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The Spokesman-Review: Cantwell, Risch urge Biden, Trudeau to prioritize negotiations on critical Columbia River Treaty provisions

Dec. 13, 2023

By Emry Dinman

The U.S. and Canada need to prioritize swiftly modernizing the nearly 60-year treaty governing the management of the Columbia River between the two countries, wrote U.S. Sen. Maria Cantwell and Idaho Sen. James Risch in a Wednesday letter to President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“A modernized treaty regime will benefit both of our countries by strengthening flood response and creating opportunities for better management of our shared water resources to overcome new challenges,” the senators wrote.

Cantwell, a Democrat, and Risch, a Republican, lead the Pacific Northwest delegation in negotiations. They argue a new treaty could spur grid modernization, improve access to U.S. markets for Canadian electricity and lead to more efficient systems governing the flow of water through the series of dams along the major waterway. Unless an agreement is reached by September, some provisions of the treaty, which has dramatically shaped the Columbia River since the 1960s, will lapse.

“The United States and Canada have long benefited from our close and extraordinarily positive relationship,” the senators wrote. “We should avoid the uncertainty and potential disputes that could come from any further delays in concluding negotiations over modernization of the Columbia River Treaty.”

The United States began building dams along the Columbia River 90 years ago, first with the Rock Island Dam in 1932 and later the Bonneville, Grand Coulee and others, providing cheap electricity that would attract military industries, but governed by seasonal water flow and without sufficient reservoir storage to mitigate flooding.

In 1948, a flood devastated communities along the river from southeastern British Columbia to the Pacific Ocean, destroying the Vanport community near Portland, which was the second-largest city in Oregon at the time, causing over $100 million in damages and killing at least 16. A joint commission of the United States and Canada that had formed four years earlier to explore bilateral improvements along the Columbia River gained a new sense of urgency in the wake of the Vanport Flood.

The Columbia River Treaty was signed in 1961 and went into effect in 1964, which led to the construction of new dams and major reservoirs on the Canadian side of the border, causing the displacement of those who lived in areas that are today underwater. With that additional storage capacity, water could be reliably directed downriver to American dams, generating power to meet demand or held back in Canadian reservoirs to prevent flooding.

The treaty gives the U.S. significant control over the release of that water in Canadian reservoirs. In exchange, the U.S. agreed to give Canada half of the estimated increased power generated by the downriver dams in what is called the Canadian Entitlement, much of which is sold back to the U.S. Today, the Canadian Entitlement is worth approximately $120 million to $335 million annually, with Canadian and U.S. government officials varying wildly in their estimates.

The treaty has come under fire from a number of directions in the interceding decades, including environmental groups worried about habitat displaced by reservoirs and the impact of dams on the migration of salmon and other fish. Tribal governments were left out of negotiations. Recent drought also has exposed fault lines in the deal, with communities along the Canadian reservoirs worried that their government has insufficient flexibility to hold back flows as local water levels recede, the CBC reported in October.

Most provisions of the Columbia River Treaty do not need to be renewed, though either country could initiate a termination of the treaty starting in 2024, though only after a 10-year notice. The Assured Annual Flood Control provision of the treaty, however, expires automatically on Sept. 16.

In addition to sharing electricity generated, the U.S. paid $65 million in compensation for the flood control benefits of the deal, a 60-year provision set to expire next year. In exchange, Canada agreed to reserve a certain amount of storage in its reservoirs every year that can be used to slow flows downriver and prevent floods.

While neither country has signaled a desire to terminate the treaty, the need to renew the flood control provisions have animated efforts to renegotiate other terms at the same time.

Canadian authorities have argued that their government needs more control over their reservoirs and additional compensation through the Canadian Entitlement. U.S. negotiators have countered that entitlement payments are larger than they should be.

“The current Canadian entitlement is not acceptable to us and to many other members of the U.S. Congress,” Cantwell and Risch wrote in their Wednesday letter. “Any compensation must be reasonable and defensible for funding to be approved by the U.S. Congress.”

U.S. authorities have also argued environmental responsibility should become an agreed-upon priority, in addition to power generation and flood control. In order to move the smolt of fish such as salmon downriver to the ocean, the U.S. frequently spills water over its dams without generating power, but still compensates the Canadian government as though power was generated, payments that U.S. negotiators have argued should be ended or reduced.

Cantwell alluded to these negotiations in a 2016 letter to Trudeau.

“Given the growing impact to our climate, natural environment and economy, I believe we must find a mutually beneficial path forward to modernize the treaty in a way that balances flood control, ecosystem-based function, and hydropower generation,” Cantwell wrote.

If the Assured Annual Flood Control provision is allowed to expire, the U.S. would have to request and compensate Canada for flood control on an ad hoc basis. Already, during periods of very high flows on the river, the U.S. can call upon Canada to provide additional reservoir storage over and above the annual guarantee, but only after proving the U.S. has effectively tried to use its own reservoirs, and then at a price.

How exactly that would work is unclear; the Columbia River Treaty does not describe how this ad hoc system would operate, nor the costs that would be borne by the U.S., according to the Congressional Research Service.

https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/dec/13/cantwell-risch-urge-biden-trudeau-to-prioritize-ne/

CBC News: Sinixt want a say in Columbia River Treaty renegotiations

Nov. 9, 2023

While First Nations in British Columbia's southern Interior have a seat at the renegotiation tables for the Columbia River Treaty between Canada and the United States, the Sinixt — whose territory was directly affected by the original treaty negotiation — do not.

Watch the video here: https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/2281056323613

Global News: First Nations in B.C. seek salmon return to Columbia Basin in new treaty with U.S

By Chuck Chiang

November 5, 2023

First Nations groups on the Canadian side of the Columbia River Basin are adamant that salmon runs that have long been blocked by dams in the United States must be restored, potentially in a renewed river treaty between the two countries.

But experts say possible solutions, such as “salmon cannons” that suck fish through a pipe and shoot them out upstream and over obstacles, are all costly and potentially limited in their effectiveness.

Representatives from the Ktunaxa and Syilx Okanagan nations say they continue to bring up salmon restoration in negotiations for a modern Columbia River Treaty and will not stop until a solution can be reached within or outside a new agreement.

The U.S.-Canada treaty regulates the cross-border Columbia River to prevent flooding and generate hydro power. A key component of the 62-year-old treaty is set to expire in September 2024, lending urgency to the ongoing talks.

“I think what we are doing in the fight to bring salmon back is vital to us moving forward,” said Lower Similkameen Indian Band Chief Keith Crow, who is a member on the Syilx Okanagan Nation’s Chiefs Executive Council and the Nation’s lead in the Columbia River Treaty talks.

“And we’re not going to back down, either,” he said.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation says much of the migratory salmon run in the Upper Columbia, both in Canada and the U.S., ended with the completion of the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington state in 1942.

While the Grand Coulee Dam isn’t among four dams built in accordance with the 1961 Columbia River Treaty, First Nations leaders say the talks offer a rare opportunity for them to directly engage American officials about restoring Pacific salmon to the Upper Columbia.

“The salmon hasn’t been a big piece of (the talks), and I’ve been trying to move it forward consistently,” Crow said.

The nation opened its own hatchery near Penticton, B.C., in 2014 to help bring salmon back to Okanagan waters.

The goal, Crow said, is the restoration of natural salmon runs throughout the Upper Columbia Basin.

“We’ve been supplying salmon back to the people for years from our hatchery from the work that we’ve done, but to be able to see them actually swimming freely and coming up the Columbia the way they’re meant to be, I think it’s something I’m hoping I’m going to see in my lifetime.”

Ktunaxa Nation Council Chair Kathryn Teneese said the loss of salmon to the Upper Columbia Basin fundamentally changed communities and their ways of life, since the fish was a staple to traditional diets and held significant cultural value.

“We now have generations of people that have grown up without even knowing that salmon was very much part of our staple diet,” Teneese said. “So, from that perspective, it’s changed who we are. Because one of the things that we say is that we have a word in our language for salmon, but we don’t have access to it.

