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SALMON ALONG THE PACIFIC COAST
{OR Salmon Management. On Jan. 5, 2000, an ECONorthwest economist submitted a report to the OR Board of Forestry, concluding that logging restrictions to protect salmon habitat would yield other economic benefits in tourism and recreation that could outweigh the costs of the reduced timber harvest. This report was prepared for several environmental groups, including OR Trout, Portland Audubon, and Pacific Rivers Council.} {{On Jan. 6, 1999, OR Governor John Kitzhaber announced that programs under the OR salmon plan had improved salmon habitat by upgrading or removing more than 1,400 miles of road from service to reduce erosion and by fencing wildlife and livestock from 400 miles of streambank.}} [Portland Oregonian]
{{AK Salmon Dumping Case. On Jan. 5, 2000, Juneau, AK, District Court officials announced that a May 2, 2000 trial date had been set for an Excursion Inlet salmon canning plant and its manager charged in November 1999, with 19 misdemeanor counts of intentional salmon waste. Almost 3.2 million pounds of chum salmon carcasses were alleged to have been dumped in Icy Strait over a period of 19 days, after their eggs were removed (roe stripping).}} [Anchorage Daily News]
{BC Salmon Management. On Jan. 4, 2000, managers of Canada's Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans released salmon forecasts for 2000, predicting a below average to poor harvest in all areas with limited fishery openings and possible complete closures. The sockeye salmon fishery at the mouth of the Fraser River is expected to be limited or closed. For the sport fishery, additional restrictions may be imposed on catching chinook salmon on the west coast of Vancouver Island. The northern commercial troll fishery will likely be closed for the entire season due to coho and chinook salmon conservation concerns. However, sockeye salmon returns to the Skeena and Nass Rivers are expected to improve. A third round of commercial license buybacks ended in late December 1999.} [Canadian Press]
{Proposed Tribal Plan Exemption. On Jan. 3, 2000, NMFS published a proposed rule that would exempt implementation of tribal resource management plans from the Endangered Species Act's Section 9 take prohibitions for threatened salmon populations, where implementation of such plans has been determined to be unlikely to reduce the survival and recovery of listed salmon.} [Fed. Register]
Corps Draft EIS. In Portland, OR, on Dec. 17, 1999, the Army Corps of Engineers released its 5-year, $20 million, 4,000-page draft environmental impact study of 4 options to change operation of the 4 lower Snake River dam to assist salmon recovery. The document is reported to include an advisory recommendation from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that the dams be breached. The Corps recommended more study in the belief that current scientific understanding in inconclusive. A preferred alternative would be identified late in 2000. NMFS officials announced a plan to conduct a comprehensive economic analysis of the all salmon recovery options. [Assoc Press, Seattle Times, American Rivers press release]
Salmon 4(d) Rule. On Dec. 14, 1999, NMFS announced new proposed regulations for protecting 14 populations of threatened steelhead trout and salmon under Section 4(d) of the Endangered Species Act, giving state and local governments significant powers. A series of 15 regional hearings will be held during the 60-day public comment period on the proposal. Exempt from these regulations would be WA loggers who abide by new state timber harvest regulations, urban developers following the Portland Metro guidelines, and OR Dept. of Transportation crews who follow new road maintenance guidelines. Other exemptions could be allowed for scientific research, fish hatcheries, commercial and sport fishing, and habitat restoration that meet NMFS standards. {{These proposed rules were published in the Federal Register on Dec. 30, 1999 (steelhead trout) and on Jan. 3, 2000 (salmon). Public comment will be accepted until Feb. 22, 2000 (steelhead trout) and Mar. 3, 2000 (salmon).}} [Assoc Pr! ess, Seattle Times, Seattle Post- Intelligencer, Fed. Register]
Salmon Habitat and Mining Lawsuit. On Dec. 13, 1999, U.S. District Court Magistrate John P. Cooney ruled that U.S. Forest Service officials violated the 1994 Northwest Forest Plan and federal law threatening critical salmon and steelhead spawning habitat by allowing mining operations in the Silver Creek, OR (Illinois River) drainage without environmental analyses and approved operations plans. The lawsuit was filed in September 1998 by the Siskiyou Regional Education Project. [Assoc Press]
NPPC Project Funding. On Dec. 7, 1999, the Northwest Power Planning Council approved $140 million in funding for almost 300 projects to mitigate loss of fish and wildlife habitat. All projects were evaluated by the NPPC's Independent Scientific Review Panel. The NPPC did award an $8 million grant to the Nez Perce Tribe to build a salmon hatchery on the Clearwater River, despite the Review Panel's recommendation against this project. [Assoc Press]
Savage Rapids Dam. On Dec. 6, 1999, the Grants Pass Irrigation District Board adopted a proposed list of demands, including federal payment of $27 million for dam removal and associated expenses, as a formal condition for agreeing to removal of the Savage Rapids Dam on the Rogue River. {On Jan. 18, 2000, ballots from Grants Pass Irrigation District patrons will be counted to determine whether patrons will approve conditions set by the District's Board for meeting demands by the OR Water Resources Council and NMFS to remove Savage Rapids Dam.} [Portland Oregonian, Assoc Press]
