Lower Snake River Dam Stakeholder Report Comments

January 24, 2020

Mr. Jim Kramer

c/o Ross Strategic

1325 Fourth Ave., Suite 1600

Seattle, WA 98101

J.T. Austin, Natural Resource Policy Advisor

Office of the Governor

PO Box 40002

Olympia, WA 98504

Dear Mr. Kramer and Ms. Austin,

Our organizations represent the commercial salmon fishing industries in Washington, Oregon, California and Alaska. We are writing to thank you for your efforts to plan and implement the Lower Snake River Stakeholder Process over the past eight months and to share with you some of our thoughts about the Draft Report. We appreciate Governor Inslee’s commitment to protecting and restoring the Southern Resident orcas and the salmon populations they rely upon. Protecting orcas from extinction will require rebuilding abundant salmon populations across the Pacific Northwest by protecting, reconnecting and restoring the rivers and streams that salmon need to complete their life cycle.

As the Governor’s Southern Resident Orca Recovery Task Force recognized, restoring the lower Snake River in southeast Washington State is one of our very best salmon recovery opportunities anywhere on the West Coast today. It would recover 140 miles of mainstem river habitat and reconnect endangered salmon and steelhead populations with more than 5,000 miles of largely pristine, protected spawning and rearing habitat upstream in central Idaho, northeast Oregon and southeast Washington. Scientists predict that restoring adequate access for salmon to this once highly productive habitat would result in annual returns of fall and spring/summer Chinook between 600,000 and 1.1 million adults. Rebuilding this type of salmon abundance would deliver huge benefits to endangered orcas, to Northwest ecosystems and to scores of coastal communities from California to Alaska that rely on commercial fishing. All too often, the policy response to declining salmon populations has been to increase hatchery production while reducing harvest. Time and experience have shown us that hatcheries alone are no substitute for productive well-managed salmon habitat (e.g. Hanford Reach). In addition, the steady reduction of fishing opportunity over the last 40 years has hurt many rural coastal communities that may have few alternative economic development options. Far too little attention has been paid to protecting and restoring mainstem river reaches like the lower Snake River.

It should come as no surprise that commercial fishermen are writing to you about restoring salmon habitat. Fishermen, after all, were responsible for the Bonneville Dam having fish ladders and the Magnuson-Stevens Fisheries Conservation Act having Essential Fish Habitat conservation provisions. Fishermen have a direct stake in the health of the Columbia-Snake River Basin. Salmon spend most of their lives in the ocean in mixed stock schools that range thousands of miles from their natal streams. As such, we fish on stocks that originate from many rivers, including the Columbia and Snake. When salmon populations decline and our fishing opportunities close, we all suffer. For this reason, we all support the protection and restoration of salmon habitat from Southeast Alaska’s Tongass National Forest down through Washington, Oregon and California.

After reviewing the draft version of the Lower Snake River Dams Stakeholder Engagement Report, we appreciate the hard work it took to produce it. Its presentation of the different stakeholder perspectives represents an important step toward increased understanding around a highly complex and difficult issue. We strongly believe that these kinds of conversations must continue. It is essential that people must build trust and work together on inclusive solutions that work for wild salmon and orcas – and coastal and inland communities. We all share a serious concern regarding the Draft Report that we urge you to address in the final version. We find that the Draft Report fails to properly emphasize the role and importance of the commercial fishing sector as critical, longstanding stakeholders in the Columbia-Snake River Basin salmon management and recovery activities. Our members have made tremendous economic, personal and community sacrifices over the past seven decades in order to respond to – and to protect and conserve – declining salmon populations. Our communities today are suffering as a result: reduced harvest means less business activity, job losses – and the stresses that often come with economic downturns and sense of despair. For instance, there were over 3,000 commercial salmon trollers in Washington 30 years ago. Today there are barely 100 left. The Columbia River gillnet fishery has suffered to a greater extent with almost no current day access to historic resources. That dramatic decline can be measured in jobs, and businesses and opportunities lost in many rural coastal communities. It is critical that the final report describe and acknowledge these kinds of impacts to help put other impacts in perspective.

On a more positive note, meaningful salmon recovery – like what a restored lower Snake River would deliver - could be an important economic development opportunity not just for our families and our coastal communities but also for other river communities from the coast to central Idaho. This important and positive story must also be better reflected in the final report. We would like to see a final report that, for example, includes a specific section dedicated to highlighting the important historic relationship that salmon dependent communities have with the Columbia-Snake Basin, the sacrifices that we’ve made and the opportunity that restoring the lower Snake River and healthy fisheries could mean for communities both on the coast and inland. Appropriately, agriculture has a substantive section dedicated to its role in Washington’s economy and its relationship to the Snake and Columbia Rivers. We ask you to include a similar look at the role and status of salmon fishing industries and communities in the final report as well. Salmon recovery IS economic development on the coast of Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California and inland in Idaho as well.

We were disappointed by the small number salmon fishermen that were interviewed for the draft report. Fellow stakeholders and the public remain poorly informed about how fisheries are managed or how declining salmon populations impact coastal and inland fishing communities. The better this is understood by all, the greater our chances of finding real solutions that work for everybody so we can all leverage the opportunities before us today. We have included a number of documents with this letter that help illustrate the importance of the salmon and steelhead fishing culture and economy in Washington and the Pacific Northwest, the losses that have been suffered and sacrifices made, and the opportunity that salmon/steelhead recovery represents, especially for rural communities that today often have few other options - in central Idaho, along the lower Columbia River, on the WA coast, and as far north as Alaska. We appreciate your hard work to host this conversation on what has long been a contentious subject. Increased dialogue and mutual understanding is a critical first step toward collaboration and the development of solutions that can work for us all.