“We just fill that void with the utilization of all of the other resources off the land that we’ve always used, but there’s just a piece missing.”

Crow said salmon may have comprised up to 50 per cent of traditional Syilx Okanagan diets prior to the region losing its fish runs.

In September, the U.S. pledged more than $200 million over 20 years from the Bonneville Power Administration for reintroducing salmon in the Upper Columbia River Basin.

Crow said he has spoken with British Columbia Premier David Eby about similar long-term financial commitments on the Canadian side.

“Right now, we are kind of doing the best we can with the budgets that we get every year,” Crow said. “So, a long-term commitment would be so much more beneficial. We can get so much more done, I think.”

In June, the province agreed to separate bilateral deals with the Syilx Okanagan, Ktunaxa and Secwepemc Nations so each group receives 5 per cent of the revenue B.C. receives every year from the U.S. through the Columbia River Treaty, funding known as the Canadian Entitlement.

But the challenge in bringing salmon back to the Upper Columbia Basin isn’t limited to funding, experts say.

In 2012, a group of researchers published a report on efforts to restore Atlantic Salmon and other migrating fish species to rivers on the East Coast of North America.

The report found that the effort at three major rivers did not yield “self-sustaining populations in any eastern U.S. river” despite “hundreds of millions” in investment on the construction of hatcheries and fish passages.

“It may be time to admit failure of fish passage and hatchery-based restoration programs and acknowledge that significant diadromous species restoration is not possible without dam removals,” said the report on fish that travel between salt and fresh water.

University of Victoria Biology Professor Francis Juanes was a co-author of the report, and he said that while the topic of fish passage technology among researchers is actively discussed and constantly advancing, studies have shown the only reliable way to fully restore a natural fish run may be a dam’s removal.

Juanes said that when a dam on the Elwha River was removed about a decade ago in Washington state, “you didn’t have to reintroduce (salmon).”

“They came back naturally. In a sense, that is the best way to reintroduce salmon especially to a river system.”

Results on the East Coast where fish ladders were used, particularly the Connecticut River, were not nearly as effective, Juanes said.

“It took so much effort by so many states, and you needed the hatcheries to grow these babies. So, that’s an enormous effort, and the return just wasn’t very good.”

John Waldman, biology professor at Queens College in New York, is one of the main authors of the report.

Waldman said there is rising belief among grassroots and Indigenous groups throughout North America that dam removals may be the optimal way to restore fish runs, in lieu of the poor results from alternative passages.

“I think there’s one universal theme that has emerged over the last two decades, which is that dam removal is without question the best solution to bringing these fish back again,” he said.

“Fish ladders and fish elevators provide what’s called the halfway measure.

“It looks like to the uninitiated that you have a solution and that it works, but the truth is when you look at the actual performance of many of these fish ladders and fish elevators, not that many fish pass through them.”

The biggest dam removal project in the United States began earlier this year on the Klamath River along the Oregon-California border, where four such structures will come down by next year under a budget of US$450 million.

Discussions on removing four dams on another branch of the Columbia River Basin – in the lower parts of the Snake River – have been ongoing for years, with the U.S. federal government rejecting in 2020 the idea due to possible power-grid destabilization if the hydro electricity from the dams are removed.

Last month, U.S. President Joe Biden directed federal agencies to use all available authorities and resources to restore salmon runs in the Columbia River Basin that are “healthy and abundant.”

Biden’s order, however, stopped short of calling for the removal of the dams on the Lower Snake River in Washington state.

The Upper Columbia United Tribes, consisting of five member Indigenous nations in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, said on its website on salmon restoration that while more studies are needed, there have been “encouraging advances” in fish passage technologies such as floating surface collectors and salmon cannons to get past tall dams without the structures’ removal.

 

But such technology, Waldman said, is unproven in being able to support a large, natural fish migration.

“I think this is a quarter-way measure, not even a halfway measure,” he said.

“You see them emerging once in a while, and somebody gets wind of it on TV, and some late night comedians make fun of fish being shot through these cannons. But no one’s ever ramped them up to be at a level that would sustain a natural level of migratory fish.”

But Juanes said such options may be necessary if dam removals are not possible, even if they may add stress to the salmon population and make them more vulnerable to diseases.

“For one, that’s a very costly thing to do,” Juanes said of fish-passage technology. “For two, it causes stress to the animals. I can imagine that this cannon is not a happy moment for the fish, but maybe it’s better than it dying below the dam.”

Crow, for his part, said he understands “there’s no way of getting around the fact” that dams such as the Grand Coulee remain in the migration path, posing a monumental challenge to restoring salmon migration routes.

But he said the reintroduction of salmon runs to the Upper Columbia Basin is important enough to warrant effort and funding.

“There are lots of options out there, but what is going to be the most efficient and least impactful to the salmon, and they can still get back up? That’s the key,” he said.

“I’ve been taught to think seven generations down. So, I’m looking seven generations ahead of decisions that I make today: How is it going to influence or how is it going to impact my great-great-grandkids?”

https://globalnews.ca/news/10072179/first-nations-bc-salmon-return-columbia-basin/

Vancouver Sun: Drought reveals cracks in Canada-U.S. Columbia River Treaty as B.C. lake dries up

"I would say that when it was negotiated in 1961 and entered into force in 1964, it probably was one of the most important — if not the most important — water treaties in the world," said Nigel Bankes

Oct. 25, 2023

Victoria Youmans says she hasn’t seen Arrow Lakes Reservoir looking so low in more than 20 years.

The resident of Nakusp on the shores of the reservoir in British Columbia’s southern Interior says she’s seen thousands of dead fish on the shore, and the receding waterline means boat access has been cut to waterfront properties. Instead of lapping waters, some homes now face an expanse of sucking mud.

Drought is part of reason. But so too is the Columbia River Treaty with the United States that obligates B.C. to direct water from the reservoir across the border at American behest.

The grim scenes described by Youmans illustrate the stakes in talks between Canadian and U.S. negotiators to modernize the 62-year-old treaty, as the increased risk of extreme weather weighs on both sides. Part of the treaty that gives the United States direct control over a portion of the water in Arrow Lakes Reservoir and two other B.C. dams is set to expire in September 2024.

“I would say that when it was negotiated in 1961 and entered into force in 1964, it probably was one of the most important — if not the most important — water treaties in the world,” said Nigel Bankes, professor emeritus at the University of Calgary’s faculty of law, whose expertise includes the Columbia River Treaty.

“Its significance was really that it provided for the co-operative development of the Columbia River — the co-operative development of storage for flood control and power purposes, and for a sharing of the benefits associated with those developments.”

The treaty was forged after catastrophic flooding of the Columbia River in 1948 destroyed the city of Vanport, Ore., near Portland.

It led to the creation of three dams in B.C. and a fourth in Montana in the Columbia’s drainage basin, serving both flood control and hydropower generation.

But recent extreme weather — such as this year’s severe drought in B.C. — has exposed problems in the agreement that residents of the Columbia River Basin say need to be urgently addressed.

The 230-kilometre-long Arrow Lakes Reservoir — made up of Upper Arrow Lake and Lower Arrow Lake — was created when the Hugh Keenleyside Dam was built in 1968 under the treaty.

The reservoir’s water level had fallen to 423.7 metres above sea level on Tuesday — a low not reached in more than two decades.

Nakusp resident Youmans said what’s even more concerning is that it’s only October, and the lakes usually don’t reach their lowest annual levels until late winter or early spring.

“I personally have never seen it this low, and I’ve lived here for over 20 years,” said Youmans, who is among 3,900 members of a Facebook group that wants to “slow the flow of Arrow Lakes” to the United States.

She says the low water levels are hampering tourism and recreation on the lake, located about 600 km east of Vancouver.

There are other commercial concerns. Nakusp Mayor Tom Zeleznik said low water levels had rendered parts of the reservoir unnavigable for vessels carrying logs, resulting in the closure of some businesses, and forcing reliance on costlier land transport.

Katrine Conroy, the provincial minister on the Columbia River Treaty talks and the MLA representing Kootenay West, said the province is legally obligated by the treaty to direct water to the United States “for flood protection, power-generation purposes, as well as for fish.”

