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News Articles

Important articles published by national and regional news outlets related to wild salmon restoration in the Columbia and Snake Rivers.


Portland Business Journal: Bonneville Power Administration advances controversial energy market decision

dam.lowergranite

By Pete Danko – Staff Reporter, Portland Business Journal
Mar 7, 2025

Bonneville Power Administration intends to join the new energy market Markets+, the federal agency said Thursday, a decision with potentially significant energy cost and reliability ramifications that has divided utilities and other industry stakeholders in the Pacific Northwest.

The draft decision by the region's biggest power player was in line with a policy direction laid out nearly a year ago. Yet it came amid rising pressure to hold off on a commitment, if not opt for a rival market supported by Oregon's two largest utilities, Portland General Electric and PacifiCorp, and many renewable energy and climate advocates.

Oregon's and Washington's U.S. senators had joined in calls for BPA to delay action.

"This hasty draft decision by the BPA is not good news for electricity consumers in Oregon and the Pacific Northwest,” Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden said Thursday in an emailed statement.

BPA's release of a two-page cover letter and 93-page draft policy paper opened a 30-day comment period ahead of a planned final policy declaration in May.

"This draft policy is consistent with Bonneville's strategic goals, day-ahead market evaluation principles, and the Trump Administration's energy directives," John Hairston, BPA's administration and CEO, said in the letter.

For nearly two years, utilities and other electricity providers throughout the West have been weighing two "day-ahead" energy market proposals: Markets+ from the Southwest Power Pool based in Arksansas, and the Extended Day-Ahead Market, or EDAM, that California's grid operator is developing.

Each has promised efficient and robust energy trading that could help in addressing the challenges of grid congestion, reliability in the face of extreme weather events, rising rates and demand, and decarbonization.

"As the region evolves, this draft policy reflects BPA's best opportunity to remain competitively positioned in the long-term to continue meeting firm power sales obligations and marketing surplus to maintain low rates for customers," Rachel Dibble, BPA Power Services vice president of bulk marketing, said in a written statement.

BPA's direction is key not only because it sells power from 31 federal dams and a nuclear plant, but it owns and manages 75% of the region's high-voltage transmission system.

Its tilt toward the Markets+ has been widely — though not unanimously — supported by consumer-owned utilities, who have first dibs on its relatively inexpensive hydropower. A key factor in their preference has been concern that EDAM's governance structure would give California politicians undue influence, putting BPA's market standing at risk.

The agency has stood by its position through two new rounds of analysis that found that an EDAM with BPA in it would deliver greater economic benefits to BPA and the region, possibly amounting to as much as $4.4 billion over the next decade.

EDAM advocates had called on BPA to hold off on a decision while California lawmakers consider legislation that could solve the governance issue. BPA's precarious staffing situation in the wake of Trump administration actions brought new urgency to their calls.

'Tumult inflicted by Donald Trump and Elon Musk'

"The needless tumult inflicted on BPA by Donald Trump and Elon Musk, along with the uncertain outcome of potential changes to the California Independent System Operator add up to serious questions BPA must answer with transparency before issuing its final market decision," Wyden, the Oregon Democrat, said. "Foremost in that decision come May is the need for an electricity market that serves everyone in the Pacific Northwest and keeps reliability and electricity prices at the forefront."

BPA officials, in a news conference Thursday afternoon, said they had waited years for changes to the California system operator's governance and didn't want to be forced into a corner as other utilities made market choices.

"The longer BPA waits, the more the opportunity to chart our own course closes," Dibble said.

She also emphasized the governance advantages the agency sees in Markets+.

"Those are qualitative elements that we hold as very high priorities," Dibble said. "We do believe in the long run they will result in positive, quantitative benefits ... because we will have a seat at the table and be able to work, to collaborate, with partners on those future design elements."

The Public Power Council, which represents consumer-owned utilities, encouraged utilities to rally around the BPA decision and Markets+.

"With many utilities across the Northwest and Southwest already supporting Markets+, this decision signals even greater momentum toward a broad and well-structured market that delivers reliability and cost benefits," Scott Simms, the group's CEO and executive director, said via email. "We encourage additional utilities to consider joining this effort to further enhance regional coordination and market efficiencies."

Many energy players, though, see EDAM — bringing in the massive California energy market — as the only possibility for achieving the broadest and most beneficial market footprint. They warned that a split decision in the region would introduce new costs and reliability risks by introducing "seams" into transmission operations that would have to be overcome.

PGE, PacifiCorp positions

"Maintaining reliability is already challenging in some circumstances, even as we've operated under the same rules," Larry Bekkedahl, a PGE senior vice president, said via email. "BPA's decision may adversely impact all customers in the PNW, including PGE's."

PGE highlighted that EDAM builds on the California grid operator's long-standing real-time market that brings in almost all of the West, including BPA, while Markets+ is starting from the ground up.

PGE had joined with PacifiCorp and Seattle City Light, a municipally owned utility, in a letter earlier this week making the case for EDAM and urging Bonneville to hold off on a decision.

"This would allow BPA to explore mechanisms to better monetize its participation in (the existing real-time market), while continuing to lead on governance reform as it considers future day-ahead market opportunities," the utilities said. "Additionally, it would delay the creation of an unavoidable, not easily managed or reversible, seam and maintain the coordination in the West that is critical to keep the lights on and costs down."

Two groups that support the clean energy transition in the Pacific Northwest expressed disappointment at BPA's decision.

NW Energy Coalition said it puts "every power customer in the Northwest ... at risk for higher costs on their monthly bills." Renewable Northwest said "we believe it will have negative economic impacts on regional customers that have not been adequately addressed."

Both groups noted the BPA staffing challenges that have been in the headlines in recent weeks.

"While we disagree with this proposed decision, we continue to support BPA's employees' essential work to manage the power and resources entrusted to them by the American people, to protect our fish, wildlife and natural resources, and to keep the lights on," Nancy Hirsh, NW Energy Coalition's executive director, said in a statement.

Portland Business Journal: Bonneville Power Administration advances controversial energy market decision


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The Seattle Times: Climate, energy upheavals roil NW power market

Granite DamMarch 5, 2025
By Lynda Mapes

Heat domes. Cold snaps. Winter storms — even as far away as Texas: extreme weather events are roiling power markets and spiking power prices for energy providers and their customers.

This increasing volatility — and mandates to decarbonize energy supplies, introducing more variable energy sources, such as wind and solar power — is driving big changes for regional utilities, including how they buy and sell power.

In play right now is a new alignment of Northwest utilities into centralized, organized energy markets.

Two power market operators are contending for their business: the Southwest Power Pool’s Markets+, based in Arkansas, and the California Independent System Operator. Both operators are seeking commitments from Northwest utilities.

This is a complex topic, so let’s step back to see what’s new.

Around the region, utilities buy and sell energy to meet customers’ needs, moving power around a connected power grid. That is not new.

What is changing is creation of these larger, centralized pools of utilities over a bigger geographic footprint, with an operator that optimizes trades not just minute to minute but for a whole day. That is intended to help utilities smooth challenges of variability in both weather and energy sources.

As these new market pools shape up, all eyes are on the Bonneville Power Administration.

A nonprofit federal administration, the BPA is self-funded by revenues from selling power and transmission services across 15,000 miles of high-voltage power lines. The juice comes from 31 federal dams and one nuclear plant, which produce about 32% of the power generated in the Northwest, sold wholesale to 142 retail customers — utilities large and small across 300,000 square miles in eight states.

Some get all their energy from BPA. Others, such as Seattle City Light, supplement their own generation with purchases from BPA. Typically, Seattle City Light gets 40% of its customers’ power from BPA — even more in low-water years, such as last year.

BPA has held multiple briefings, and workshops to help lead the process as the region remakes its energy market. BPA staff in a white paper last year recommended BPA jump in the pool operated by Markets+.

But with the players in the two power pools still shaping up, some powerful policymakers are urging BPA to pump the brakes.

Aligning with energy partners in the Southwest Power Pool’s Markets+ initiative is projected to be, under some scenarios, $79 to $129 million more costly in 2026 for Bonneville — and its ratepayers — compared to business as usual, according to a study commissioned by BPA. U.S. senators for the Northwest wrote in a letter to BPA Dec. 13 that there is no scenario evaluated in the study that demonstrated financial benefits in choosing the Markets+ alternative.

BPA counters that while initial costs in the first few years of Markets+ participation are more costly, those costs level out and BPA contends the long-term picture eventually is financially beneficial for customers.

But why eat extra cost? And why the hurry, the senators asked, and urged BPA to do nothing for now, and wait out changes expected in California law this session, that could put to rest concerns about governance of that market pool.

PacifiCorp, PGE, Seattle City Light and three major electrical worker unions in Portland, Tacoma and Seattle also urged BPA to change nothing for now a letter sent to BPA this week, urging BPA to avoid additional costs for customers already facing rate increases.

Heavy hitter customers that guzzle power, including Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Rivian, also in a public comment sent to BPA’s administrator stated Bonneville has not sufficiently taken into consideration the impact to ratepayers and any decision now is premature. A host of environmental groups and green energy advocates have also urged BPA to give this decision more time to more fully consider both economic and environmental impacts before making its move.

But with some area utilities already declaring their market preferences, BPA must make a decision, or will find itself isolated, with limited options, said Rachel Dibble, vice president for bulk power marketing at BPA. “We have to make a choice,” Dibble said. “Or everything will change around us and our options will be limited. Not to make a choice is a choice.”

Chelan, Grant County and Snohomish County PUDs and Tacoma Power have each already indicated a preference for Markets+. For Tacoma Power, the decision came down to reliability and independent governance, said Chris Robinson, general manager and chief operating officer for the utility.

Being hosted by a market run by a California entity didn’t seem like a good deal, Robinson said, and he didn’t want to wait on legislation in California to sort that out, either. “We have this opportunity right in front of us; we think it is important to move forward,” Robinson said.

