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http://www.theworldlink.com/articles/2006/11/30/news/news01113006.txt
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| World
Photos by Lou Sennick Before the start of the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission town hall meeting
Wednesday in North Bend, Marcelle Lynde, left, takes
the names of Daryl and Sally Bogardus. The Charleston
couple were wearing survival suits to quietly make a
point that the fishing industry is in need of
emergency help. |
A handful of commercial salmon trollers
dressed in bright orange survival suits provided color to
a meeting that dealt with issues that are anything but
black and white.
At the request of Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission held an additional hearing
Wednesday on the relicensing of four Klamath River dams in
North Bend. Four other FERC meetings already were held in
Klamath Falls, and Yreka and Eureka, Calif., and another
meeting will be held in Newport tonight.
DeFazio requested the coastal hearing so that fishermen
and coastal communities, constituents affected by a
downturn of Klamath River fall Chinook populations, could
comment on the draft environmental impact statement that
could affect their futures. DeFazio planned to attend but
was ill.
But he still had a voice at the
hearing.
DeFazio aide Ron Kreskey was the first speaker, reading a
statement from the congressman into the record.
“I would strongly urge FERC to reconsider and instead, at
a minimum, to condition relicensing on the fishways
recommended by the resource agencies. ... Further, I
believe it makes sense to condition the license on
outcomes-based research on the health of salmon
populations. ... Granting a 50-year license only to find
out in 10 or 20 years that the prescriptions proposed by
the agencies, or alternatives proposed by Pacificorp, fail
to protect salmon would condemn fishing families and the
businesses and communities that rely on them to financial
ruin,” his statement said.
Most of DeFazio's comments dealt with fish passage around
the dams, for which various options were addressed in the
environmental review. One option proposed by PacificCorp
and supported by FERC staff, would involve trucking salmon
around the dams. The National Marine Fisheries Service and
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service both concluded that, in the
absence of dam removal, building fish passageways would be
a better option and allow salmon and steelhead access to
more habitat.
Much of the controversy over relicensing the Iron Gate,
Copco 1, Copco 2 and J.C. Boyles dams has centered around
removal of the dams. None were put in with fish passage in
mind and some people believe removing them is the best
option. Others promote the alternative of simply adding
fish passages to the dams. One of the analyses in the
environmental study also recommended removal of two dams.
It's a murky issue and one that wasn't made clearer
Wednesday night. Representatives of the fishing industry
provided substantial comments but offered no consensus on
dam removal.
Fisherman and buyer Scott Boley, of Gold Beach, is for
removing the dams, though he recognizes tearing them down
might not happen right away and that the energy generation
those dams provide must be taken into account.
But as far as restoring the health of
the salmon, “I believe the only solution is to remove the
dams,” Boley said.
Fisherman Paul Heikkila, who also supported dam removal,
noted that even with fish passages included on the dams,
fish can suffer with other problems, such as unstable
water flows and parasites.
New technology could help, Charleston troller Rayburn
Guerin said.
“As far as the dams go - it's not in our best interest to
remove them,” he said, noting that new developments in
fish ladders and other passageways could enable fish to
return to the upper reaches.
One of the main problems is population growth, Guerin
said. More people are moving to the coastal areas. The
energy produced by the dams could be needed in the next 20
years or so.
But new technology could help. Tyler Long, from the
Reedsport area, brought up the fact that harnessing the
energy from ocean waves is looking like a viable
alternative energy source in the future and could
eliminate the need for the dams.
Some commenters dressed in the bright orange “gumby”
suits, designed to increase fishermen's chances of
survival if they go overboard in the ocean, underscored
the necessity of economic survival.
Troller Jeff Reeves said the attire was to help draw
attention for the need for federal financial assistance.
“We need and expect disaster funding,” Reeves said.
As far as removing the dams, it likely would take too long
and fishermen need help now - for the fishing season next
year and in upcoming years, he added.
But regardless of the dam issue, troller Paul Merz
addressed something much more immediate: the relicensing
itself.
“A 50-year license is ridiculous,” Merz said. “I have to
buy a license every year.”
FERC's director of the division of hydropower licensing,
Ann Miles, said the five-member commission will take the
final environmental impact statement into consideration
and decide to relicense the dams based on whether the dam
operators do a little, medium or a lot of mitigation work.
“Most licenses are closer to the 30- to 40-year range,”
Miles said.
Sport angler John Ward, president of the Southwest chapter
of the Northwest Steelheaders, said recreational fishermen
barely got a season but watched as commercial trollers
were tied to the dock. It's not something he wants to see
again.
“It hurts all of us,” Ward said of the limited seasons.
“You have important, difficult decisions to make and many
factors to consider,” he said, “but the biggest factor is
the fish.” |