“It’s really frustrating to be faced with a situation that feels like there’s very little that you can do to fix it,” Conroy said in an information session held for West Kootenay residents on Oct. 18, saying her position as the minister responsible for the treaty does not give her a seat at the negotiating table.

The latest round of negotiations, which were the 19th since talks began in 2018, concluded in Portland on Oct. 13.

My “position doesn’t give me a magic wand,” Conroy said. “I can’t cancel a treaty or change its terms or requirements … Often as a government minister, I’m confronted by problems and issues that are hundreds of kilometres away, but for me, this one hits very, very close to home. It’s in my backyard.”

Conroy is also B.C.’s minister of finance.

Federal, provincial and First Nations delegates are represented at the talks with U.S. authorities.

If a new flood-control agreement isn’t reached by September next year, the treaty currently calls for a shift to an “ad hoc” regime, with U.S. authorities having to rely on their own dams’ capacity for flood control before being able to call upon Canadian dams to hold back water as necessary.

The concern, Bankes said, is that nobody knows exactly what an ad hoc regime will look like because it has never been done before.

“Currently, as I understand it, the dam operators start thinking about flood control operations in February,” Bankes said. “So, you need long lead-ups to be able to achieve target flows down in Washington and Oregon. ”That, I think, is the biggest issue, and obviously it should be a huge driver for the United States. What amazes me is that they haven’t got it figured out now, because 11 months is not a long time.“

The U.S. army Corps of Engineers, which built and operates the American treaty dam in Montana as well as a number of dams downriver in the Columbia River Basin such as the Bonneville Dam, warned Oregon and Washington residents in a September information session that waterflow may become “unpredictable” if Canada moves to an ad hoc regime.

Development has proliferated on historical Columbia River flood plains in the United States since the treaty came into effect, and the Corps of Engineers said an ad hoc regime could lead to flooding and disruptions to transport corridors including the I-5 bridge linking Oregon and Washington.

“At this point, we just simply don’t know the actual changes in reservoir operations or potential changes in flooding, because we don’t know how Canada will be operating their system,” Geoff Van Epps, Commander of the U.S. army Corps of Engineers’ Northwest Division, told the information session.

Speaking to West Kootenay residents with Conroy, Canadian treaty negotiator Stephen Gluck said while an ad hoc regime will give Canada more control over waterflow “in theory,” it also introduces uncertainty.

“I will say that even though we continue to negotiate, there is an emerging acceptance that a modernized (treaty) must include Canadian flexibility,” Gluck said.

Kathy Eichenberger, B.C.’s lead negotiator, told residents the province received roughly $420 million last year in the “Canadian entitlement” from power generation at U.S. dams based on waterflows from Canada.

Typically, the province receives about $150 million to $200 million a year, funding that’s directed at regions affected by the dams.

Eichenberger said the dams also helped avert flooding in the B.C. communities of Trail and Castlegar in 2012.

“The key is, Canada and B.C., we entered into this treaty willingly, as partners with the United States,” Eichenberger said. “So, we are committed, as the U.S. is committed, to upholding to treaty requirements.”

For residents such as Youmans, however, it is “beyond frustrating” to see Washington’s Franklin D Roosevelt Lake — downriver from the Canadian dams — operating at normal water levels, while Arrow Lakes Reservoir recedes.

“Unfortunately, there’s nothing we can do with what’s happened now,” Youmans said. “All we can do is move forward and be heard on the upcoming and ongoing negotiations.”

https://vancouversun.com/news/local-news/drought-reveals-cracks-in-canada-u-s-columbia-river-treaty-as-b-c-lake-dries-up

Nelson Daily Guest Opinion: As Columbia River Treaty negotiators get serious, Basin residents need to speak up

By the Upper Columbia Basin Environmental Collaborative
July 8, 2020Treaty.siteC

On June 29 and 30, Canada and the United States met for the tenth round of Columbia River Treaty renegotiations. The negotiations were held by web-conference due to COVID-19. Unlike previous rounds, negotiators actually started debating specific proposals. According to press releases issued by both sides, Canada responded to an initial proposal from the U.S. and presented a counter-proposal. This is big news.

The week before, in fulfilment of a pledge made to continue to engage with Basin residents around their issues and concerns, the B.C. Treaty Team released its latest report on local interests and the status of negotiations: a remarkably forthcoming document for a process conducted almost entirely behind closed doors. The Province also committed to engage Indigenous nations, local governments, and citizens on final decisions about the treaty once options become clear.

But as negotiations with the U.S. proceed, options will be whittled down toward a narrow consensus.

That’s why it’s crucial for negotiators to hear from the public now.

Our group, the Upper Columbia Basin Environmental Collaborative, is participating in an Indigenous-led research process investigating how a modernized treaty could improve the health of Canadian ecosystems. This spring, we released a discussion paper and summary on this topic—and we welcome public comment. The Columbia River Treaty Local Governments Committee has provided similar recommendations.

The new Columbia River Treaty must include ecosystem function as a third primary purpose, equal to the existing purposes of international flood-risk management and hydropower. This means adjusting dam operations to help restore land now periodically inundated by reservoirs and improve conditions for fish and other aquatic species in downstream river reaches.

In general, reservoir operations should mimic natural systems as much as possible. We also need to have more flexibility in Canada to adapt to climate change. We can make these changes while still generating plenty of power and protecting communities from floods. To support this new mandate, Treaty governance must be reformed with biologists working alongside engineers, better international collaboration, and Indigenous nations central in decision-making. The public must have a strong voice.

More of the ongoing treaty revenue paid by the U.S. should be dedicated to relevant Basin needs.

Many people mistakenly believe the Columbia Basin Trust is funded by the treaty. In fact, it was created with a one-time $376-million payment from the Province, representing well under 10% of B.C. revenue to date.

A new agreement should provide new funds for (1) adaptive ecosystem research, restoration, and management, (2) salmon reintroduction, (3) watershed education for youth and the public, and (4) local food security.

The renegotiation of the treaty is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to secure a just, ecologically prosperous, and economically sustainable future for the Basin. UCBEC applauds the Canadian negotiating team, which includes the federal and provincial governments and the Ktunaxa, Secwepemc, and Syilx Okanagan nations, for breaking away from the treaty’s dark history.

Nothing since colonization has had a more destructive impact on the Upper Columbia Basin than this treaty. Four large dams (Hugh Keenleyside, Duncan, and Mica in Canada and Libby in the U.S.) were built through the treaty, which together inundated around 1200 square kilometres of ecologically- and agriculturally-rich land, flooding over a dozen communities.

To this day, Canadian treaty dams are partially operated to meet treaty requirements that serve downstream American interests. In 1964, the federal government signed the treaty without consulting with Indigenous nations or Basin residents.  BC Hydro and the Province enforced the removal of condemned communities with what many people felt was inadequate compensation and little to no empathy.

Thankfully, we’re living in a different time. We can speak directly to negotiators and ask them to make sure ecosystem function becomes the third treaty purpose so that river flows will be shaped to also benefit ecosystems and their diverse plant and animal communities.

Send a comment to negotiators today by email (columbiarivertreaty@gov.bc.ca), Facebook @ColumbiaRiverTreaty), or Twitter (@CRTreaty).

And when the Province holds its next round of formal public engagement, we all need to show up. We are fortunate to have government officials in charge who truly want to listen. Let’s seize the opportunity.

Submitted by Dr. Martin Carver, Lead & Coordinator, Upper Columbia Basin Environmental Collaborative

The Upper Columbia Basin Environmental Collaborative(UCBEC) is a collaboration of a cross-section of environmental voices from the Upper Columbia Basin representing provincial, regional and local environmental groups. Current members include the Sierra Club of British Columbia, BC Nature, Wildsight, Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, Friends of Kootenay Lake Stewardship Society, and the North Columbia Environment Society.

CBB: State Department To Hold Portland Town Hall On Columbia River Treaty Negotiations

 Friday, July 20, 2018col.gorge

The U.S. State Department will host a town hall meeting in Portland Sept. 6 to discuss the ongoing re-negotiation of the Columbia River Treaty.
 