But Dawn Lindell, general manager for Seattle City Light, isn’t feeling the Markets+ love. She said she is concerned about reliability and affordability for the utility’s customers.

“I want to know, do I have paths by which I can get the energy and send the energy, and is it what makes economic sense?” said Lindell. “We have 113,000 customers at or below 60% of average income, it matters a lot what we charge … I am looking for the least cost, most effective option.”

Weather events of the last four years compared with the previous 20 have gotten the utility’s attention, Lindell said, offering a graph that shows spikes in power prices on the market as jagged as the extreme temperatures that necessitated the power purchases.

“You can see climate change in the graph, it is very impactful over the last four years and every time we have a high (temperature) day or a low day, we have to go on the market and it is very expensive,” Lindell said.

“These weather events are driving the need for a very good and cost effective way of buying and selling energy.”

The larger storms wrought by climate change also make creation of a larger market into which to sell and from which to buy sensible — to escape weather patterns that spike prices. “Storms are stronger, last longer, and affect a much bigger land mass,” Lindell added.

“We need trading markets where the weather is different … I would love a ginormous footprint that covers a lot of ground, north and south, and we want as non-carbon emitting sources as we can find.”

BPA has announced it will make a preliminary decision on market choice March 6 and a final decision in May.

Seattle Times: Climate, energy upheavals roil Northwest power market


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The Seattle Times: This baby orca is healthy and it’s a girl

Center of Whale Research J62 2025Feb. 24, 2025 
By Lynda V. Mapes

Baby orca J62 is a female, scientists have confirmed, and looking great so far in her first month of life.

The birth of a healthy female calf is crucial for the southern resident orca families. With just 73 members, the pods need every female they can get to rebuild their numbers, noted Michael Weiss, research director for the Center for Whale Research.

“It’s especially great that we have a little female calf that appears to be healthy and normal. She appears to be filling out; we have no concerns about her,” Weiss said. In recent encounters, the baby was lively and social, “healthy and normal.”

For this population of whales, that is news. The southern residents have struggled to successfully reproduce, with the mothers losing as many as two-thirds of their calves. Scientists have linked the high rate of pregnancy failures to lack of adequate, quality food, especially Chinook salmon.

Mother orca Tahlequah, orca J35, shocked the world back in August 2018 by carrying her dead calf, which lived only 30 minutes, for 17 days and 1,000 miles. This Christmas, the region was delighted that Tahlequah gave birth again, only to be saddened by her once again carrying a calf that didn’t live to New Year’s.

It is not known how long Tahlequah carried the baby this time; she had been carrying the calf for at least 11 days when she and her family were seen in Haro Strait on Jan. 10 before heading out to sea. The southern residents in winter frequently travel the outer coast in search of food. J35 and her family were not seen again by scientists for weeks at a time. However on Feb. 8, she and her family returned to local waters, and she by then did not have the calf.

“That is to be expected,” Weiss said, as the carcass could not hold up that long no matter her efforts. J35 looked fine, he said. “She seemed to be doing well; she seemed herself. Her back looked nice and straight.”

She has two sons she continues to care for.

The southern residents are the only population of marine mammals in the Salish Sea struggling to survive. All the great whales — humpbacks and grays and the other populations of orcas are doing well, with their numbers increasing. The northern resident orcas, which like the southern residents are fish-eaters, also are growing in population.

But the southern residents are the most urban of the orcas and are plagued by at least three threats: lack of food, noisy waters that make it harder for them to hunt and contaminants in their food.

The Seattle Times: This baby orca is healthy and it’s a girl


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King 5: Welcome J62: A new female orca joins the Southern Resident family

Orcas advocates got positive news this month, as the J pod's new calf was spotted in good health.

Center of Whale Research J62 2025

By Allison Sundell
February 17, 2025

SEATTLE — It’s official – it’s a girl!

The Center for Whale Research confirmed Sunday that the new orca calf in the J pod, J62, is female.

During a sighting on Feb. 8, researchers said J62 appeared to be “doing well” and is “filling out nicely.” J62 was seen “bouncing around” with the J19s while the pod appeared to be resting about three-quarters of a mile off the west side of San Juan Island.

Near the end of the sighting, researchers said the J19s were in a large group that was “getting social.” The calf rolled around, and researchers confirmed J62 is a girl based on photographs of her belly.

Center of Whale Reserach J62 rolling around 2025

Researchers first confirmed J62’s birth on Jan. 1.

During the February sighting researchers also confirmed that orca J35 is no longer carrying the carcass of her dead calf, J61. The calf’s birth was confirmed in late December, and within a week, the calf died.

The mother, Tahlequah, gained national attention in 2018 for carrying her dead calf for more than 1,000 miles for at least 17 days.

J62’s good health is positive news for researchers as the Southern Resident killer whales’ population continues to struggle. The number of Southern Residents has reached its lowest level in decades, and advocates are racing to address factors contributing to their plight, including boat noise, which affects their ability to hunt; availability of Chinook salmon, their preferred prey; and pollutants in sea water.

Joe Olson, President of the Puget Sound Chapter of the American Cetacean Society, expressed enthusiasm about the new arrival.

"I am very excited that there is a female orca calf. J needs that really bad," he said.

The addition of J62 comes at a critical time for the Southern Resident orcas, whose population has dwindled to just 73 individuals. Howard Garrett, co-founder of Orca Network, explained the gravity of the situation.

“Optimum population should be at least 150, around 200 would be a robust population, so they are at a very low level and they are kind of plateauing,” Garrett said. "By far the main problem with these orcas' survival with reproductive success is nutrition, is having enough food. And their food, as they have specialized in for thousands of years, is primarily Chinook salmon, the big fatty chinook, and they are not so big anymore, and there are not very many of them."

Despite these challenges, the arrival of J62 has renewed hope for the pod's future. Conservation efforts are ongoing, with experts emphasizing the need for ecosystem restoration and reduced human impact.

Olson stressed, "The whales need our help. If we could leave them alone and restore the ecosystem so that there are abundant salmon and no pollution and not a bunch of noise, they would recover with no problem."

King 5: Welcome J62: A new female orca joins the Southern Resident family


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E&E News: Trump admin extends environmental review of Columbia River dams

Lower Snake River Dams ©EcoFlight

By Jennifer Yachnin
02/07/2025 01:51 PM

The Trump administration is pushing back a review into how dams on the Columbia River system could be operated to benefit endangered salmon and steelhead population, extending a deadline set under the previous White House by nearly two months.

In a joint statement Thursday night, both the Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation announced a new May 9 deadline for a supplemental environmental impact statement focused on 14 dams on the waterway. Related public meetings are also being rescheduled to take place in April, instead of next week.

"This extension will allow additional time to receive vital public input and engagement on this important topic," the agencies said in the statement. The deadline had been in March. "USACE and Reclamation are committed to transparency and meaningful public participation, and both agencies are still available to discuss the SEIS and provide information related to this process."

The review, which began in late December under the Biden administration, was triggered by the "Resilient Columbia Basin Agreement," the name of the $1 billion settlement agreement reached in 2023 between the federal government and plaintiffs in a lawsuit centered on hydropower operations on the waterway.

The settlement paused the lawsuit for up to 10 years, while federal agencies and the Nez Perce, Yakama, Warm Springs and Umatilla tribal nations, as well as the states of Oregon and Washington, study the impacts of breaching four of the dams and how to replace services like marine transportation, hydropower and irrigation services.

Although the settlement does not explicitly call for removing any dams, proponents have not shied away from admitting that their goal is to see four structures — the Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite hydropower dams — breached.

That action, however, would require Congress' authorization, and GOP lawmakers who currently control both chambers and the White House have expressed opposition.

The Trump administration also opposed breaching those dams in the previous review of the Columbia River system, which was completed in 2020. That review found that the dams could spill more water to support endangered fish populations, instead of being removed.

E&E News: Trump admin extends environmental review of Columbia River dams


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The Seattle Times: How Tahlequah, her dead calf tell the story of climate change

orca calf with Tahlequah Courtesy of Audrey GaoTahlequah, J35, carries her dead calf off Point Robinson, Vashon Island. The birth was confirmed on Christmas Eve, and the baby was confirmed dead on New Year’s Eve. She has been carrying the calf at least 11 days (Courtesy of Audrey Gao)Jan. 27, 2025
By Lynda V. Mapes

The stories of salmon and orcas in the Pacific Northwest are linked. Their paths intermingle in a vast web of ecosystems and coevolved species.

Salmon are struggling to survive. So are the families of endangered southern resident orcas, with a population of just 73, not improved in years. Their plight has been on full display, capturing worldwide attention yet again as mother orca Tahlequah this winter has carried her dead calf that lived only about a week.

She did the same thing in 2018, carrying another baby calf that lived only a half-hour, for 17 days and over 1,000 miles. Both lost calves were females, devastating for a population needing to rebuild.

The web of influences that impact orcas, especially the lack of salmon, reveals a stark lesson about climate change. It is a wrecker of the balance of life on which the natural world, which makes the Northwest so special, depends.

Widespread declines of wild Chinook salmon have hurt fisheries, tribal cultures and ecosystems that depend on the fish, especially the southern residents. They eat other fish but preferentially target Chinook, the biggest, fattiest salmon in the sea.

A key to orca survival is for more of the runs they depend on to improve, so they get enough food. Lack of regularly available, quality food is one of the biggest threats to their survival.

What salmon are hurting the most?

All three southern resident pods, or families, take fish from the Columbia and Snake rivers. Snake River spring/summer Chinook are of particular importance for their size and high fat content; they are crucial food in a lean season.

Declines in wild Snake River spring/summer Chinook over the past century were driven by overfishing and migration barriers, including dams, water diversions for irrigation, salmon farms and hatcheries. The species was federally listed as threatened in 1992 and has continued to dwindle toward extinction.

