[env-trinity] Earthjustice Press Release April 16

Byron bwl3 at comcast.net
Wed Apr 16 18:38:52 PDT 2008


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 16, 2008 

CONTACT: 
Mike Sherwood, Earthjustice at 510-550-6700 
Craig Noble, NRDC at 415-875-6100 or 415-601-8235 (mobile) 
Zeke Grader, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations at
415-561-5080 ex 224 
Christina Swanson, The Bay Institute at 530-756-9021 
Gary Mulcahy, Winnemem Wintu Tribe at 916-991-8493 
Sejal Choksi, Baykeeper at 925-330-7757 

Judge Tosses Biological Opinion for Salmon and Steelhead in California 
Groups say delta water project operations must protect water supply for fish
and people 

FRESNO, Calif. - A federal judge has invalidated a water plan that would
have allowed more pumping from the San Francisco Bay Delta at the expense of
five species of protected salmon and steelhead trout. Fishing and
conservation groups and a California tribe called the ruling a victory for
the millions of Californians who depend on the delta for drinking water,
fishing jobs and agriculture. The ruling comes in the wake of federal
fisheries managers' unprecedented April 10 decision to cancel this year's
salmon fishing season because of a record decline in spawning fish. 

The decision is the second time the court has ruled that water export plans
would harm the threatened estuary. The court scheduled a conference on April
25 for the parties to address developing interim remedies to protect the
fish. 

In his opinion Judge Oliver W. Wanger relied on the National Marine
Fisheries Services' (NMFS) own finding that diverting water from the
bay-delta was killing huge numbers of salmon. He said, "This morbid
projection is inconsistent, if not irreconcilable" with the agency's opinion
that the project operations did not jeopardize the survival of the fish. He
also faulted the agency for failing to analyze the effects of global warming
on the fish, calling that failure "arbitrary and capricious." 

The court also cited NMFS' findings that "current operations result in the
loss of 42 percent of the juvenile winter-run Chinook population, and
proposed project effects are expected to result in an additional 3 to 20
percent loss of the juvenile population." 

NMFS also found that proposed water project operations would kill as many as
66 percent of Central Valley steelhead and 57 percent of juvenile spring run
Chinook salmon - likely leading to the extirpation of the spring run in the
Sacramento River and steelhead in the Central Valley. These findings, the
court ruled, are the "diametric opposite" of the finding that the projects
would not jeopardized listed salmon species. 

"When most of our native fish species are struggling to survive, the water
project's plans to eliminate habitat, reduce cold water flow requirements
and increase delta exports made no sense," said Dr. Christina Swanson, a
biologist with The Bay Institute, a plaintiff in the case. "Ecological
collapse in our rivers and in the delta is not just bad for fish, it's bad
for the millions of people who depend on delta water for farming and
drinking." 

The plaintiffs challenged a 2004 long-term water plan known as OCAP
(Operating Criteria and Plan) that would have allowed increased exports
south of the delta by reversing many of the decade-old protections credited
with saving endangered winter-run Chinook salmon from extinction, including
relaxing cold water flow requirements and eliminating nearly half of the
available spawning habitat in the Sacramento River. These operational
changes have corresponded with significant declines in protected Chinook
salmon populations since 2004. This year's salmon run has largely failed to
show up. 

"Salmon need cool, clean water," said Kate Poole, a senior attorney with the
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a plaintiff in the case. "Meeting
their needs can keep clean water flowing from our taps as well, without
losing our salmon fishing industry." 

"We've never seen the Sacramento salmon return as bad as this year," said
Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fisherman's Associations, a plaintiff in the case. "California's water
projects must be operated in a way that helps protect these commercially
important species, rather than driving them to extinction." 

The court's ruling follows an August 31, 2007 decision to protect the delta
smelt. In that ruling the court ordered state and federal water managers to
reoperate the giant pumps that draw water from the delta to supply farms and
cities in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. The fishing and
conservation groups say keeping enough fresh water in the delta is vital to
protecting the fragile ecosystem. 