The meeting will be led by Jill Smail, the State Department’s lead negotiator in talks with Canadian officials that are aimed at modernizing the treaty, which was enacted in 1964.
 
The town hall meeting at the Bonneville Power Administration’s Rates Hearing Room, from 5:30 to 7 p.m., will follow a round of negotiations that will be held in British Columbia Aug. 15-16, and an Oct. 17-18 round of negotiations that will be held in Portland.
 
The meeting is free and open to the public. Smail and other negotiators will provide a general overview of the negotiations and take questions. Questions can be sent in advance to ColumbiaRiverTreaty@state.gov.
 
The Columbia River Treaty was enacted mostly to provide flood risk management and affordable hydropower on both sides of the border.
 
“As the United States continues bilateral negotiations with Canada, our key objectives are guided by the U.S. Entity Regional Recommendation for the Future of the Columbia River Treaty after 2024, a consensus document published in 2013 after five years of consultations among the Tribes, states, stakeholders, public, and federal agencies,” a State Department press release states.
 
More information on the treaty and negotiations can be found at: https://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/ca/topics/c78892.htm
 
In addition to Smail, the U.S. negotiating team includes representatives from BPA, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Northwestern Division, the Department of Interior, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
 

  1. Vancouver Sun: Restoring the Columbia/ Water as an opportunity to rebuild our relationship with the U.S.
  2. Spokesman Review Guest Opinion: A modern Columbia River treaty needs to treat the Columbia as one river
  3. NW News Network: After 70 Years, Salmon Could Return To Columbia River Above Grand Coulee
  4. For immediate release: U.S. - Canada talks to modernize the treaty will begin in early 2018
  5. Seattle Times: Evening of ‘story, reflection and discussion’ about Columbia River
  6. Healing the Columbia River - Seattle event - Sept. 28
  7. For Immediate Release: The Columbia River Basin Holds Immense Natural Capital Value
  8. News Release – Northwest, British Columbia need to stand together to modernize the Columbia River Treaty
  9. Clearing Up: Northwest Delegation Sends Another Letter Urging U.S. CRT Action
  10. CBB: Cantwell, Canadian Ambassador Meet To Discuss Columbia River Treaty
  11. Seattle Times Editorial: Columbia River Treaty works, but needs thoughtful updating
  12. CBB: Cross-Border Coalition Urges Collaboration In Modernizing U.S.-Canada Columbia River Treaty
  13. For Immediate Release: Conservation, fishing and faith communities call for U.S and Canadian government collaboration as essential to modernize the Columbia River Treaty
  14. Spokesman-Review Editorial: Drought put new facet on U.S.-Canada river treaty
  15. The Spokesman-Review: B.C. residents push for more-stable reservoir levels as Columbia River Treaty is renegotiated
  16. Spokesman-Review guest opinion: Pope's letter on environment a call for change
  17. For Immediate Release: Columbia River Treaty: State Department to include Ecosystem Function in negotiating position
  18. Wenatchee World: Feds - Columbia River Treaty's future is a 'priority'
  19. AP: NW delegation demands start of Columbia River treaty talks
  20. High Country News: Salmon ground is holy ground
  21. Views from North of the Border: Treaty must consider climate change
  22. Al Jazeera America: Salmon people pray for sacred fish to return to historic home
  23. Modernizing the Columbia River Treaty: A report from our nation's capitol (Sept 2014)
  24. HCN: Watershed moment: The U.S. and Canada prepare to renegotiate the 50-year-old Columbia River Treaty.
  25. CBB: Religious, Tribal Leaders Send To President, Prime Minister Declaration On Columbia River Treaty
  26. New York Times: Large Dams Just Aren’t Worth the Cost
  27. NAIADS: When Will Salmon Return to the Spokane?
  28. The Daily New: Residents, Cowlitz Tribe pray for return to natural salmon runs
  29. The Spokesman-Review: Spawning hope
  30. Spokesman Review Guest opinion: Value the water stored in Canada
  31. Seattle Times Guest Opinion: Why the Columbia River Treaty matters
  32. Righting Historic Wrongs: A conference on ethics and the Columbia River Treaty.
  33. The Economist: The Columbia River Treaty: Salmon en route
  34. EPA weighs in on the Columbia River Treaty
  35. It’s Unanimous: Northwest delegation says “aye” to Treaty negotiations
  36. Spokesman-Review: Tribes talk salmon, dams as Columbia River Treaty renewal looms
  37. Seattle Times: Weigh all the benefits of the Columbia River Treaty
  38. The Globe and Mail: First Nations push to restore Columbia River salmon runs
  39. Tri-City Herald: Ecology, power concerns voiced in Columbia River Treaty hearing
  40. Seattle Times Guest Opinion: Consider ecosystem in U.S.-Canada negotiations for Columbia River Treaty
  41. Columbia River Treaty: November 2013 Update
  42. Spokesman-Review: U.S. utilities say Columbia River Treaty payments to Canada are excessive
  43. Spokesman-Review op/ed: Include salmon, climate provisions in river treaty
  44. Seattle Times: Roll on Columbia River Treaty
  45. AP: Canada Cries Foul on Columbia deal; U.S. plan exact opposite
  46. B.C. Releases Draft Columbia River Treaty Recommendations
  47. What Save Our Wild Salmon is doing to modernize the Columbia River Treaty
  48. Why Save Our Wild Salmon is Working to Modernize the Columbia River Treaty
  49. Toronto Globe & Mail: With water treaty to be revisited, future of Columbia River up for debate
  50. The Oregonian Editorial: The Northwest needs an overhauled Columbia River Treaty.
  51. The Spokesman Review: Treaty renewal chance to reopen salmon passages
  52. Wenatchee World: Tribes say fish protection must be part of river treaty
  53. U.S. Government’s Columbia River Treaty “Working Draft” recommendation has come under fire
  54. Save Our wild Salmon submits comments on the Columbia River Treaty
  55. Save Our wild Salmon submits comments on the Columbia River Treaty (2)
  56. The Globe and Mail: Revised Columbia River Treaty could restore salmon runs
  57. Renewing the Columbia River Treaty: a-once-in-our-lifetime chance
  58. Paul Lumley: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era
  59. Paul Lumley: To manage the Columbia River, we need a new treaty for a new era (2)
  60. Seattle Times: New orca baby born to southern resident L pod
  61. Seattle Times: Orca J50 presumed dead but NOAA continues search
  62. Seattle Times: Concern over endangered orcas blows up approval of Trans Mountain pipeline in Canada
  63. Spokesman-Review Outdoor Page: All connected: a mother’s grief, starving orcas, dams, PCBs and Spokane
  64. NYT: Grieving Orca Carries Dead Calf for More Than 3 Days: ‘She’s Just Not Letting Go’
  65. Washington Post: An orca calf died shortly after being born. Her grieving mother has carried her body for days.
  66. Q13 Fox: Inslee voices support for short-term action on orcas as long-term decisions loom
  67. Seattle Times: For third day, grieving orca carries dead calf in water
  68. Seattle Times: We won't give up as long as she doesn't—Orca mother carries dead calf for fourth day
  69. Huffington Post: Grieving Mother Orca Whale Carries Dead Calf For Days
  70. Seattle Times: Grieving mother orca falling behind family as she carries dead calf for a seventh day
  71. NOAA Fisheries & WDFW: Prioritizing West Coast Chinook salmon stocks for Southern Resident killer whale recovery
  72. Seattle Times: Struggling orcas heavily rely on urban chinook from Seattle-area rivers, new analysis shows
  73. New York Times: Orcas of the Pacific Northwest are Starving and Disappearing
  74. Puget Sound Recovery Caucus: Puget Sound Recovery Caucus introduces “National Orca Protection Month” resolution
  75. Seattle Times: Inslee calls Canada pipeline ‘profoundly damaging,’ fears for orcas in surprise deal