Now research shows salmon will be hammered by climate change in both their freshwater and ocean life stages. In streams, lethal conditions for salmon are predicted across the state. Interior Columbia Basin populations of salmon face the largest percentage loss of snow-dominated habitat, as temperatures warm, causing summer droughts and scouring winter floods.

In the ocean, rising surface temperatures also pose an overriding threat to salmon, upending ocean food webs and predator communities, scientists predicted in a 2021 paper.

What is Tahlequah telling us?

Scientists know this much for certain: Climate change is a killer even for the most productive Chinook spawning grounds in the Columbia Basin, threatening a life source for the southern resident orcas. The Chinook that orcas depend on for survival are under unprecedented threat due to warming sea surface temperatures and streams.

Seattle Times Columbia Basin Map NOAA CalFish Abundance Database StreamNet Esri Fiona Martin The Seattle Times

When they modeled predictions of climate change on the life cycle of the salmon, even the largest spring/summer Chinook populations today in the basin of the Salmon River crashed to near-extinction levels by 2060, with fewer than 50 adult fish returning to their spawning beds, the scientists found.

Negative effects from rising sea surface temperatures will drive most populations to extinction within this century, the scientists concluded.

Salmon are geniuses at adaptation. But even by running out to sea earlier, or shifting their run time back to the river by multiple days, they could not overcome the lethal effect of warming sea surface temperatures enough to beat extinction in a warming world, the scientists predicted.

What have been some salmon bright spots?

The good news is that where humans have made big changes for wild salmon recovery, salmon are responding.

On the Elwha, where two dams were taken down to recover the river’s legendary salmon runs, and habitat work continues, steelhead, coho and Chinook are coming back.

On the Upper Columbia, better water management has boosted sockeye to record runs in modern times, delighting sport fishermen and bringing precious food home to Upper Columbia tribes — even after crossing nine dams to get to spawning streams in British Columbia. The Okanagan Nation Alliance tribal communities got the breakthrough going, with an invitation to Canadian fisheries officials to work together with them and dam managers to help the run.

Meanwhile, work by the Nez Perce Tribe, in collaboration with other partners, has brought back the run of fall Chinook in the Snake River from near extinction to the most successful Chinook run on the river, benefiting sport and commercial fishermen, as well as tribal fishers.

And from the eastern side of Vancouver Island to Hood Canal, chum numbers saw a boost last fall, returning home in runs bigger than had been seen in decades. The chum boom follows decades of habitat work. Independent researcher Alexandra Morton also noted in a recent study that getting most of the Atlantic salmon fish farms out of a crucial migratory corridor for baby salmon east of Vancouver Island greatly reduced pathogens they encounter, including sea lice.

Three years after the fish pens came out, the 2024 chum runs kaboomed from Alert Bay in the Broughton Archipelago all the way to Puget Sound, with adult returns in this region increasing 10 to 20 times their usual numbers in one generation, Morton noted.

“The overarching feeling is incredible respect for these fish; chum were doing so poorly, it was theorized it was over for them,” Morton said. “Yet when we gave them something they need, they showed remarkable resilience; it was extraordinary.

When the fish came back, so did the orcas. Week after week last fall during the chum run, Morton listened to the sounds of the northern resident orcas — who like the southern residents primarily eat salmon — swimming past underwater microphones, their voices broadcast on speakers filling her home. The southern residents also visited central Puget Sound waters day after day last fall, chasing chum.

With climate change, what’s the outlook?

Perhaps an ecological surprise will occur, said Brian Burke, a supervisory biologist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle. What the future ocean will be like is not known. “How are those dynamics going to change?” Burke said.

But this much is certain: There is no easy way to fix declines in marine survival, he noted, and there certainly is no one silver bullet to recover Snake River Basin salmon runs, not even dam removal.

NOAA in a September 2022 report stated returning Columbia Basin salmon will require multiple fixes across all life stages of salmon, including dam removal on the Lower Snake River. Meanwhile, hunger stalks the southern residents.

Once producing 1.5 million Snake River spring/summer Chinook a year, today runs are 10% of that in a good conditions. “It would be like going to the grocery store and there is no food available,” said Rick Williams, co-author of the book “Managed Extinction” and fish biologist based in Eagle River, Idaho, about the decline of wild salmon in the Pacific Northwest.

Poor ocean conditions make it even more important to improve the freshwater habitat, Williams said.

“The ocean is going to be really hard to control and manage; the flip side of that is it makes it imperative that we do what we can in the freshwater environments,” Williams said. People can count on nature, though, he added. Given a chance, species of salmon in multiple Northwest rivers have shown they will rebound.

“The fish have the capacity to come back,” Williams said, “if we give them the opportunity.”

