled the Bush administration's plan for
operating the hydropower system violated the act.
In the aftermath of that ruling, environmentalists, tribes and sport-fishing
industry groups are seeking wide-ranging changes to make the hydropower system
more salmon friendly. They hope Congress eventually would approve removal of the
Lower Snake River dams, a move bitterly opposed by some other groups in the
region, such as barge operators.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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