  76. Seattle Times: Critically endangered orcas have governor’s, tribe’s attention
  77. US News and World Report: State Bills Tackle Threats to Endangered Puget Sound Orcas
  78. OPB: Endangered Orcas Are Starving. Should We Start Feeding Them?
  79. Could Slower Ships Help the Orcas?
  80. Crosscut.com: Where have all Puget Sound’s orcas gone?
  81. Seattle PI: Orca whales need Chinook salmon, losing same
  82. Seattle Times: Orcas headed to extinction unless we get them more chinook and quieter waters, report says
  83. NWPR: Puget Sound's Southern Resident Orca Population Drops To 30-Year Low
  84. South Whidbey Record: UW study pins orca pregnancy problems on lack of salmon
  85. Oceana: Study: endangered orcas are losing their unborn babies because they’re starving
  86. Idaho Statesman: Fate of Pacific Northwest orcas tied to having enough Columbia River salmon
  87. Seattle Times: A new study nails dearth of chinook salmon as the primary cause of the endangered resident orca whale’s failure to rebound.
  88. AP: Tribes sue Coast Guard over tanker-traffic risk to orcas
  89. The Stranger: Is Anyone Going to Save the Endangered Killer Whales in Puget Sound Before It's Too Late?
  90. Hawaii Magazine, Coastal Science and Societies: What Happens When an Endangered Whale Pod Loses its Wise Old Grandma?
  91. Tri-Cities Herard Letter to the Editor: On orcas, ask an expert
  92. KING5-TV: Vigils Held for Southern Resident Orcas
  93. KOMO NEWS: Endangered southern resident orca found dead off Canadian coast
  94. Crosscut.com: Oil tankers could doom Puget Sound’s orcas
  95. Truthout Report: Without Major Interventions, the Orca's Days Are Numbered
  96. KOMO News: 'It's a sad day:' Researchers claim Puget Sound orcas are starving and dying
  97. Seattle Times: Another Puget Sound orca dies; hope dim for her calf
  98. Crosscut.com: The orcas are starving
  99. Orca and Salmon - An Evening of Storytelling
  100. NRDC Blog: To Save Orcas, First Save Salmon
  101. Defenders Magazine: Looking for a Sound Solution
  102. Orca Month 2016 Calendar of Events
  103. Orca Month 2016
  104. Seattle Times Guest Opinion: Hungry killer whales waiting for Columbia River salmon
  105. Seattle Times: Puget Sound orca numbers rise fast after 30-year low in 2014
  106. CBC: Orca baby boom: 7th calf born to endangered southern resident population
  107. Crosscut.com: To save the orcas, do we need to demolish dams?
  108. Huff Post: Newborn Orca 'Baby Boom' Depends Upon Our Breaching Deadbeat Dams
  109. Daily Astorian Editorial: Orcas growing factor in Columbia River salmon management
  110. KOMO TV: Interview with Dr. Carl Safina on the Orca-Salmon Connection
  111. Seattle Times: Puget Sound’s killer whales looking good
  112. Skagit Valley Herald: New alliance has big goals for salmon, orca recovery
  113. Intertwined Fates: The Orca-Salmon Connection in the Northwest
  114. Patagonia's The Cleanest Line: Save Money, Save Salmon, Save Mike: Free the Snake
  115. Nat Geo Guest Blog: Breach the Snake River Dams
  116. The Daily Astorian: Orcas back at Columbia River as 2015 tracking ends
  117. WDC Guest Blog: Southern Resident Orcas and the Snake River
  118. Seattle Times: Orca baby boom continues with discovery of fourth calf
  119. Seattle Times: Researchers tracking killer whales took this video of a new calf from the endangered orca population
  120. Chinook Observer: Animal roundup: Baby orca leads a parade of returning species
  121. Chinook Observer: Baby orca in the Columbia River plume this week
  122. Guest Opinion: Survival of endangered orcas in the Salish Sea depends on restoring chinook
  123. Lewiston Tribune: Whale concerns prompt dam petition
  124. Kitsap Sun: K and L pods under observation as they travel south in ocean
  125. Islander Weekly: Dam removal initiative finds footing in DC
  126. Seattle Times: Ten years after ESA listing, killer whale numbers falling
  127. CBS News: Pregnant killer whale J-32 was starving, necropsy reveals
  128. Seattle Times: 7-week-old baby orca missing, presumed dead
  129. Associated Press: Orca population in Puget Sound falling
  130. KING 5 TV: Orca expert's dire warning about Puget Sound orcas
  131. New study connects Puget Sound orcas and Columbia Basin salmon
  132. Orca advocates, businesses and scientists call on Governor Inslee to take action to rebuild endangered chinook salmon stocks
  133. Watching Our Waterways: Orca tracking project comes to an end for now
  134. Revealing new data shows killer whales' affinity for the Columbia River mouth
  135. Saving Salmon to Save Orcas
  136. June is Orca Month - Check out the new video on salmon and orcas
  137. Orcas and Salmon Roundup by Howard Garrett: Will The Present Administration Act In Behalf Of Orcas And Salmon?
  138. "Commercial Fisheries, Salmon, and Orcas" - by Candace Calloway Whiting in the Seattle PI's City Brights
  139. "River of Renewal"- Salmon, Dams, Orcas, and You
  140. June is Orca Awareness Month!
  141. Saving Snake River salmon will save Puget Sound killer whales
  142. Seattle Times Guest columnists: Connect the dots to save orcas, salmon
  143. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 12.
  144. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 11.
  145. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 10.
  146. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 9.
  147. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 8.
  148. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 7.
  149. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 6.
  150. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 5.
  151. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 4.
  152. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 3.
  153. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 2.
  154. Hot Water Report 2024 - Issue 1.
  155. Thank You President Biden and Six Sovereigns
  156. ACT TODAY: Sen. Murray/Gov. Inslee 'Snake River Salmon Initiative' Survey Resource Page
  157. Washington State Food Professionals Call for Solutions for Salmon and Communities
  158. Thank you for your salmon recovery leadership...
  159. Stand with the Tribes to restore Snake River salmon - July 15
  160. Extinction or Abundance?
  161. Watch a recording of Reps. Simpson and Blumenauer discuss solutions for Northwest salmon and communities
  162. The Columbian: Editorial - In Our View: Snake River dams plan warrants consideration
  163. 2020 CRSO Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS): An SOS Summary of the Public Comment Period (April 2020)
  164. Public News Service: Gov. Inslee Report Weighs Future of Snake River
  165. Save Our wild Salmon Reacts to Seattle Times article "Breaching Snake River dams could save salmon and orcas, but destroy livelihoods"
  166. Seattle Times: Gov. Jay Inslee wants $1.1 billion to help save Puget Sound’s critically endangered orcas
  167. Street Root News: Save the orcas: Protesters want Snake River dams breached
  168. You're invited! 2018 Flotilla to 'Free the Snake' - Sept. 7/8 in the Lewiston-Clarkston Valley
  169. CBB: With Temps Rising, Corps Cools Snake River With Dworshak Water To Aid Endangered Snake River Sockeye
  170. Lewiston Tribune: Why did the B-run get a ‘D’? Reasons for diminishing fish returns begin to come into focus
  171. Lewiston Tribune: BPA at a Crossroads
  172. KIVI: Salmon numbers in Idaho take a nose dive
  173. News Deeply: Salmon Are Booming in Oregon’s Rogue River. Dam Removal May Be Why.
  174. Idaho Mountain Express Guest Opinion: Idaho congressmen sell out our salmon
  175. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Think tank slams dam-breaching study
  176. Columbia Basin Bulletin: House Committee Passes Bill Requiring Congressional Authorization For Certain Changes At Dams
  177. Tri-City Herald: This bill would save Snake River dams. It’s hitting opposition in Congress
  178. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Harvest Managers Predict 23 Percent Decline In 2018 Fall Chinook Run, One-Half Of 10-Year Average