The Seattle Times: How Tahlequah, her dead calf tell the story of climate change

  1. Seattle Times: Where is Tahlequah? What we know about the mother orca and her calf
  2. Seattle Times: Mother orca Tahlequah still carries dead calf after 11 days
  3. Orca Tahlequah’s new baby dies
  4. The Columbian: ‘Unlawful’ or ‘a critical next step’? Feds to update Columbia River dams’ environmental guidelines
  5. Seattle Times: What will a switch from Biden to Trump mean for the Columbia River?
  6. E&E News: Proponents of breaching dams see opportunities in Trump era
  7. Puget Sound Institute: Some orcas extend their stay in Puget Sound; others visit capture site for first time in years
  8. Columbia Basin Bulletin: All Four Lower Klamath River Dams Removed, Several Years Work Ahead To Restore Formerly Submerged Lands
  9. E&E: Lower Snake River flows sufficient even without dams, research finds
  10. KOIN: Oregon Gov. Kotek signs executive order to restore Columbia Basin
  11. E&E News: Lower Snake River ‘temperature diet’ looks to shed degrees
  12. Wallowa County Chieftain: First food: What the fish mean for tribes
  13. NWPB: Toxic algal bloom found on the Snake River for second year in a row
  14. Portland Business Journal: OR, WA senators question Bonneville Power Administration on 'monumental' decision
  15. NWPB: Biologists truck Snake River sockeye to cooler Idaho waters
  16. HCN: When the dams come down, what happens to barge traffic?
  17. Seattle Times: Why 'deadbeat dam' removals are so difficult in WA, PNW
  18. E&E News: Record salmon migration runs into hot water
  19. E&E News: Columbia River Treaty deal would boost US energy capacity
  20. HCN: Nez Perce energy transition to save salmon
  21. Seattle Times: Record sockeye salmon run on Columbia now threatened by hot water
  22. Idaho Statesman: Northwest U.S., Canada reach vital Columbia River pact. Some worry it’s not enough to protect salmon
  23. OPB: US would keep more hydropower under agreement with Canada on treaty governing Columbia River
  24. Seattle Times: U.S. and Canada reach deal on Columbia River Treaty
  25. InvestigateWest: The Federal Government Just Acknowledged the Harm Its Dams Have Caused Tribes. Here’s What It Left Out.
  26. E&E News: Reclamation weighs how to keep taps open on Lower Snake River
  27. The Lewiston Tribune: Report: Dams hurt salmon and tribes
  28. The New York Times: Federal Dams Harm Native American Communities, U.S. Acknowledges
  29. AP News: US acknowledges Northwest dams have devastated the region’s Native tribes
  30. Seattle Times: Biden administration acknowledges harms of Columbia River dams on Indigenous people
  31. Seattle Times: Extinction risk to southern residents orcas accelerating as researchers raise alarm
  32. NWNews: Tribes, governments sign historic agreement that's a 'path forward' for salmon, dams
  33. AP News: White House, tribal leaders hail ‘historic’ deal to restore salmon runs in Pacific Northwest
  34. E&E News: White House celebrates $1B deal to save Columbia River Basin salmon
  35. Seattle Times: PNW tribal nations, states sign historic Columbia Basin agreement with U.S.
  36. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Dam deal’s in eye of beholder
  37. Seattle Times: Newborn southern resident orca spotted in Puget Sound
  38. KUOW: 'They're our relatives.' Samish Indian Nation prepares to welcome new orca calf to Puget Sound
  39. The Oregonian: Efforts of tribes pay off in historic agreement on Snake River dam removals
  40. High Country News: Lower Snake River dams closer to coming down with new agreement
  41. NPB: Historic agreement seen as a harbinger to Snake River dam removal
  42. Lewiston Tribune: Salmon and dam agreement formally announced, features $1 billion in federal funds and pause on lawsuits
  43. Seattle Times: Biden administration promises $1 billion more for salmon, clean energy — but punts on Lower Snake River dam removal in major agreement
  44. NPR: Tribes celebrate historic deal with White House that could save Pacific Northwest salmon
  45. AP News: Conservationists, tribes say deal with Biden administration is a road map to breach Snake River dams
  46. E&E News: White House pledges $1B to restore Pacific Northwest salmon, steelhead
  47. Tri-City Herald: ‘Historic’ Columbia River agreement called ‘roadmap’ to breaching Snake River dams
  48. AP: Leaked document says US is willing to build energy projects in case Snake River dams are breached
  49. NWNews: Tribal members gather to demand the federal government uphold treaty obligations, protect salmon
  50. Seattle Times: Northwest Tribes build momentum in large gathering for dam removal, salmon restoration
  51. Seattle Times: Lower Snake River dam removal still possible as talks continue
  52. Spokesman-Review: ‘Unusually large’ toxic algal bloom covers 30-mile stretch of the Lower Snake River
  53. KUOW: Large Snake River toxic algal bloom hasn’t happened before
  54. Seattle Times: Tribe catches coho salmon on free-flowing Elwha River, a first since dam removals
  55. Lewiston-Tribune: Demonstrators gather for a free-flowing Snake River
  56. Spokesman Review: ‘This is historic’: Biden orders whole-of-government effort to restore salmon in Columbia, Snake rivers
  57. Seattle Times: President Biden calls for abundant salmon in Columbia, Snake rivers
  58. Lewiston Tribune: Feds back tribal-led salmon campaign
  59. Spokesman-Review: Federal government, salmon advocates agree to continue talks that could lead to breaching Snake River dams
  60. Lewiston Tribune: Parties seek extension in dams debate
  61. Seattle Times: Dam removal still on table as settlement talks over Lower Snake River operations continue
  62. Seattle Times: Celebrating the life of Tokitae the orca on San Juan Island
  63. Lewiston Tribune: Snake River sockeye run sputters
  64. Lewiston Tribune: Sockeye begin epic Northwest journey
  65. Lewiston Tribune: Dam Study: More research required
  66. Spokesman-Review: Environmentalists, politicians clash over Republican hearing to defend Snake River dams
  67. Seattle Times: The massive dam removal on the Klamath may save salmon but can’t solve the West’s water crisis
  68. Seattle Times: As the West’s dam removal movement presses on, could the Lower Snake be next?
  69. Northwest Public Broadcasting: PNW artists’ work evokes salmon to educate, inspire change
  70. Public News Service: Historic Step Forward for Snake River Dam Replacement in WA Budget
  71. Spokesman-Review: This year’s return could be one of the smallest on record, and it appears there are a number of factors at play
  72. Columbia Basin Bulletin: As Expiration Date Nears, U.S., Canada Pushing To Finish Columbia River Treaty Negotiations By June; Uncertainty Over Future Operations A Motivator
  73. Idaho News 6: Idaho Youth head to U.S. Capitol to protect Salmon and Steelhead
  74. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Canada, U.S. Meet For 16th Round Of Columbia River Treaty Negotiations; Biden, Trudeau Issue Statement
  75. Lewiston Tribune: Anti-dam overtakes listening session
  76. Spokesman-Review: Washington expected to have a limited spring chinook season
  77. Lewiston Tribune: Bills unveiled to save Snake River dams
  78. Lewiston Tribune: President Biden pledges support for efforts to restore salmon runs on the Snake and Columbia rivers
  79. Public News Service: In DC, Focus on Fish, NW Energy Grid
  80. Seattle Times: WA teen keeps youth at root of environmental movement
  81. Spokesman-Review: Overall run forecast calls for more fish than last year; numbers on the Snake River are down slightly
  82. Phys.org: Salmon deplete fat stores while stopped at dams, study shows
  83. Spokesman-Review: Northwest Tribal leaders welcome Biden’s new commitments at Tribal Nations Summit
  84. Seattle Times: ‘Momentous:’ Feds advance largest dam demo in US history
  85. Seattle Times: 5 exhibitions to see during Native American Heritage Month
  86. OPB: Hundreds of gallons of oil leak into Snake River from Little Goose Dam
  87. KUOW: Salmon advocates ask to include healthy ecosystems in Columbia River Treaty
  88. OPB: Federal report recommends removing four Lower Snake River dams to protect salmon
  89. OPB: The racism, and resilience, behind today’s Pacific Northwest salmon crisis
  90. The Lewiston Tribune: Speaking up for salmon
  91. Capital Press: Q&A: Simpson continues to push lower Snake River dam plan
  92. The Capital Press: Environmental groups urge update of Columbia River Treaty
  93. New York Times: Breaching Dams ‘Must Be an Option’ to Save Salmon, Washington Democrats Say
  94. AP News: Columbia River's Salmon Are at the Core of Ancient Religion
  95. KREM2: Inslee, Murray recommend taking action to make breaching Snake River dams a 'viable option'
  96. OPB: Benefits of Snake River dams must be replaced before breaching to save salmon, report says
  97. Spokesman-Review: Murray and Inslee conclude breaching Snake River dams ‘not an option right now,’ while calling status quo unsustainable for salmon
  98. Seattle Times: Inslee, Murray say Snake River dam removal possible, but not yet
  99. Spokesman-Review: Snake River spring Chinook struggling like never before, feds decide against classifying them as ‘endangered’
  100. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: SNAKE RIVER: Energy, fishing, conservation groups respond to Sen. Murray’s & Gov. Inslee’s presumptive plan for dam replacement
  101. Tri-City Herald: ‘Who are we without salmon?’ Tribes gather along dammed Snake River to call for action
  102. The New York Times: Plaintiffs in Long Fight Over Endangered Salmon Hope a Resolution is near
  103. OPB: Groups seek pause in long-running Columbia River Basin salmon dispute
  104. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Salmon and dam talks get another year
  105. OPB and ProPublica: How the BPA is contributing to salmon’s decline in the Northwest
  106. NWNews: Federal report recommends breaching Lower Snake River dams to restore salmon
  107. Seattle Times: White House weighs in on Lower Snake River dam breaching in unusual power play
  108. Seattle Times: Indigenous carvers’ totem pole to journey across Pacific Northwest to bolster dam-removal movement
  109. The Bellingham Herald: ‘Spirit of the Waters’ totem pole journey begins. Here’s where you can see it
  110. E&E News: Climate activists put bull's-eye on hydropower dams in Wash.
  111. Moscow-Pullman Daily News: Officials seek change of course in wild salmon recovery
  112. The Olympian: Supporters march for salmon survival
  113. The News Tribune: Activists rally in Tacoma for Northwest salmon — next event is April 2 in Olympia
  114. NW News Network: Study says plans needed to replace Snake River dams power generation
  115. The Seattle Times: New calf joins endangered southern resident orcas; 2 other pregnancies lost
  116. NRDC: Saving Salmon—from One Generation of Fisherwomen to the Next
  117. KIRO 7: Activists create human mural to support saving orcas, salmon
  118. Idaho Capital Sun: Idaho heart, Idaho Ark - The Middle Fork is our best chance to sustain salmon in an uncertain future
