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Take Action! Support the Salmon Economic Analysis and Planning Act.
For two years in a row, the Bush administration and various federal
agencies failed to implement their own plan to save endangered Columbia
and Snake river wild salmon and steelhead from extinction. According
to the "Salmon
Plan Report Card" issued by conservationists and members
of the sport and commercial fishing industries, the government failed
to implement more than 70 percent of the 150 measures required in
2002 under the federal Salmon Plan.
Then in Fall 2003, this Bush Administration "Salmon Recovery
Plan" was ruled illegal by a Federal Judge. The Bush Administration's
re-write, which could have helped restore habitat, lessen the impacts
of hatcheries on wild salmon, and improve survival rates through
dams, was worse. Their new plan varied wildly from the original
judges' request, and he ruled it illegal in May, 2005.
They Administration attempted to avoid its responsibilities under
the Endangered Species Act by saying two things. One was that they
said the dams were a natural part of the river, and they are not
responsible for the damage they cause to salmon. The other was that
they weren't responsible for recovering salmon, just "treading
water" at current levels. This, in a year where returning salmon
numbers were so low that spring fishing season was cut short in
the Northwest. Now it is time to create a new plan that meets the
requirements of the Endangered Species Act, fulfills treaty promises
and restores wild salmon to harvestable numbers is crucial.
Coho salmon went extinct in the Snake River in 1985. All five remaining
species of Snake River salmon and steelhead are listed under the
Endangered Species Act, headed toward the same fate unless we act
now. Biologists say that, collectively, the four lower Snake River
dams in southeastern Washington are the primary threat to salmon.
These dams and reservoirs now lie between the inland streams where
salmon are born and the ocean where they spend most of their lives.

Endangered
Species
Lewis
and Clark: Fishing Guide
Wildlands:
Hunting and Fishing
National Marine
Fisheries Service
Light on the River NW Salmon Report, March 2008
SalmonRecovery.gov
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