  179. Tri- City Herald: Decision on Snake dam removal has Murray and Newhouse at odds
  180. The Tyee: Megadams Not Clean or Green, Says Expert
  181. CBB: Salmon BiOp Challengers Argue New 2018 BiOp Due End Of Year Would Be Illegal Without EIS Foundation
  182. Idaho Statesman: This agency spends the most to help Northwest salmon. But cuts are coming.
  183. Seattle Times: Environmental impact of salmon decline: This isn’t just about fish
  184. The Idaho Statesman: The fate of the Northwest’s largest energy provider may decide future of our salmon
  185. CBB: Judge Denies Irrigators‚ Motion For Hearing On 2015 Spill/Transportation, Spread The Risk
  186. Seattle Times: Site unseen - Floodwaters buried a treasure trove at Marmes Rockshelter
  187. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Hard water makes for hard times
  188. Idaho Statesman: Taxpayers paid $14 million for an Idaho hatchery — and all its fish have been dying
  189. NewsDeeply: Why Hydroelectric Utilities Are Endangered by Soaring Solar and Wind
  190. Lewiston Morning Tribune Letter to the Editor: Save the salmon
  191. NewsDeeply: Two Years After California’s Biggest Dam Removal, Fish Rebound
  192. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Federal Agencies Update Court On NEPA, EIS Process For Columbia/Snake Salmon, Steelhead
  193. L.A. Times Guest Opinion: Four dams in the West are coming down — a victory wrapped in a defeat for smart water policy
  194. Lewiston Morning Tribune Editorial Opinion: Has the game changed for Snake River fish?
  195. CBB: Independent Science Panel Reviews Draft Report On Columbia Basin Salmon Survival
  196. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Time to breach?
  197. Idaho Mountain Express: Bill would void court order no salmon recovery
  198. NEWS RELEASE: Ten years after Oregon’s largest dam removal, salmon and steelhead rebounding on the Sandy
  199. OPB/EarthFix: Salmon-Friendly Rulings On Columbia, Snake Dams Could Be Oveturned By Congress
  200. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Feedback - Ocean Conditions And Salmon Survival
  201. CBB: Idaho Sockeye Run Second Worst In 10 Years But Good Conversion Rates From Lower Granite To Sawtooths
  202. NW Fishletter #374: Draft Results From Model Show Benefits With and Without Snake River Dams
  203. CBB: Draft Annual Salmon Survival Study Considers Impacts Of Lower Snake Dam Breaching, More Spill
  204. NRDC: New Study Offers Way Out of Hot Water & Salmon Crisis
  205. Idaho Statesman Guest Opinion: Don’t blame ‘the blob.’ Even with good ocean conditions, salmon face hostile rivers.
  206. Street Roots News: Nez Perce activists fight to save the Snake River
  207. 2017 Free the Snake Flotilla Photo Gallery
  208. Idaho Statesman: Remove 4 dams, leave these fish alone, and they may be able to replenish themselves
  209. Lewiston Tribune: Salmon advocates take to the water to call for dam breaching
  210. HCN: After its dams came down, a river is reborn
  211. Press Advisory: 3rd Annual Free the Snake Flotilla: Boaters Call for Dam Removal to Save Wild Steelhead, Salmon
  212. High Country News: States restrict chinook fisheries
  213. Seattle Times: Warm-water conditions in the Columbia and Snake Rivers are challenging cold water salmon and steelhead — and the problem is likely to get worse because of climate change.
  214. JOIN THE FREE THE SNAKE FLOTILLA - 2017!
  215. Lewiston Tribune: Seriously stressed steelhead
  216. Idaho Statesman Series Part 2: A changing electrical grid may make Snake River dams expendable — and help save salmon
  217. LMT: IDFG scrambling to fill hatchery quotas of spring chinook
  218. Idaho Statesman: Should Snake dams be removed?
  219. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Short lines - tall orders
  220. LMT: Steelhead numbers even lower than forecast
  221. Idaho Statesman: Northwest Salmon, the stuff of legends, still struggle to survive
  222. Seattle Times: At Elwha River, forests, fish and flowers where there were dams and lakes
  223. Lewiston Tribune: McMorris Rodgers seeks new life for salmon plan
  224. SOS Blog: Spokane churches and Nez Perce Tribal members gather together on the banks of the lower Snake River
  225. The Drake: Columbia Conundrum
  226. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Spring chinook fishing closed in Clearwater Basin
  227. Moscow-Pullman Daily News: Our View: Can lawyers just try to swim with the salmon?
  228. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Fisheries managers move to protect B-run
  229. Idaho Statesman: Saving Idaho's salmon: Nature again turns against returning fish that already face long odds
  230. CBB: Spill Advocates, Federal Agencies Agree To Status Conference Schedule, Protocol In Salmon BiOP Case
  231. ORECA's alert targeting Governor Brown doesn’t tell the full story.
  232. LMT: Anemic return leads managers to close salmon fishing on Snake
  233. CBB: Spring Chinook Return Had A Little Bounce Then Back To Low Numbers; Insufficient Data For Run Update
  234. CBB: Heading Into Summer Water Supply Forecasts Across Basin Above Normal; One Of Wettest Years
  235. Tri-Cities Herald: 3 horseback riders stop in Kennewick on journey to save salmon
  236. Seattle Times: Epic snow and rain help salmon now, but conflicts with hydropower lie ahead on Columbia River
  237. Oregonian: Idaho horseback riders on salmon trek pass through Portland
  238. NWPR/EarthFix: Conservation Groups Ask To Stop Barging Sockeye Around Dams
  239. OPB: Court Orders More Spill Over Columbia River Dams In 2018
  240. KUOW: Northwest Tribes Say Salmon Recovery Is Requirement Based On Treaty Rights
  241. The Oregonian: How infrastructure report card reflects on West Coast states in 10 critical areas
  242. CBB: Listed Steelhead Move Into New Habitat Created By Removal Of Obsolete Dam On Idaho's Potlatch River
  243. Lewiston Tribune: Tribal, nontribal activists gather for environmental conference
  244. Spokesman Review: Worries growing for wheat farmers
  245. Media Advisory
: Court Hearing in Portland on Columbia/Snake Salmon - 3.9.2017
  246. Willamette Week: Environmental groups seek federal action to save salmon and steelhead in Snake and Columbia Rivers
  247. Columbia/Snake Salmon NEPA Analysis Public Scoping Comment Period: A Summary
  248. 400,000 citizens submit comments calling for removal of the lower Snake River dams
  249. Patagonia Blog: The Cleanest Line - Free the Snake and Restore Salmon to Honor Treaty Right
  250. KING5-TV: Snake River dams examined after decades of lawsuits
  251. Workboat: Lockdown - Inside America’s decaying waterways infrastructure
  252. The Daily News: Removing dams could affect Cowlitz industry, electric rates
  253. Many Dollars and Little Sense: Barging on the Lower Snake River
  254. The Daily Astorian: Debate spills over the dams
  255. Associated Press: Environmental groups want work halted on Snake River dams
  256. Oregonian: Shielded Native American sites thrust into debate over dams
  257. Steelhead, sockeye spotted above Elwha dam sites
  258. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Irrigators want dams off endangered list
  259. Idaho Statesman: Lower Snake River farmers seek federal ruling to allow Idaho salmon to go extinct
  260. NW Fishletter #364: NWEC Panel Explores Replacing Power From Lower Snake River Dams (2)
  261. KING 5 TV: Future of Snake River dams under microscope
  262. KNKX - 88.5 FM: Feds Discussing Snake River Dam Removal At Public Meeting In Seattle
  263. Yakima Herald: Grant boosts effort to dismantle Yakima's Nelson Dam
  264. The Columbian: Hearings next week on Columbia River salmon recovery
  265. Spokesman Review: Big crowd turns out in Spokane to talk about Lower Snake River dams
  266. Oregonian: Judge's order revives movement to remove Snake River dams
  267. CBB: Science Review Of Salmon Survival Study: Snake River Fish Not Meeting Smolt-To-Adult Return Goals 