Biologists have grown alarmed in recent years about a cascading series of
crashing delta fish populations; salmon, steelhead, delta smelt, striped
bass, longfin smelt, sturgeon and Sacramento splittail are all in trouble. 

"With his decision today, Judge Wanger has placed salmon survival back at
the center of California's struggle to protect our natural heritage," said
Mike Sherwood, an attorney from Earthjustice who represented the coalition
of fishing and conservationists. "There are several man-made factors that
have contributed to the collapse of salmon runs. One factor is pumping too
much of our water from the delta and exporting it south. This ruling makes
it clear that there are biological limits to the amount of water we can
export south." 

The Delta's fragile ecosystem and drinking water supplies already face
severe pollution threats from agricultural pesticides and dairy waste," said
Sejal Choksi, program director for San Francisco Baykeeper. "Today's ruling
is a huge step forward in restoring our Delta to a healthy state." 

The court will now schedule hearings to establish an interim salmon
protection plan for project operations. Agencies predict that a new
Biological Opinion for salmon will be complete by December 2008. 

Conservationists say water managers could restore the delta by following the
advice of the state's own master water plan, which identifies conservation,
water recycling and better groundwater management as the biggest, cheapest
sources of untapped water supply. 

BACKGROUND 

Prior to construction of the state and federal delta water pumping systems,
chinook (or "king") salmon and steelhead were abundant in the Sacramento and
San Joaquin River systems. Sacramento River salmon were of great cultural
and spiritual importance to the Winnemem Wintu Tribe and remain a major
economic contributor to northern California. 

As a part of the pumping projects, a necklace of dams was constructed up and
down the western slope of the Sierra Nevada on every major river flowing
into the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers blocking the upstream migration
of chinook salmon and steelhead to and from their historic spawning grounds.
Of the 6,000 miles of historic steelhead spawning grounds, today only 300
miles remain. Friant Dam on the San Joaquin River resulted in the extinction
of the spring-run chinook salmon in that river. Shasta and Keswick Dams on
the Sacramento River blocked the winter-run chinook salmon from their
historic spawning grounds, forcing them to spawn in a 40-mile stretch of
less favorable river habitat below those dams. 

Every year the pumping of huge volumes of fresh water out of the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River delta sucks in and grinds up juvenile salmon
and steelhead as they attempt migrate down the rivers and though the delta
on their way to the ocean. As a result, Sacramento River winter-run Chinook
salmon, Central Valley spring-run Chinook salmon and Central Valley
steelhead populations have plummeted from historic abundance and all three
species are protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. 

In August 2004, federal scientists charged with reviewing the plan to
increase pumping to 8 million acre feet concluded that doing so would
illegally jeopardize protected salmon. However, after political
interference, the agency flip flopped and released a final opinion in
October 2004 that concluded that the project operations plan would not harm
listed salmon and steelhead species. But after several negative independent
science reviews and widespread concern over inappropriate political
influences on the opinion, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and the State
Department of Water Resources asked NOAA Fisheries to reconsider the plan in
April/May 2006. Yet the agencies continued to implement the new plan without
any lawful analysis of its impacts to listed fish species while a new
opinion is written. 

The plaintiff coalition that launched the legal challenge includes: Pacific
Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations and the Institute for Fisheries
Resources, The Bay Institute, Baykeeper, California Trout, Friends of the
River, Natural Resources Defense Council, Northern California Council of the
Federation of Fly Fishers, and the Winnemem Wintu Tribe. 

Read the decision online here:
http://www.earthjustice.org/library/legal_docs/salmon-decision-41608.pdf

 

Byron Leydecker

Friends of Trinity River, Chair

PO Box 2327

Mill Valley, CA 94942-2327

415 383 4810

415 519 4810 cell

415 383 9562 fax

bwl3 at comcast.net

bleydecker at stanfordalumni.org (secondary)

http://www.fotr.org

 

 

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