  119. The Lewiston Tribune: RIVER ROAD TRIP PART 2 -- THE JOHN DAY Fewer dams provided migrating fish a significant advantage
  120. The Lewiston Tribune: RIVER ROAD TRIP PART 1 -- THE ELWHA RIVER When dams fell, salmon returned
  121. OPB: Salmon - the original superabundant food of the Pacific Northwest
  122. Idaho Statesman: Analysis - In Washington state, the tide might be turning on breaching Snake River dams
  123. Spokesman Review: ‘A giant step’ for salmon: As dam-breaching debate rages, Cantwell quietly secures billions for fish recovery
  124. Lewiston Tribune: Snake River dam litigation put on hold
  125. Spokesman Review: 20-year legal tug-of-war between federal managers on the Snake River and conservation and tribal interests may be put on hold until next summer
  126. Spokesman Review: ‘With open minds,’ Murray, Inslee detail process to consider breaching Snake River dams
  127. Seattle Times: Lawsuit over dams on hold as Gov. Inslee, Sen. Murray pursue breaching assessment on Lower Snake River
  128. Time Magazine: Upstream Battle
  129. Seattle Times: Washington governor, senator want answers on how to replace benefits of Lower Snake River dams
  130. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Inslee, Murray to ponder future without dams
  131. The Spokesman-Review: Inslee, Murray plan to release dam breaching assessment by next summer
  132. Spokesman Review: Poll finds most Washington voters support plan to breach Snake River dams
  133. Spokesman-Review: Infrastructure bill would let Bonneville Power Administration borrow $10 billion to modernize Northwest power grid, but critics say it props up ‘failed status quo’
  134. CBB: With Few Snake River Sockeye Making It To Sawtooth Basin, Endangered Fish Hang On With Captive Breeding, Outplanting Adults Into Lakes
  135. Post Register: Dismal returns: 43 sockeye make the journey from the Pacific to central Idaho in 2021
  136. OPB: Southern Resident grandmother orca missing and likely dead
  137. Seattle Times: Lower Snake River irrigators propose two-dam drawdown, breaking with some farmers and bargers
  138. Lewiston Tribune: Steelhead numbers bad, again
  139. WSJ: Declining Salmon Population Threatens Fishing Tourism in Pacific Northwest
  140. The Seattle Times: Skinny orcas are up to 3 times more likely to die than healthy whales, new research shows
  141. KIVI TV: Excessive heat makes it more difficult for sockeye salmon to return to Idaho
  142. The Seattle Times: What does climate report foresee for Northwest?
  143. King 5 News: Conservation groups call for removal of lower Snake River Dams to save salmon, orca
  144. Katu TV: Conservation groups call for removal of Snake River dams, citing concerns for salmon
  145. Idaho Statesman: ‘More and more dire’: Idaho salmon advocates rally for Snake River dam breaching
  146. KHQ: Local wildlife advocates work to save endangered salmon populations
  147. Seattle Times: This tribe has lived on the coast of Washington for thousands of years. Now climate change is forcing it uphill
  148. KUOW - U.S. Senate infrastructure package could ‘significantly improve’ salmon habitat
  149. Columbia Insight: As salmon cook in rivers, pressure on Biden mounts
  150. Nelson Star: Canada given top marks for Columbia River Treaty public engagement
  151. Washington Post: A 25-foot Native American totem pole arrives in D.C. after a journey to sacred lands across U.S.
  152. Red Road to DC: Sec. Haaland welcomes totem pole commemorating sacred sites
  153. Atmos Magazine: The Frontline - To Our Relatives in the Water
  154. YES! Magazine: Tribes Are Leading the Way to Remove Dams and Restore Ecosystems
  155. Seattle Times: Lawsuit seeks more spill over Columbia Basin dams for salmon
  156. Idaho Statesman: If dams go, then what? Saving salmon, power grid means finding answers now, leaders say
  157. L.A. Times: Instead of braving the river, these endangered salmon take the highway
  158. OPB: ‘The Very Essence Of Our Being’: Northwest Tribes (And Politicians) Gather To Discuss Future Of Salmon
  159. Seattle Times: Historic summit of tribes across Pacific Northwest presses dam removal on Inslee, Biden, Congress
  160. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Tribes call for action on salmon, dams
  161. Associated Press: Northwest lawmakers seek progress on Columbia River Treaty
  162. Seattle Times: Pacific Northwest heat wave sets up ‘grim’ migration for salmon on Columbia, Snake rivers
  163. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Cold water released from N. Idaho dam to help salmon
  164. Columbia Insight: Hydro-fade. Pac NW power production is in dramatic flux
  165. Oregon Business: The Salmon and the Snake
  166. Lewiston Tribune: Northwest tribes unite behind breaching concept
  167. Seattle Times: Northwest tribes unite over GOP congressman’s pitch to breach down Lower Snake River dams
  168. Idaho Mountain Express: Shoshone-Bannock Tribes mark milestone in sockeye recovery efforts at Pettit Lake
  169. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Simpson calls on his challengers to provide ‘alternatives’
  170. Seattle Times: Gov. Inslee, Washington state’s U.S. senators reject GOP congressman’s pitch on Lower Snake River dam removal
  171. The Spokesman:The U.S. promised the Nez Perce fishing rights. But what if Snake River dams kill off the fish?
  172. ABC News: Snake River among top 10 most endangered rivers in the US, conservation group says
  173. Idaho Statesman: Oregon Congressman joins Idaho’s Mike Simpson in promoting dam removal
  174. Lewiston Tribune: Water level raised in lower Snake River, fish advocates cry foul
  175. Lewiston Tribune: Tribe’s fish study is ‘a call to alarm’
  176. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Columbia Basin tribes back Simpson plan
  177. Seattle Times: Lummi Nation carvers and allies to embark on national tour to D.C., give totem pole to President Biden
  178. The Columbian: Yakama Nation to Emhoff: Breach dams on Snake River
  179. Idaho Statesman: Idaho Republican, Oregon Democrat could be the key figures in dam-breaching debate
  180. Lewiston Tribune: Letter from tribal leaders: Breach the lower Snake River dams
  181. E&E News: A Republican wants to breach dams. Where are Democrats?
  182. La Grande Observer: My Voice: A main stem vision for our upstream economy
  183. Spokesman Review Guest Opinion: Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Dan Newhouse, Jaime Herrera Beutler, and Russ Fulcher: The future of the Columbia-Snake River System
  184. AP: Study: Chinook salmon are key to orcas all year
  185. Spokesman Review: New website imagines the Snake River without dams
  186. Seattle Times: COVID and squalor threaten tribal members living in once-abundant Indian fishing sites along Columbia River
  187. LMT: Scientists say removing Snake River dams ‘is necessary’ to restore salmon population
  188. Peninsula Daily News: Snake River dams proposal draws accolades, criticism
  189. Star Tribune: Congressman hopes politics align on divisive Northwest dams
  190. Seattle Times: GOP congressman pitches $34 billion plan to breach Lower Snake River dams in new vision for Northwest
  191. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Rep. Simpson proposal calls for breaching four lower Snake River dams
  192. Tri-City Herald: This GOP congressman wants to remove 4 dams to save Idaho’s salmon. It’ll cost billions.
  193. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Another poor chinook return expected
  194. New York Times: Northwest’s Salmon Population May Be Running Out of Time
  195. Hatch Magazine: Scientists draft letter calling on governors to tear down the lower Snake River dams
  196. Spokane Public Radio: Report Lays Out Bleak Picture For Northwest Salmon 'Teetering On The Brink Of Extinction'
  197. The Oregonian: COVID-19 restaurant downturn, health risks pack double blow to tribal fishers, salmon business
  198. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Salmon workgroup makes its final report
  199. Canadian Broadcasting Company: Calls to terminate Columbia River Treaty spark concern after 2 years of negotiations
  200. Idaho News 6: Idaho's Salmon Workgroup finalizing recommendations to save salmon and steelhead populations
  201. AP: Unique Idaho salmon numbers rise, but extinction looms
  202. Seattle Times: Salmon People: A tribe’s decades-long fight to take down the Lower Snake River dams and restore a way of life
  203. Seattle Times: What Biden’s agenda on the environment could mean for the Pacific Northwest
  204. Idaho Statesman: Idaho’s sockeye salmon run falters again; experts perplexed
  205. The American Legion: Maintain or Drain
  206. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Groups plan to sue over latest dams and salmon strategy
  207. Seattle Times: The Elwha dams are gone and chinook are surging back, but why are so few reaching the upper river?
  208. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Northwest governors pledge to work with tribes, others for salmon recovery
  209. NPR: 2 newborn orcas spotted in Puget Sound in the same month
  210. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Feds formally adopt salmon, dams plan
  211. Lewiston Tribune: Research: Sockeye are in hot water
  212. AP: Advocates vow to continue efforts to remove Snake River dams
  213. Seattle Times: Another new orca baby born to J pod — the second this month
  214. The New York Times: Orca That Carried Dead Calf for 17 Days Gives Birth Again
  215. Seattle Times: Orca Tahlequah is a mother again
  216. Public News Service: Columbia River Basin Salmon in Hot Water
  217. The Spokesman Review: Cooked salmon: Climate change, dams contribute to lethal habitat
  218. Magic Valley: As 9 salmon make it back to Pettit Lake, Sho-Ban Tribes play critical role to save sockeye
  219. OPB: Repairs on Snake River Dam slow wheat barges at peak of season
  220. The Inlander: Nearly 30 years in, Save Our Wild Salmon continues its push to save Snake River fish
  221. E&E News: Climate concerns preclude dam breaching — Trump admin
  222. Idaho Press: Sockeye salmon return to Redfish Lake, but numbers are still low
  223. Walla Walla County Chieftain: Canoes Take Shape
  224. The Everett Herald: Editorial - Debate regarding Snake River dams is far from over
  225. Seattle Times: Another Washington dam removal — and 37 more miles of salmon habitat restored
  226. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Federal plan keeps lower Snake River dams; legal challenges expected to follow
  227. Seattle Times: U.S. - Snake River dams will not be removed to save salmon
  228. East Oregonian/Columbia Insight: Thermal hopscotch: How Columbia River salmon are adapting to climate change
  229. Lewiston Tribune: Outfitters, guides call out legislators on salmon recovery
  230. Post Register: Salmon work group closer to making recommendations
  231. Seattle Times: Nooksack River dam finally coming down, freeing miles for fish habitat
  232. KING5 TV: Blasting begins on Middle Fork Nooksack dam to restore salmon habitat
