Action #1:
Urge Congress to save the Pacific salmon from extinction.

Action #2:
Speak up for Salmon: Submit your comment on the new Federal Salmon Plan.

Action #3: Letter to the Editor: Express your support for salmon recovery. Write a letter to the editor. 
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Today's Action
Northwest Salmon are a National Treasure
Submit your comments for a legal recovery plan today!
Wild salmon and steelhead of the Columbia and Snake Rivers are a treasure to our nation and the Northwest’s ambassadors to the world. Their epic voyage – traveling from a mountain stream to the far reaches of the Pacific Rim, only to return to that very stream in which they were born – is symbolic of the journeys we all make.
Yet these majestic fish cannot be reduced simply to symbols and icons. Salmon are essential to the economy, culture, and ecosystem of the Northwest. For centuries, wild salmon have supported rural communities and tribal cultures, stable jobs, world-renowned fishing opportunities and healthy food along the Pacific Coast and the inland West.
Salmon also act as a barometer for the Northwest ecosystem – their abundance describes the health of rivers and forests in which they flourish – their decline points to the challenges we face in restoring our backyards. In the Columbia-Snake basin the barometer points beyond decline and into crisis. Today, all runs of salmon and steelhead on the Snake River are either extinct or listed under the Endangered Species Act. Last year only three sockeye salmon returned to their spawning grounds in Idaho. The clock is ticking for these fish.
Right now, four outdated dams on the lower Snake River are holding back solutions to the crisis affecting salmon, salmon-dependent communities, and taxpayers nationwide. These four dams severely limit access to thousands of miles of pristine habitat that provide salmon the best chance at survival in a warming climate. After over $8 billion in US taxpayer dollars wasted on ineffective and illegal programs, the effects of this crisis can be felt across the country. The federal agencies in charge of managing this watershed continue to ignore the underlying fact: partial removal of the four lower Snake River dams is the best and most cost-effective way to recover wild salmon to abundance.
It is not too late to restore a free-flowing Snake River and recover wild Snake River salmon for generations to come. The time is now: add your voice today.
Over the last 15 years, the federal government has produced 5 salmon plans for the Columbia and Snake Rivers. Four of the these plans have been ruled illegal, one most recently in spring of 2005. At that time, the court ordered the Administration to rewrite a new, legal plan that will protect and recover endangered wild salmon and comply with federal law. The Draft is out – released on October 31. Salmon and fishing advocates are working together to deliver tens of thousands of comments in support of wild salmon recovery and lower Snake River dam removal.
Please help us generate thousands of public comments that will be delivered to members of Congress, to Presidential candidates, and to the federal agencies responsible for crafting a legal recovery plan.
Visit www.giveadamforsalmon.org and add your voice today. |