  268. KQED News: Removal of Klamath Dams Would Be Largest River Restoration in U.S. History
  269. Seattle Times: Another Puget Sound orca dies; hope dim for her calf (2)
  270. Spokesman Review: Pressure mounts on Lower Snake dams as fish runs sag
  271. EarthFix: Taking Down Snake River Dams: It's Back On The Table
  272. Spokesman Review Guest Opinion: We can restore salmon and have carbon-free energy
  273. Seattle Times: Environmental effects of Columbia, Snake river dams scrutinized
  274. Seattle Times: More Elwha fish find way to dam-free upper watershed
  275. The Seattle Weekly: Washington’s Big Dam Climate Nightmare
  276. Spokesman-Review: Feds asking public to weigh in on breaching Snake River dams
  277. Call to Action: Court-Ordered Columbia-Snake Salmon NEPA Review: Phase 1 – Public Hearings this Fall!
  278. Seattle Times: Hydropower isn’t carbon neutral after all, WSU researchers say
  279. McClatchy News: Klamath River dams could be on chopping block
  280. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Pro-salmon advocates plan to launch flotilla on Snake River on Saturday
  281. Spokesman Review: About 35 percent of Snake River sockeye presumed dead
  282. OPB Radio: Lawsuit Aims To Lower Columbia And Snake River Temperatures For Salmon
  283. Spokesman Review: Hot water poses ongoing threat to Columbia River salmon, groups say
  284. Spokesman Review: Hot water poses ongoing threat to Columbia River salmon, groups say (2)
  285. Boise Weekly: Dams, Megawatts and Poached Salmon
  286. SOS Blog: Lessons from the 2015 Columbia-Snake Salmon Kill
  287. Lewiston Tribune: Drawdown Could Spare Fish
  288. CBB: Steps Taken To Cool Warming Lower Snake, Reduce Thermal Blocks As Large Basin Sockeye Return Heads Upstream
  289. WAPO: Obama’s advisers just dismantled a key myth about the future of clean energy
  290. CBB: BiOp Challengers Urge Court To Reject Feds’ Five-Year Timeline
  291. CBB: Hot Summer. Will Sockeye Get Slammed Again?
  292. May 4, 2016 U.S. District Court Ruling: Background and Links
  293. Recent Economic Analyses of the Lower Snake River Dams
  294. Idaho Mountain Express Editorial: Stop dance of death
  295. Idaho Mountain Express: Middle Fork could regain role as salmon nursery
  296. Crosscut: Judge: Failed salmon restoration has cost billions
  297. Seattle Times: Judge: Salmon recovery requires big dam changes
  298. Idaho Statesman: Warm Pacific continues to chop salmon numbers, affecting Idaho, Northwest
  299. Seattle Times: Last year’s heat wave doomed nearly all Okanogan sockeye salmon
  300. Seattle Times: Lean year for coho means big worries for Westport salmon charters
  301. LMT: Waterways exec: dams aren't doomed
  302. CBB: Army Corps Responds to Fish Advocates - Report underway on 2015 Columbia/Snake warm water, fish die-off
  303. Tri-City Herald: Port of Pasco may sell crane, end container business
  304. LMT: Idaho landscape could be safe haven for native fish
  305. CBB: Songbird Study Shows River Ecosystem Recovery After Dam Removal, Return Of Salmon Nutrients
  306. CBB: 2015 Smolt-To-Adult Return Data For Columbia/Snake Salmon, Steelhead
  307. New York Times: Finding Refuge for Salmon, Cold Water Preferred
  308. Al Jazeera: Fight Over Dams in the Northwest
  309. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Studies doubt value of Snake River dams
  310. Scientists to Administrator Will Stelle: NOAA must act on climate change and salmon
  311. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Preliminary 2015 Spring Juvenile Survival Estimates Through Snake/Columbia River Dams Dismal
  312. Canoe & Kayak: Paddling Against Deadbeat Dams at the Free the Snake Flotilla
  313. Boise Weekly: Free the Snake: A 150-Boat Flotilla Takes to the River on Oct. 3 to Advocate Against Dams
  314. Al Jazeera: Salmon in Idaho Becoming Endangered
  315. High Country News: Why is bad science protecting the Lower Snake River dams?
  316. Idaho Statesman: Biologists bring sockeye into Idaho on trucks to get them out of hot water
  317. Free The Snake: Patagonia’s new short film highlights lower Snake dam removal
  318. Lewiston Tribune: CHS Primeland building fertilizer storage center
  319. Seattle Times: Columbia River Basin plan to restore fish runs faces legal challenge
  320. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Farmers closer to shipping solution
  321. Idaho Statesman: Salmon swim in the Owyhee River (Nevada!) after 87 years
  322. Patagonia Ad: Don't Hold Back
  323. Lewiston Tribune: Layoffs come to call at Lewiston's Port
  324. Lewiston Tribune: Port of Portland's continuing problems plague Port of Lewiston, official says
  325. Lewiston Tribune: Port container traffic on hold indefinitely
  326. Idaho Statesman Columnist Rocky Barker: New numbers won't change debate about Snake River structures
  327. Outside: What Happens When You Demolish Two 100-Year-Old Dams
  328. Lewiston Tribune: Port of Lewiston sees its container shipping drop to lowest levels in years
  329. Oregonian: Hanjin Shipping officially leaves Port of Portland
  330. Lewiston Tribune: Once more into the breach debate
  331. HCN: Livin' on the dredge: Army Corps mucks out the Snake
  332. LMT: Port brass defend dredging plan
  333. CBB: Lower Snake Dredging Opponents: Loss Of Revenues Does Not Out Weigh Irreparable Environmental Injury
  334. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Pacific lamprey could halt dredging
  335. NWPR: $2 Million In Taxpayer Dollars At Risk In Snake River Dredging Showdown
  336. High Country News: The great salmon compromise
  337. Lewiston Tribune: Dredging plan spawns lawsuit
  338. Lewiston Tribune: Clearwater Paper's new warehouse could hurt port
  339. CBB: Dam Removal Study Suggests Rivers Return To Natural Conditions Surprisingly Fast
  340. Lewiston Tribune: Lewiston port had difficult fiscal 2014
  341. Snake River Sockeye Make Most Endangered List: New Report Highlights Ten American Species Our Children May Never See
  342. Seattle P-I: Chinook salmon returning to reservoir sites on Elwha River
  343. ACTION ALERT - Stop wasteful spending. Protect our wild salmon!
  344. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Dworkshak Unit Out
  345. Al Jazeera: Elder’s devotion to ugly fish lives on after his tragic death
  346. Energy & Environment Publishing: Hastings blasts leaking dams settlement
  347. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Dredging on docket for Snake River
  348. KPLU: New Life After Dam Removal: Surf Smelt Spawning In Mouth Of Elwha
  349. Seattle Times letters to the editor: Salmon recovery: Don’t cut back on dam spills
  350. Associated Press: Army Corps of Engineers will monitor, disclose dam pollution
  351. Seattle Times: On Columbia, ‘just add water’ seems to be working
  352. Nature Science Journal: Dam removals: Rivers on the run
  353. Idaho Statesman's Rocky Barker: Renewing Idaho's wild salmon and wild rivers
  354. Idaho Statesman: Sockeye draft recovery plan shows just how far away success is
  355. As dams fall, Elwha River makes stunning recovery
  356. Lewiston Morning Tribune Letters to the Editor
  357. Los Angeles Times: Groups sue U.S. agencies, saying plan to protect salmon falls short
  358. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Federal salmon plan contested again
  359. Lewiston Tribune: Activists descend on Lewiston port hearing
  360. The Fight for a Lawful Salmon Plan
  361. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Groups Challenge In Ninth Circuit BPA’s Record Of Decision
  362. Lewiston Morning Tribune: New economic data emerges in dams debate
  363. Lewiston Tribune: Group says megaloads threaten rivers
  364. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Corps to kill fish-noshing birds
  365. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Lock repair at Little Goose has shippers scrambling;
  366. Science panel’s review provides pathway to expanded spill test