  233. Herald Net: A major fish barrier on the Pilchuck River is coming down
  234. Columbia Insight: How (and why) to fix the U.S.-Canada Columbia River Treaty
  235. Seattle Times Guest Opinion: Snake River dams in hot water
  236. Peninsula Daily News: Kilmer comments on Snake River dams
  237. Peninsula Daily News: Port Angeles council co-signs Snake River dam letter
  238. Seattle Times: Washington state aims to regulate water temperature at federal dams, wading into controversy
  239. Public News Service: Sockeye Salmon: Canary in Coal Mine for Health of NW Rivers
  240. Tri-Cities Business News: Guest Contributor: Let’s work to find a new path forward
  241. Oregonlive: Columbia, Snake river dam operators must make plan to keep waters cold enough for salmon survival
  242. E&E News: Calif. greenlights massive Klamath River dam removal
  243. Seattle Times: Electric utilities, conservation groups unite to seek solutions for Columbia River Basin dams
  244. Lewiston Tribune: Idaho fishing towns object to Columbia River study
  245. Lewiston Tribune: Simpson offers critical remarks on river study
  246. LMT: Groups want more time to comment on river plan
  247. E&E News: Spotlight turns to states as critics slam feds' salmon plan
  248. Indian Country Today: Nez Perce Tribe calls for leadership on lower Snake River restoration and accurate, complete, and transparent information on impacts of four lower Snake River Dams
  249. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Feds - Snake River dams should stay
  250. E&E News: Pacific Northwest salmon review is Groundhog Day to greens
  251. AP/Seattle Times: Feds reject removal of 4 Snake River dams in key report
  252. Seattle Times: For the First Time in 20 Years, Feds Take a Deep Look at Hydroelectric Dam Removal on the Lower Snake River
  253. Lewiston Tribune: Groups Call for Action on Fish
  254. East Oregonian: Oregon looks upstream to the lower Snake River
  255. Idaho Statesman: These groups disagree on salmon. Now, they’re calling on NW governors to collaborate
  256. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Report: Idahoans split on breaching the four lower Snake River dams
  257. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Anemic Chinook return predicted
  258. Spokesman Review: Free-flowing vision: Q&A with wild salmon advocate Sam Mace
  259. Idaho Statesman: Oregon gov: Snake River dam removal critical to save salmon. Republicans say that’s too extreme
  260. CBB: Oregon Governor Expresses Support For Lower Snake Dam Removal; Must Mitigate ‘Potential Harm To Vital Sectors’
  261. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Fish School: Part 5
  262. Seattle Times: Another southern resident orca feared dead
  263. National Public Radio: Northwest Salmon In Peril, And Efforts To Save Them Scale Up
  264. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Fish school - Part I
  265. KEPRTV: Experts meet for public panel on Snake River dams
  266. Oregon Public Broadcasting: Dams vs. Salmon
  267. Courthouse News: Four Washington Dams Again on Chopping Block
  268. Lewiston Tribune: Discussion on dams draws crowd
  269. Capital Press: Environmentalist calls for discussions on Snake River dams
  270. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Outfitters discuss grim outlook
  271. Idaho Statesman: 2 Idaho rivers remain open for steelhead fishing. Guides say closure causes confusion
  272. Tri-City Herald: Republicans, outraged by no dam-breaching session in Tri-Cities, get their way
  273. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Low steelhead numbers prompt review
  274. Seattle Times: New drone, underwater footage of orcas stuns researchers, gives intimate look at killer whales’ family life
  275. Post Register: Fish woes debated by Salmon panelists
  276. Post Register: Without redoubled conservation efforts 'the trajectory is clear' for wild salmon
  277. NBC News: Salmon shortage threatens food chain in Pacific NW
  278. Q13 Fox: Scientists warn of salmon extinction if Snake River dams stay
  279. Columbia Basin Bulletin: EPA Releases Draft Columbia River Cold Water Refuge Plan; 12 Tributaries Tagged For Protection; Scientists’ Letter Says Lower Snake Dam Breaching Needed To Reduce Temps For Fish
  280. Spokane Favs: Event seeks to create a better future for lower Snake River
  281. LA Times: Trump team weakens endangered species protections for California salmon and delta smelt
  282. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Scientists assert only breaching can cool Northwest waterways
  283. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Scientists assert only breaching can cool Northwest waterways
  284. E&E News: Energy Transitions - The new weapon in the war over dam removal: Economics
  285. Seattle Times: Yakama, Lummi tribal leaders call for removal of three lower Columbia River dams
  286. Inlander: Washington tribes call for removal of Columbia River dams, reject doctrine of Christian discovery
  287. KNKX: Orca task force adds 13 recommendations at final meeting as 'biological extinction' looms
  288. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Salmon group still getting its sea legs, Members struggle to define scope of work
  289. Seattle Times: Chasing a memory - In California, orcas and salmon have become so scarce people have forgotten what once was. Will the Northwest be next?
  290. CBB: Memo Offers Preliminary 2019 Juvenile Salmon/Steelhead Survival Estimates Through Columbia/Snake Dams; Sockeye Show Improvement
  291. High Country News: Courts can’t keep Columbia and Snake River salmon from the edge of extinction
  292. Greenwire: Time running out for crusading biologist's war on dams
  293. Moscow-Pullman Daily News: Idaho F&G panel votes to close all steelhead fishing on area rivers
  294. CBB: Columbia/Snake Steelhead runs downgraded again, so far only 25 percent of average; Idaho considers closing fishing, other states would follow
  295. CBB: NOAA Fisheries proposes expanding critical habitat for killer whales from Washington to California; New details on eating Columbia River fish
  296. Seattle Times: Feds seek expanded habitat protection as salmon, orcas battle climate  change, habitat degradation
  297. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Idaho to consider closing steelhead fishing on Clearwater/Snake rivers
  298. NY Times: How Long Before These Salmon Are Gone? ‘Maybe 20 Years’
  299. The Oregonian: Columbia River barge passage to be closed for over 2 more weeks, authorities say
  300. Daily Kos: As killer whales starve to death, public anger drives a shift in the political winds
  301. The Lens: Stakeholders to weigh in on Snake River dam removal
  302. Chinook Observer: Editorial - Only smart, honest policies stand in the way of extinction
  303. Idaho Statesmen: Officials downgrade steelhead forecasts as fish return to Snake River in abysmal numbers
  304. KIVI TV: Sockeye returns extremely low, only 81 sockeye salmon have made it to Idaho
  305. Daily Kos: Endangered orcas' fate is tied to a series of dams 400 miles inland
  306. Daily Kos: The politics of starving orcas - Why human folly is killing off an endangered population
  307. E&E News: Energy Transitions - Hydropower giant Bonneville Power is going broke
  308. CBB: With steelhead forecasted return dropping 27 percent, states extend ban on retention in lower mainstem Columbia River
  309. CBB: Who sets water temperature standards for Columbia/Snake Rivers? Arguments heard in ninth circuit
  310. KNKX: Lummi Nation mourns lost Southern Resident orcas, renames those remaining
  311. First sockeye from Idaho hatchery comes home ⁠— $14M, 6 years and hundreds of thousands of smolts later
  312. The Lens: New Analysis on Snake River Dams
  313. The Coeur d’Alene Press: Steelhead counts lower than average in Snake River
  314. KNKX: 'Hot Water Reports' use government's own data to highlight unsafe conditions for fish
  315. Seattle Times: Both orca babies are alive, and all 3 southern resident pods have been spotted in Canadian waters
  316. CBB: States Take Steps To Protect ESA-Listed Snake River Steelhead; Deschutes Fishing Closure (Cold Water Refuge), Rolling Closures Up The Columbia
  317. CBB: Oregon Study Shows How Increasing Abundance Of ESA-Listed Salmon Can Translate Into A Dollar Value, Deliver Economic Benefits
  318. KOMO News: A million salmon could be restored by removing Snake River dams
  319. Crosscut: A new film argues Lower Snake dams make life worse for salmon, orcas and everyone in the PNW
  320. Tri-City Herald: Up to 300 gallons of oil may have spilled into the Snake River from a leaking dam turbine
  321. CBB: Upriver Steelhead Forecasts Down, B-Run 24 Percent Of Average; Idaho Considers Extending Fall Chinook Fishing Areas In Clearwater
  322. CBB: Snake River Sockeye Run Lowest In More Than A Decade, Currently 6 Percent Of 10-Year Average
  323. Boise Weekly: Salmon Runs in 2019 Expected to Be Lower Than 2017, 2018 
  324. Seattle Times: Three southern resident orcas missing, presumed dead
  325. KUOW: Orca population drops as 3 more killer whales presumed dead
  326. Seattle Times: Where are the salmon and the orcas? Tribe, scientists grapple with unprecedented disappearance in Washington waters  
  327. Columbia Basin Bulletin: ECONorthwest releases report on economic tradeoffs of removing Lower Snake River Dams; Northwest Riverpartners Challenge
  328. Idaho Statesman: The first sockeye arrives at Redfish, but biologists worry few will follow. Here’s why
  329. Idaho Statesman: Idaho fisheries managers forecast poor steelhead return  
  330. Gazette-Tribune: In support of salmon recovery, Ecology seeks feedback on proposed rule changes
  331. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Study, Breaching dams would pay off
  332. Westerly News: First Nations, governments agree to bring salmon back to Upper Columbia River
  333. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Tribe, others challenge agreement
  334. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Lower Snake River Sockeye Passage: “We have concerns fish are not passing upstream dams at appropriate rates”; Huge shad numbers causing some counting problems
  335. Inside Climate News: Global Warming Is Pushing Pacific Salmon to the Brink, Federal Scientists Warn
  336. The Spokesman Review: Idaho steelhead forecast remains poor
  337. Boise Weekly: The Most Complex Natural Resource Issue In The West, Part 1 of a three-part series on Lower Snake River dam removal
  338. CBB: River Managers Clarify Priorities On Using Dworshak’s Cool Water For Salmon Into September; Lower Granite Sockeye Passage Dismal So Far, Only 19 Fish
  339. Seattle Times: Bonneville, the Northwest’s biggest clean-power supplier, faces promise and perils in changing energy markets
  340. Seattle Times: Mother orca Tahlequah and her dead calf, one year later. How did she change the conversation?
  341. Alaska Public Media: Record warm water likely gave Kuskokwim salmon heart attacks
