Table
of Contents
Land
of Two Rivers
"All
The Water for All the
Land"
Remaking
Community:
McNary Dam
Making
Way for
John Day
Umatilla
Today and Tomorrow

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Regional
Choices: The Salmon Crisis
Umatilla
schoolchildren created this April, 1999 McNary Dam display. Since
the advent of fishwheels, gillnets, and dams, annual runs of Snake
River Chinook have dwindled from 1.5 million fish in the late 1800s
to 125,000 in the 1950s, to only 2 in 1989. Photos by Donna Sinclair
Umatilla
residents face many challenges in the coming decades. Scientists,
environmentalists, and the four treaty tribes (Umatilla, Warm Springs,
Yakama, and Nez Perce) are asking for the removal of the four lower
Snake River dams in addition to drawing down the reservoir behind
John Day Dam to restore spawning beds for salmon.
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We are not going to allow a few Seattle
ultraliberal environmental zealots to destroy what took generations
to build. Washington
State Senator Dan McDonald
No dams, no water, no grapes, eat
raisins. sign at a Snake
Dam rally, February, 1999
We just want to make sure humans don't
get added to the endangered species list. Bill Martin,
Tri-Cities Economic Development Group, 1999
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We are not going to have dams and
salmon together here. . . A decade from now, people
living here. . . really wouldn't know the difference in the
lower Snake if dams were gone. Scott Bosse, conservation
scientist, Idaho Rivers United
Save the Salmon, kill the dams. sign
at a Snake Dam rally, February, 1999
I believe that one way to do this
and to equitably spread the economic burden is to build a recovery
strategy that includes breaching the four lower Snake River
dams. Governor John Kitzhaber,
1999
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In
March 1999, 200 independent scientists signed a letter asking the Clinton
administration to bypass Army Corps of Engineers studies and return the
Columbia to normative conditions. The letter stated, "Salmon or dams:
not both." In response, fifty local officials of eastern Oregon and Washington
communities gathered in Pasco, Washington. There they signed a resolution
stating that salmon and dams can co-exist.
Dam-breaching
would change transportation patterns on the mid-Columbia River, and some
say it would destroy river communities. Others argue that the economic
and spiritual benefits of salmon restoration outweigh negative consequences.
This is an ongoing controversy with no easy solution.
Three
signficant pieces of legislation uphold the restoration of salmon runs:
the Endangered Species Act of 1973; the Northwest Power Act of 1980, and
the Clean Water Act of 1972 [?]. In addition, and perhaps most importantly,
the 1855 treaties with Columbia Basin tribes and federal trust responsibilities
mandate preservation of salmon runs.
Dams
of the Columbia Basin & Their Effects on the Native Fishery
Endangered
Species Act
Governor
John Kitzhaber supports dam breaching, February 2000
Snake
River Ralley articles, February 2000
Tri-Cities
Herald "Battle Over Dams" series

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