  367. House bill aims to restore science and common sense to federal salmon efforts: Salmon advocates applaud introduction of study legislation
  368. Spill test is positive response to climate change
  369. Crosscut: Feds' latest Columbia River plan: Play me an old-fashioned melody
  370. Idaho Stateman: Salmon, dams will head back to court
  371. Update: a not-so-new Federal Plan for Columbia/Snake salmon and steelhead
  372. Lewiston Tribune: Latest NOAA opinion on salmon goes back to well
  373. Press Release: Feds squander chance for progress on salmon
  374. Scientists to Obama Administration: "New" Federal Salmon Plan a Bust
  375. High Country News: Megaloads and wild–and-scenic rivers don’t mix
  376. New York Times Blog: The Law That Saved the Bald Eagle
  377. Is the Northwest regaining lost ground?
  378. Protect the Lower Snake-Oppose Harmful, Unlawful Dredging!
  379. An enhanced spill experiment – costs and carbon impacts are modest and manageable.
  380. Lewiston Tribune: Getting to the bottom of the issue
  381. Seattle Times: Elwha River sees largest run of Chinook in decades
  382. Lewiston Tribune: Dredging up an endless debate
  383. Lewiston Tribune: Megaloads company gives up legal fight
  384. Wall Street Journal: Road Too Far: GE Strains to Deliver Energy Colossus
  385. Lewiston Tribune: Much more McGregor
  386. Lewiston Tribune: Bye-Bye to barging on the Snake, Clearwater?
  387. Al Jazeera: Tribe fights to save historic river way
  388. New York Times: Fight Over Energy Finds a New Front in a Corner of Idaho
  389. LA Times: Big chinook run doesn't let Columbia dams off the hook, activists say
  390. LMT Editorial: Feds' fifth fish recovery plan invites a sixth
  391. Lewiston Tribune: Judge suspends megaloads
  392. Idaho Statesman: Feds reject potential way to help salmon
  393. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Feds deal blow to Nez Perce Tribe, salmon advocates
  394. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Feds deal blow to Nez Perce Tribe, salmon advocates (2)
  395. Seattle Times: Snake River barging drop: new factor in dams debate?
  396. Nez Perce Tribe Blockades Tar Sands Equipment near the Lower Snake River
  397. SOS Letter to Forest Service re: megaloads and salmon
  398. Seattle Times: Lamprey Eel - bringing back an ancient species
  399. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Port of Lewiston meeting takes an existential turn
  400. A Brief History of “spill”
  401. High Country News Book Review: Elwha, a story of today's West
  402. All Scientists Are Saying Is…"Give (More) Spill A Chance."
  403. Spokesman Review guest opinion: It’s time to assess use of shrinking tax dollars on lower Snake River dams
  404. AP: Dredge plan draws opposition
  405. Chicago Tribune: Interior Department recommends removal of Klamath River dams to aid salmon
  406. Independent analyses challenge the economic viability and future of lower Snake River waterway
  407. Old Arguments, New Realities
  408. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Dredging costs rise to top of meeting
  409. Rocky Barker Blog: Corps faces a fight over dredging behind Lower Snake dams.
  410. The Sediment Statement and the Lower Snake River Waterway
  411. Crosscut.com: In a status-quo sea, Oregon politicians are salmon's lone champions
  412. Confusing sockeye hatcheries with sockeye recovery
  413. NOAA, We Have a Problem
  414. Looking to the Future: New report challenges the Northwest’s aging dam infrastructure
  415. Senator Wyden Supports New Approach to Salmon Restoration
  416. Feds Maintain Status Quo as Salmon Numbers Struggle
  417. 2012 Salmon and Steelhead Returns Still Poor
  418. The Worst Dam Bill Ever
  419. In Virginia: Dam Removal Helping Eels
  420. If you un-build it, the fish will come
  421. Sockeye Numbers at Bonneville Dam are Encouraging
  422. Maine's Great Works and the Columbia-Snake Opportunity
  423. Lamprey Summit Sets a Good Example
  424. Solutions for one of America’s Most Endangered Rivers
  425. Spill, Judge Redden, and the Need for a New Process
  426. Judge Redden Supports Dam Removal
  427. Men's Journal Features LSR Dam Removal
  428. Court-Ordered Spill Helps Salmon Returns and Jobs
  429. Sea Change for Port of Lewiston?
  430. Outside Sees Momentum for Dam Removal in 2012
  431. Press Release: House Bill To Restore Science and Common Sense to Federal Salmon Efforts
  432. Why Snake River salmon and people should matter to Congressman DeFazio
  433. Inland Northwest Business and Community Leaders Ask Murray and Cantwell for Leadership on Columbia Salmon Crisis
  434. Salmon Stakeholders in Washington D.C. - Fall 2009
  435. Top 10 Ridiculous Things the Federal Government Does & Says to Save the Four Lower Snake River Dams Instead of Salmon
  436. Obama Administration - US Commerce Department / NOAA Fisheries Salmon Plan Checklist for the Columbia & Snake Rivers
  437. Solutions in Congress: The Salmon Solutions & Planning Act
  438. Background on the Salmon Solutions & Planning Act (H.R. 2111)
  439. Statement of Record from Rep. Blumenauer regarding SSPA
  440. Salmon Solutions bill restores sound science and fiscal responsibility to federal
  441. America to President Obama: Please Save Wild Salmon in the Columbia & Snake Rivers!
  442. House of Representatives Salmon Letter to Pres. Obama
  443. Salmon and Communities in the Courtroom
  444. The Salmon Extinction Plan
  445. Hot Water Report 2021 - July 21, Issue 5.
  446. Hot Water Report 2019 - August 16th
  447. Hot Water Report 2019 - July 12th
  448. Hot Water Report 2019 - July 5th
  449. KNKX: How Washington's Last Coal Plant Could Become State's Largest Solar Project
  450. Hot Water Report 2018 - August 31
  451. Hot Water Report 2018 - August 24
  452. Hot Water Report - August 10
  453. Oregonian: Oregon closes steelhead sanctuary off mouth of Deschutes to all fishing
  454. Hot Water Report 2018 - August 3
  455. Hot Water Report 2018 - July 27
  456. Hot Water Report 2018 - July 20
  457. HOT WATER REPORTS - COMPILED
  458. Hot Water Report 2018 - July 13
  459. Hot Water Report 2018 - July 5
  460. Washington Post Guest Opinion: Three Republican EPA administrators: Trump is putting us on a dangerous path
  461. NW Fishletter #364: NWEC Panel Explores Replacing Power From Lower Snake River Dams
  462. Hot Water Report 2016
  463. Hot Water Report 2016 (8.16.2016)
  464. Hot Water Report 2016 (8.9.2016)
  465. SOS Blog: Wild Salmon and Climate Change: The Law*
  466. Hot Water Report 2016 (8.2.2016)
  467. Hot Water Report 2016 (7.26.2016)
  468. Hot Water Report 2016 (7.6.2016)
  469. CBB: Steps Taken To Cool Warming Lower Snake, Reduce Thermal Blocks As Large Basin Sockeye Return Heads Upstream (2)
  470. WAPO: Obama’s advisers just dismantled a key myth about the future of clean energy (2)
  471. CBB: Hot Summer. Will Sockeye Get Slammed Again? (2)
  472. Lewiston Tribune: Sockeye salmon in hot water
  473. Summer 2013 – Hot water alert No. 4
  474. The Lower Snake River is heating up.
  475. Climate Change Prevention and Care
  476. The Oregonian: A 21st-century blueprint for saving Oregon species from climate change
  477. Fires, Sediment, Salmon and Taxpayers
  478. Light in the River Program 2013
  479. Light in the River Reports
  480. A Northwest first – wind over water!
  481. Boil On Columbia
  482. BPA stifling opportunities for salmon, wind, and jobs
  483. Wind farm set to power 100,000 homes taking shape in Washington
  484. Sustainable Business Oregon: New challenges emerge in wind vs. water debate
  485. North American Wind Power: Salmon Group Wades Into Pacific Northwest Curtailment Battle
  486. Don't let BPA squander clean energy jobs and innovation.

Subcategories

Modernizing the Columbia River Treaty

Protecting Orca by Restoring Salmon

Restoring the Lower Snake River

Tackling the Climate Challenge

Save Our Wild Salmon
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