  342. CBB: Corps releases Dworshak water to cool Lower Granite tailwater for Salmon; Low sockeye run downgraded by one-third
  343. KOMO News: Two southern resident orcas are missing, feared dead
  344. Seattle Times: The great salmon mystery, Scientists go to unprecedented lengths to find out where chinook go
  345. Idaho Fish & Game: very few sockeye salmon returning to Idaho
  346. HCN: Renegotiating the Columbia River Treaty, six decades later
  347. CSM: In Idaho, the plight of salmon spawns an unorthodox proposal 
  348. CSM: In Idaho, the plight of salmon spawns an unorthodox proposal 
  349. Public News Service: Idaho Governor Assembles Diverse Groups to Plan Salmon Recovery
  350. Crosscut.com: U.S. tribes are being left out of talks over the Columbia River's fate. Why? 
  351. Idaho Statesman: Little vows to fight for abundant, sustainable salmon populations through work group
  352. MeatEater Conservation: Breach It and They Will Come  
  353. CBB: Treaty Fishing To Begin For Summer Chinook, Sockeye; Run Forecasts Down From Last Year’s Actual Returns
  354. Out There Outdoors: Reckoning on a River
  355. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Spring chinook season comes to close
  356. Mountain Journal: Collapse of Salmon And Steelhead A Dam Shame
  357. Seattle Times: Chinook bust on the Columbia: Spring returns worse than forecast on Northwest’s largest river    
  358. Tri-City Herald: Washington governor urged to veto money to study tearing down Lower Snake River dams
  359. Q13 Fox: Endangered orca J17’s health in dramatic decline
  360. KIVITV: Bonneville Power struggles as salmon runs decline, Economists say Snake River Dams are losing money
  361. National Geographic: Two-thirds of the longest rivers no longer flow freely—and it's harming us
  362. Seattle Times: Canada’s new protections for orcas go a little further than new legislation in Washington state    
  363. Inlander: Dammed to Extinction Doc exploring orca survival, Snake River dams comes to Spokane
  364. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Washington OKs $750,000 for dam study
  365. OPB: Washington Budget Funds Group To Study Snake River Dam Removal
  366. Seattle Times: State budgets $750,000 for outreach over impacts of breaching Lower Snake River dams
  367. Crosscut: Can Washington save salmon without removing dams? 
  368. The Daily News: Orca advocates join lower Snake River dam removal debate
  369. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Rep. Mike Simpson’s talk of mitigating for eventual removal draws mixed reviews from other lawmakers
  370. Idaho Statesman: Simpson stops short of calling for dam removal to save salmon. But he is asking, ‘What if?’   
  371. OPB: Salmon Conference Calls For Innovative Solutions To Protect Fish
  372. Idaho Press: Conservationists, power officials look for common ground over dams, wild salmon
  373. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Bringing breaching to the table - Congressman Mike Simpson says he’s determined to see fish runs recovered in his lifetime
  374. Idaho Statesman: ‘I want salmon back in Idaho.’ Simpson seeks bold action after $16 billion spent on recovery
  375. Crosscut: Will limits on fishing free up salmon for starving orcas?
  376. CBB: Salmon Fishing Seasons:Good Opportunities For Coho, Some Restrictions To Protect Low Chinook Returns
  377. CBB: Columbia River Springer Fishing Allowed This Weekend; Passage Numbers Low At Bonneville But Improving
  378. Seattle Times: Gov. Jay Inslee’s orca-recovery agenda advancing, but billion-dollar funding yet to be seen
  379. Inlander: Inslee's Orca Task Force wants to plan now for the potential breaching of four Snake River dams, but there's pushback from some groups 
  380. Chinook Observer Editorial: Orcas should be allies not enemies in salmon efforts
  381. CBB: Two More Days Of Spring Chinook Fishing, But Harvest Managers Wonder If Looking At ‘Really Poor Run’
  382. Seattle Times: Restore the Snake River? Stakeholder talks are the right next step    
  383. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Conference eyes Andrus-like look at salmon, Organizers hope to bring diverse participants to the table in Boise later this month for discussion
  384. Nelson Star: U.S. and Canada continue to talk Columbia River Treaty
  385. Vancouver Sun: B.C. in no big rush to conclude Columbia River Treaty talks with U.S.
  386. Thomas Reuters Foundation: Roll on, Columbia? U.S. tribes demand seat at river treaty negotiating table
  387. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Conference eyes Andrus-like look at salmon
  388. TriCity Herald: Trump wants to speed up the Snake River dams decision. Democrats wonder why the rush
  389. CBB: NOAA Releases New 2019 BiOp For Columbia Basin Salmon/Steelhead; Includes Flexible Spill 
  390. CBB: Two More Days Of Spring Chinook Fishing, But Harvest Managers Wonder If Looking At ‘Really Poor Run’ 
  391. Seattle Times: Groups sue to restrict salmon fishing, help Northwest orcas
  392. Crosscut: WA lawmakers pass on whale-watching ban aimed at helping orcas
  393. Moscow-Pullman Daily News: Idaho salmon, steelhead populations in ‘perilous state’
  394. Idaho Mountain Express: Salmon advocates see potential for Snake River dam removal, Economics may demand it
  395. Lewiston Tribune: Columbia River Treaty, What's at stake during negotiation
  396. Everett Herald Editorial: What look at Snake dams can mean for orcas and us
  397. LMT: Problem at dam lock freezes barges, No date set for traffic on Snake River to resume
  398. CBB: More Salmon/Steelhead To Columbia River Than Last Year, But Forecasts Mixed Among Species 
  399. CBB: Salmon Fishing Rules Off NW Coast To Be Guided By Need To Protect Low Numbers Of Chinook 
  400. CBB: Report On 2018 BPA Fish/Wildlife Costs Released For Comment; $16.8 Billion Since 1981 
  401. CBB: Ocean Conditions Appear To Be Heading In Right Direction For Improving Salmon-Steelhead Runs 
  402. Seattle Times: Feds could restrict Pacific Ocean fishing over endangered orcas, NOAA letter says
  403. Seattle Times: Hunger, the Decline of Salmon Adds to the Struggle of Puget Sound’s Orca
  404. CBB: Very Low Spring Chinook Forecasted Return Prompts Limits on Recreational Fishing 
  405. CBB: NW Power/Conservation Council Hears Details On Flexible Spill Agreement To Aid Juvenile Salmonids 
  406. Q13 Fox: To help salmon migrate, state looks to spill more over dams
  407. The Spokesman-Review: Diverse group of outdoor enthusiasts urges Legislature to fully fund the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
  408. Columbia Basin Bulletin: 2018 Comparative Survival Report Offers Latest Numbers On Smolt-To-Adult Returns For Basin Salmonids Columbia Basin Bulletin: 2018 Comparative Survival Report Offers Latest Numbers On Smolt-To-Adult Returns For Basin Salmonids 
  409. Seattle Times: EPA ices Washington state’s effort to regulate hot water in Columbia, Snake rivers
  410. KATU: Dam cool idea? Washington seeks public input on plan to help salmon
  411. Tri-City Herald: The Snake River dams fill a power gap. Lawmakers need to know that
  412. Seattle Times: Washington state to regulate federal dams on Columbia, Snake to cool hot water, aid salmon
  413. Seattle PI: 'Fish flush' could be part of orca and salmon recovery
  414. OPB: To Help Orcas Catch More Salmon, Washington Plans To Increase Spill At Dams
  415. The Spokesman Review: Salmon and orcas linked, Legislature told
  416. Outside Magazine: Washington's Bold Plan to Save Its Orcas
  417. National Wildlife Federation Blog - Can We All Agree? A Baby Orca Needs to Eat
  418. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Dam issues reach both sides of the river
  419. High Country News: Idaho’s new governor: ‘Climate change is real’
  420. CTV News: Scientists suggest new threat to endangered B.C. orcas: pink salmon
  421. Lewiston Tribune: Speaker says breaching the dams is no cure-all
  422. Tri-City Herald: Study on tearing down Snake River dams is a waste of taxpayer money, says letter to governor
  423. Lewiston Tribune: Trump shortens timeline for Columbia system study
  424. Seattle Times: 2 more Puget Sound orcas predicted to die in critically endangered population
  425. Tri-City Herald:  Opponents call new dam agreement to help salmon ‘worse than useless’
  426. Lewiston Tribune: Salmon deal to add more spillage at region’s dams. Oregon, Washington and Nez Perce Tribe reach agreement over fish passage operations
  427. Seattle Times: Changes to dams on Columbia, Snake rivers to benefit salmon, hydropower and orcas
  428. OPB: Dam Agreement Aims To Help More Salmon Survive Columbia River Journey
  429. Tri-City Herald: If Snake River dams are breached, what would happen? We must get our message out
  430. Spokesman-Review: Inslee task force would study possible dam breaching to help salmon, orcas
  431. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Federal Climate Report Suggests More Warm Years Such As 2015 Will Be A Reality For Columbia Basin 
  432. Idaho Statesman: Without drastic changes, Idaho’s wild steelhead are on a path to extinction
  433. Editorial Lewiston Morning Tribune: If you love a river, you’ll reopen the season
  434. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Into the wild - Factions fight over best catch-and-release practices
  435. Lewiston Morning Tribune: For endangered orcas, it's the hunger games
  436. Q13 Fox: Orca task force finalizes plan to save endangered southern resident killer whales
  437. Tri-City Herald: State task force names 36 ways to save orcas. What does that mean for tearing down the dams?
  438. Seattle PI: Urgent, controversial orca whale recovery steps go to Inslee
  439. Seattle Time: Orca task force recommends whale-watching moratorium, studying dam removal to help endangered mammals
  440. Crosscut - The Orca Task Force finally has a plan. Will it work?
  441. Seattle Times Special Report: Orcas thrive in waters to the north. Why are Puget Sound’s dying?
  442. KOMO News: Suspending whale-watching tours, breaching dams recommended to save orcas
  443. The Daily Astorian: Guest column - Orcas, fishermen are both endangered species, four low-value Snake River dams should be removed
  444. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Fish futures - Feds reviewing updated plan for monitoring and evaluating Idaho’s steelhead fisheries
  445. The Columbia Basin Bulletin: Independent Science Review off Salmon Survival Study Shows Concern Over Low Smolt-To-Adult Returns 
  446. Tri-City Herald: Trump issues order on Columbia and Snake River dams. He wants fewer regulations
  447. Q13 Fox: Trump speeds up environmental review of Columbia River system and its effects on salmon
  448. Q13 Fox: Calls to breach Snake River dams to save Northwest orcas grow louder
  449. Kitsap Sun: Task force considers breaching dams to save endangered orcas
  450. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Ruling presses EPA to act on hot water plan Federal judge orders agency to approve or disapprove its draft report within 30 days