We encourage Governor Inslee to continue his engagement and leadership on this important matter after the release of the final report in March – and we are committed to working with you and others in our region to develop win-win solutions that will assure a vibrant future for both our fishing and our farming communities.

Sincerely,

Linda Behnken

Executive Director

Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association

Sitka, AK

Amy Daugherty

Executive Director

Alaska Trollers Association

Juneau, AK

Joel Kawahara

Vice President

Coastal Trollers Association

Quilcene, WA

Noah Oppenheim

Executive Director

Pacific Coast Federation of

Fishermen’s Associations

San Francisco, CA

CC:

The Honorable Jay Inslee, Washington State

The Honorable Patty Murray, United States Senate

The Honorable Maria Cantwell, United States Senate

The Honorable Derek Kilmer, House of Representatives

The Honorable Rick Larsen, House of Representatives

The Honorable Pramila Jayapal, House of Representatives

The Honorable Denny Heck, House of Representatives

The Honorable Kate Brown, Oregon State

The Honorable Ron Wyden, United States Senate

The Honorable Jeff Merkley, United States Senate

The Honorable Peter DeFazio, House of Representatives

The Honorable Suzanne Bonamici, House of Representatives

The Honorable Mike Dunleavy, Alaska State

The Honorable Lisa Murkowski, United States Senate

The Honorable Dan Sullivan, United States Senate

The Honorable Don Young, House of Representatives

SEAK Troll King catch 1911-2019.jpg

Alaska Roadless Rule

Comments are being accepted on the application of the Roadless Rule in Alaska through December 17, 2019 on the internet at www.regulations.gov (RIN 0596-AD37) or through the project website 

Background: The Tongass was initially exempted from the 2001 National Roadless Rule for US National Forests.  In 2011, a lawsuit extended the roadless protections to the Tongass.  In 2018, the Governor of Alaska submitted a petition for an exemption from the roadless rule.  The Forest Service (FS) has developed and analyzed 6 management alternatives that range from Alternative 1 – status quo—the only alternative that keeps the roadless rule in place--to Alternative 6--full exemption from the roadless rule on the Tongass National Forest-- and some variations between the two, none of which are meaningful in terms of protecting fish habitat. The FS has picked Alternative 6 as their preliminary preferred alternative. 

The Forest Service has clarified that regardless of the outcome of this rulemaking, ANILCA and the Tongass Timber Reform Act (TTRA) as well as the current 2016 Tongass National Forest Plan will remain in effect.  The TTRA is the legislation that requires stream buffers; that said, many stream buffers have proved to be inadequate, with significant loss of buffer trees during windstorms, and failed culverts currently block salmon from accessing 250 miles of historic spawning habitat. Alternative 6, the FS preferred alternative, exempts 9.2 million inventoried roadless acres from the roadless rule. This would allow the FS access to the 185,000 acres of high value timber watersheds in southern Southeast Alaska.  Most of this high value timber is on Prince of Wales Island, which produces 60% of Southeast pink salmon and 72% of Southeast cohos.  

One argument cited by Alaska’s delegation for eliminating the roadless rule is that the rule impedes locally important non-timber projects, such as hydro/dam construction.  Notably, even with the Roadless Rule (status quo) in place, all individual project exemptions (e.g., hydropower, hatchery access, etc.) applied for were granted. 

STATE OF ALASKA PETITON
ALASKA ROADLESS RULE FS PROJECT WEBSITE
PROPOSED RULE
ALASKA ROADLESS RULE STORY MAP/INTERACTIVE MAP  allows a visual  comparison of the alternatives
TONGASS TIMBER REFORM ACT - The legislation was aimed at safeguarding clean water and riparian habitats, protecting the old-growth of the Tongass National Forest

For additional information on the economic value of the forest, rivers and estuaries for non-timber uses, please visit the SeaBank program on the Alaska Sustainable Fisheries Trust website http://www.thealaskatrust.org/seabank-annual-report-web.

A video short and the SeaBank annual report contain a wealth of Tongass information to assist you with evaluating alternatives and drafting comments.  

Please share your comments with ALFA, the Alaska congressional delegation, and the Governor.

Coast Guard experiencing VHF-FM Radio outages throughout Southeast Alaska

JUNEAU, Alaska — Coast Guard Sector Juneau personnel are experiencing multiple VHF-FM radio outages throughout Southeast Alaska and may not be able to hear or respond to distress calls on channel 16.

Currently, waterways affected by Coast Guard VHF-FM radio site outages include the Gulf of Alaska between Yakutat and Sitka, Cross Sound, Peril Strait, Hoonah Sound, Southern Chatham Strait, Sumner Strait, the waters surrounding Zarembo Island and the west side of Prince of Wales Island. 

All mariners transiting these waterways should remain vigilant and have another means of emergency communication such as:

  • Cellphone, when in range

  • Satellite phone

  • High Frequency radio communications on 4125 kHz, 6215 kHz and 8291 kHz

  • EPIRBs/Personal locating beacons

  • Satellite messengers

You can contact the Sector Juneau Command Center at 907-463-2980

Senator Lisa Murkowski Cancels Sitka Trip

In a tweet posted on Sept. 5, 2019 from Senator Lisa Murkowski’s Twitter account (@lisamurkowski) she announced, “Unfortunately we have to cancel today’s Mobile Office in Sitka due to flight cancellations. While my staff would have loved to be there in person, just a reminder on one way Alaskans can connect with my office — by reaching out via my website here: murkowski.senate.gov/contact.”

Sen. Murkowski Cancellation.jpg