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Commentaries and editorials

Dams Came at High Cost
to Tribes Dependent on Salmon

by Gary Piazzon
South Whidbey Record, February 8, 2019

Water pours through the Ice Harbor Dam on the Snake River east of 
Pasco. It is one of four lower Snake River dams covered in an environmental review that will look at whether removing the dams is the best option to improve salmon runs. Editor,

"Urgent warning: Elected officials, if breaching does not begin this winter, you are killing the last hope for southern resident killer whales and our fisheries," reported the Center for Whale Research in December 2018.

And, actually a lot more.

The equation is simple, without breaching the four Lower Snake River dams the Puget Sound's orca, aka southern resident killer whales and the salmon that use that river, are doomed to extinction.

That's the opinion of 34 fisheries scientists. 5,500 miles of climate change resistant, salmon-spawning streams are blocked by these purposeless and costly dams.

The Army Corps of Engineers' own assessment is that breaching is the best solution.

The dams exist primarily to make Lewiston, Idaho a seaport so private grain growers can use barges instead of trains, which taxpayers subsidize.

The dams are a proven liability for the Bonneville Power Administration, costing it millions dollars per year. They produce electricity at the time of year it is not needed.

BPA will spend an estimated $1 billion to maintain these obsolete structures.

The Corps spent millions on ineffectual, energy-intensive salmon strategies. The dams don't have to be dismantled, a simple rerouting of the river at a cost of only $2-3 million per dam, which could be done in two to three months, will suffice.

The governor's $1.1 billion dollar plan will be a waste of money.

Why? The Chinook that use the Snake/Columbia River system feed the killer whales in the winter off the coast. Banning tour boats and improving water quality in the Puget Sound will have no effect.

We don't need more studies. Chinook returns have been diminishing dramatically every year.

This is a taxpayer/rate payer rip-off and a racial injustice as well.

These dams came at severe cost to tribes, like the Nez Perce, whose lives have been dependent on salmon for millennia.

Ultimately, the Army Corps and BPA will be responsible for the extinction of these species unless a massive upwelling of public sentiment and our federal officials can encourage them to act. Lt. Gen. Todd Semonite must issue a "Record of Decision" to direct the Walla Walla District, Corps of Engineers, to select Alternative #4 of their 2002 Environmental Impact Statement.

Please contact the BPA at 800-622-4519, The Army Corps at 202-761-7690, Gov. Jay Inslee at 360-902-4111, Senators Murray, 206-553-5545, and Cantwell, 206-220-6400, and demand the dams be breached.

With your help we can "Free the Snake."


Gary Piazzon, Coupeville
Dams Came at High Cost to Tribes Dependent on Salmon
South Whidbey Record, February 8, 2019

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