FRESHWATER FISHERIES
{Atlantic Salmon. In late December 1999, NMFS and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the public comment period for the proposed Endangered Species Act listing of Atlantic salmon in ME was extended for an additional month, and that 2 additional public hearings were scheduled.} [Assoc Press]
Dam Removal Report. On Dec. 13, 1999, American Rivers, Friends of the Earth, and Trout Unlimited are scheduled to release a new report "Dam Removal Success Stories: Restoring Rivers Through Selective Removal of Dams That Don't Make Sense." This report documents 465 U.S. dams that have been removed since 1912 and focuses on 25 detailed case studies. [American Rivers press release, Assoc Press]
Contaminated Striped Bass. On Dec. 8, 1999, five Manhattan, NY, fish wholesalers were charged by the U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White with illegally selling thousands of pounds of striped bass caught in PCB-contaminated Hudson River waters under the George Washington Bridge between March 1995 and mid-1998. Four owners and one employee of these companies were arrested and arraigned in U.S. magistrate court for violating the Lacey Act. [Los Angeles Times, Assoc Press]
Dam Removal. On Dec. 1, 1999, U.S. Marines were scheduled to use explosives to demolish 12-foot high Rains Mill Dam on the Little River in the Neuse River drainage, NC, providing migratory fish (alewife, American shad, hickory shad, Atlantic sturgeon, shortnose sturgeon, and striped bass) access to 49 miles of habitat. [Environment News Service]
MARINE MAMMALS
{AK Sea Otters. Jan. 11, 2000 is the deadline for public comments to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on a request by a consultant to 2 Japanese aquariums to capture a up to 2 sea otters apiece from Kodiak waters for export and public display in Japan.} [Anchorage Daily News, Fed. Register]
{CA Sea Lion Deaths. The Jan. 6, 2000, issue of Nature contained an article concluding that the deaths of more than 400 CA sea lions between Monterey Bay and Morro Bay in 1998 was caused by domoic acid from a toxic dinoflagellate plankton bloom.} [San Jose Mercury]
{FL Manatees. On Jan. 5, 2000, the FL Marine Research Institute announced that a record high 73 manatees were killed by boats in the first 10 months of 1999. This exceeded the previous record loss of 60 manatee deaths in all of 1996.} [Assoc Press]
Dolphin-Safe? On Dec. 22, 1999, U.S. Dept. of Commerce officials published notice in the Federal Register, proposing adoption of an official dolphin-safe logo in conjunction with a tuna tracking program to assure consumers that no dolphins were injured or killed during tuna harvesting. {On Jan. 3, 2000, NMFS published an interim final rule in the Federal Register, implementing provisions of the International Dolphin Conservation Program Act and establishing specific requirements for the program. Public comment on the new rule will be accepted through Apr. 3, 2000. The regulations implement a new labeling standard for dolphin-safe tuna, effective Feb. 2, 2000, and establish requirements to track and verify the status of tuna imports from the eastern tropical Pacific.} [Environment News Service, Fed. Register, Environmental News Network, Dept. of State, Humane Society of the United States press release]
Canadian Sealing. On Dec. 21, 1999, Canadian Fisheries Minister Herb Dhaliwal announced that the year 2000 harp seal kill quota will remain at 275,000 animals, saying no information justifies a change from last year. The hooded seal kill quota would remain at 10,000 animals. In addition, a kill of several hundred grey seals will be allowed in areas other than Sable Island. [Canadian Press]
Japanese Whaling. On Dec. 20, 1999, Greenpeace activists harassed Japanese whalers killing minke whales in the Antarctic. On Dec.21, 1999, the Japanese factory whaling ship Nisshin Maru collided with the Greenpeace vessel Arctic Sunrise carrying activists protesting Japan's research kill of Antarctic minke whales. There were no reported injuries and damage appeared to not be serious. [Reuters, Greenpeace press release, Environment News Service, personal communication]
Steller Sea Lion Shooting. On Dec. 16, 1999, a Petersburg, AK, man was charged in U.S. District Court (Anchorage, AK) with shooting and killing several Steller sea lions near Wrangell, AK, in February 1998. Arraignment is scheduled for Jan. 20, 2000. [Assoc Press]
Cook Inlet Beluga Whales. On Dec. 16, 1999, NMFS biologists, speaking at a public scoping meeting on drafting an NMFS environmental impact statement for managing Cook Inlet beluga whales, reported the results of summer 1999 surveys, indicating that decline in this whale population had ceased and that the population was stable. The 1999 population estimate was 357 whales, nearly the same as the 1998 estimate of 347 animals. [Anchorage Daily News]
Whale and Dolphin Transport. As of Dec. 7, 1999, Lufthansa Airlines adopted the policy that it will no longer transport whales and dolphins for aquariums and water parks. This action was taken in response to a request from Sea Shepherd Europe that the airline review its policies on transport of wild animals after a November 1999 incident wherein 2 dolphins died in a Lufthansa cargo machine. [Environment News Service]
Items in this summary are excerpted from a variety of information sources. The Congressional Research Service (CRS) is not responsible for the accuracy of the various news items.
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