  451. Seattle Times: Southern resident orcas that frequent Puget Sound may not survive without breaching the Lower Snake River dams to help the salmon the orcas live on, scientists say.
  452. CBB: NOAA Releases Preliminary 2018 Juvenile Salmonid Survival Estimates Through Columbia/Snake Dams
  453. Q13-FOX: Snake River dams drive wedge between farmers and orca champions
  454. The Seattle Times: Another southern resident orca is ailing — and at least three whales are pregnant
  455. Seattle Times: Attendees criticized NOAA for coordinating the now-canceled rescue effort of the orca J50 with SeaWorld, the entertainment park that had for decades profited from capturing the animals for use in its aquariums.
  456. Spokesman Review: More than 600 turn out for Snake River protest Saturday
  457. The Stranger: Giving up Chinook Is a Nice Idea but It Will Not Save the Orcas
  458. CBB: Hot Water Temperatures Prompt Oregon/Washington To Close Deschutes, Yakima River Mouths To Fishing
  459. Seattle Times: ‘I am sobbing’: Mother orca still carrying her dead calf — 16 days later
  460. Ailing orca J50 looking better than expected, but still in ‘critical’ condition as rescue operation continues
  461. Seattle Times: Southern-resident killer whales lose newborn calf, and another youngster is ailing
  462. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Bonneville Power Looking At Spending Reductions In Columbia Basin Fish/Wildlife Spending
  463. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Flows Drop on Columbia/Snake, Allows Transition To Court-Ordered Spill; Water Supply Forecasts Good
  464. Post Register: 'It’s about art making a statement’
  465. Vancouver Columbian: Fishing for solutions through legislation
  466. Lewiston Tribune: Students reimagine Lewiston's waterfront
  467. NW Fishletter #381: NW Energy Coalition Commissions Study To Replace Energy From Snake River Dams
  468. Idaho Statesman: 'This will be a big deal for people who fish for trout'
  469. Northwest Tribes Noticeably Absent in Columbia River Treaty Renegotiations
  470. Spokesman Review: Citing costs, U.S. House votes to halt additional water spills for salmon
  471. Associated Press: House backs bill to block spill of dam water to help salmon
  472. Seattle Times: Southern-resident killer whales’ inbreeding may devastate the population
  473. Seattle Times: Republicans criticize spill of dam water to help salmon
  474. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Court Ordered Spring Spill For Fish Begins On Four Lower Columbia River Dams
  475. Lewiston Tribune: Cheap and Fish Friendly Power?
  476. Idaho Statesman: Northwest could tear down 4 Snake dams & still have cheap, reliable power, says study
  477. Spokesman-Review: Poll shows Washington voters choose salmon over dams
  478. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Washingtonians say they'd take salmon over the dams, poll finds
  479. Columbia Basin Bulletin: Independent Science Board Reviews Two NOAA Experimental Spill Test Designs
  480. Associated Press in the Seattle Times: US, Canada to begin talks in 2018 on Columbia River Treaty
  481. Seattle Times: Violations prompt Washington state to cancel Atlantic salmon farm lease at Port Angeles
  482. Idaho Statesman: New plans for some threatened salmon will ‘not get us to recovery,’ feds say
  483. Associated Press: Washington governor opposes House bill on Columbia, Snake River dams
  484. CBB: Briefs Filed In Appeals Court To Expedite Challenge To Increased Spill For Juvenile Salmon, Steelhead
  485. CBB: Agencies Outline NEPA/EIS Progress Evaluating Columbia/Snake River Uses, Improvements For Fish
  486. December 5, 2017: Governor Inslee issues statement opposing harmful HR 3144
  487. CBB: Judge Floats Idea Of Suspending Work On 2018 BiOp For Salmon/Steelhead Due To Lack Of Completed EIS
  488. CBB: Council Hears Presentation On How California’s Booming Renewables Affecting BPA Revenues
  489. Defenders of Wildlife: Wild Without End - Orcas in a Tight Spot
  490. CBB: U.S. State Department Picks New Columbia River Treaty Negotiator
  491. East Oregonian: Progress silences Celilo Falls; stories keep its memory alive
  492. CBB: Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission Names Pinkham New Executive Director
  493. Federal Report: Environmental Safeguards Provide Billions In Economic Benefits
  494. The Guardian: Native Americans fight Texas pipeline using 'same model as Standing Rock'
  495. Save Our wild Salmon Stands with the Water Protectors at Standing Rock
  496. A Tribute to Zeke Grader - 9.7.2015
  497. Energy & Environment Publishing: EPA finalizes agreement setting 'buffer zones' around salmon streams
  498. Associated Press: EPA To Protect Salmon Fishery By Blocking Massive Alaska Mine
  499. Remembering a legend: Billy Frank, Jr.
  500. Oregonian: Tribes warn of imminent fish passage crisis at damaged Wanapum Dam, ask feds to step in
  501. Northwest News: Fish Experts Plan A Salmon Water Slide On Cracked Wanapum Dam
  502. Wenatchee World: Wanapum Dam spillway crack, showing algae, likely not new
  503. New York Times: A Reprieve for Bristol Bay
  504. Oregonian Guest Opinion: Save the law that protects America's natural capital
  505. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Crowded conditions likely on Clearwater
  506. Crosscut.com: Salmon - Will the feds ever get their dam act together?
  507. Farewell to Fenton Roskelley - outdoor writer, sportsman, and conservationist
  508. Lewiston Morning Tribune: Analysis questions economics of barging
  509. AP: Wyden welcomes federal agency’s plan to seek consensus on saving salmon
  510. NOAA fisheries takes first step toward building consensus on Columbia Basin salmon recovery
  511. The Return of the Redfish
  512. Idaho Statesman: Powerful Wyden supports new salmon talks
  513. Salmon, Coal, and the Columbia River’s Future
  514. The salmon aren’t celebrating Bonneville’s 75th
  515. Victory: Highway to Hell Defeated
  516. Idaho Statesman: The legacy of Lonesome Larry
  517. Radio Boise: Judge Redden Supports Dam Breaching for Salmon
  518. TrailRunner features The Great Salmon Run
  519. Paul Fish: Salmon Super Hero
  520. Toxic Oil Spill on the Lower Snake; What Next?
  521. Dammed If We Don't - an essay from Patagonia's Yvon Chouinard
  522. Salmon Groups: Let’s Try Something Totally Different
  523. The Great Salmon Runners Return
  524. Nez Perce Tribe calls on Senate for leadership
  525. The Elwha Project: Lessons for the Lower Snake River
  526. Lewiston Tribune: 'More aggressive' solutions sought for wild salmon
  527. Court Rules Columbia-Snake River Salmon Plan Illegal
  528. SOS Blog - Salmon, jobs, ESA defended; bad riders linger
  529. Press Release: House Bill To Restore Science and Common Sense to Federal Salmon Efforts
  530. Different Situations: Grand Coulee Fish Kill and Columbia/Snake River Salmon Spill
  531. Rep. Markey on BPA: Please Reconsider Proposed Wind Power Policy
  532. Moving Beyond The Courtroom, Saving Wild Salmon: "The Job Is Not Done"
  533. Oregonian: Habitat restoration soars on Columbia River, but fish benefits are murky
  534. Oregonian: Salmon wars return to Portland courtroom - May 7, 2011
  535. The Osprey, January 2011: "Columbia Basin Salmon & Steelhead at Key Crossroad" by Joseph Bogaard
  536. March 15, 2011: Author Steve Hawley releases new book on Columbia-Snake Basin, "Recovering a Lost River"
  537. Spring Salmon Get Smoother Ride over N.W. Dams
  538. NPR WORD CLOUD: The State Of The Union, In Your Words
  539. NPR WORD CLOUD: The State Of The Union, In Your Words
  540. LA Times: "Scientists expected Obama administration to be friendlier"
  541. Huffington Post - Working Snake River: Saving Salmon--and Jobs, by Waylon Lewis
  542. Let's really talk about taking down those Snake River dams, by Daniel Jack Chasan
  543. Steve Wright: NW power boss for life? - Seattle PI Blog by Joel Connelly
  544. Salmon or political games? Obama administration makes its choice
  545. Huffington Post: Feds: No major changes for Columbia Basin salmon
  546. LA Times - Agencies submit new Columbia River salmon plan
  547. Public News Service: NW Salmon Battle Doesn't Bode Well for Other Endangered Species
  548. Blogs getting the word out: Obama to release revised Bush salmon plan - May 19th, 2010
  549. The Idaho Tide - an essay by Steven Hawley for Patagonia
  550. Crosscut: "Feds vs. fish: crying over spilled water" by Daniel Chasan, April 26th, 2010
  551. Oregonian, Scott Learn - April 12, 2010: Science panel opposes Obama plan for Snake/Columbia salmon
  552. SALMON NEWS: Court tells Obama Administration to Go Back and Get it Right.
  553. New York Times: Judge Finds Salmon Plan Flawed
  554. AP Story: Judge gives NOAA Fisheries last chance on salmon
  555. Something's Fishy - by Keivn Taylor, The Pacific Northwest Inlander
  556. E-mails show internal debate over Obama salmon plan
  557. Legal Update: Salmon and fishing advocates in federal court
  558. Oregon Flyfishing Blog: The battle for Columbia Salmon comes to a head in Portland courtroom
  559. Idaho Statesman, November 16, 2009: Redden raises new concern in salmon-dam case
  560. The River Why's David James Duncan on water, salmon and the policies that are killing them
  561. News Stories - Columbia & Snake River Salmon in the Media
  562. Crosscut: Obama science goes schizophrenic on salmon restoration
  563. Judge James Redden: Steelhead God
  564. McClatchy: Les Blumenthal - Puget sound orcas could be helped by California
  565. Has the salmon debate changed? - Idaho Statesman - June 21, 2009
  566. PNW Inlander: Into the Breach
  567. Men's Journal - The Last Stand of the American Salmon
  568. Crapo: Be open to dam breaching - Idaho Statesman - May 30, 2009
  569. Caddis Fly Blog: Obama Administration Comes to Portland, Talks Salmon
  570. Clip of Commercial & Sport Fishing Ad in Oregonian
  571. Commercial and Sport Fishing Ad in Oregonian
  572. LA TIMES: Snake River dams may have to go
  573. LEWISTON TRIBUNE: Spring chinook numbers shrink
  574. High Country News, May 4th, 2009 - Ken Olsen piece: Salmon Salvation
  575. AP - Matt Daly, May 1st: Feds seek delay in developing NW salmon plan
  576. Crosscut - Obama: Good news for Columbia River salmon
  577. AP: Lower Snake 3rd most endangered river
  578. Spokesman Review: Snake photos reveal pre-dam glory, March 29, 2009
  579. Legal Update: Salmon Plan Debated in Court
  580. Idaho Statesman: Rocky Barker's Blog, March 7th: In salmon and dams saga, the hard part begins
  581. Idaho Statesman - March 18th, 2009 - Northwest can reduce greenhouse gases, save salmon and create jobs, report says
  582. Salmon Director letter to President Obama
  583. New York Times: Dams allies have a change of heart
  584. Salmon recovery plan before U.S. judge
  585. Press Releases - Columbia & Snake River Salmon in the Media
  586. Seattle Times: February 10, 2009 - Columbia salmon plan goes before judge for third try
  587. AP: March 6th, 2009: Federal judge faults plan in NW salmon dispute
  588. Salmon Advocates Ask Sen. Kerry for Help

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