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http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/08/23/1792061/arguments-for-removal-of-snake.html

Arguments for removal of Snake River dams are laughable, absurd

TERRY FLORES  8/23/11, The News Tribune. Terry Flores is executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, an alliance of farmers, utilities, ports and business that promote the economic and environmental benefits of the Columbia and Snake rivers and salmon-recovery policies based on sound science.

Letter to KBC preceding the Snake River dam article:

"I received an informative letter today from my friend in Fox Island, WA about Snake River dams in a news article two days ago in the News Tribune of Tacoma, WA. John, who helped build my uncle's dams Iron Gate and J.C. Boyle, stated:
"Hi Don,
Thought you and the Klamath River Dams bunch would like the enclosed article. The Snake River dams allow large barge traffic up to Lewiston, Idaho, giving cheap fuel efficient transport of farm produce etc. among other benefits cited by the author.
The city of Portland, capital city of Northwest liberalism, has a special interest in non-removal of dams along the Snake and Columbia. Most inhabitants of the region today, don't recall the Vanport (Vancouver WA, Portland, OR) floods that came along every year in the low lying areas of those cities when the snow melted in Washington, Idaho and Canada. I recall the Vanport flood of the late 1940's that did huge amounts of damage to that area. You might be able to pull up Vanport floods on Internet.
Since the Columbia and Snake were tamed, that area, especially of Portland has been built up with hotels and businesses, that would represent a major calamity if flooded.
Had a nice rain yesterday and last night, after about a month of drought. Weather this summer cool again and having a tough time getting to 78 or 80 degrees.
Best regards,
JOHN"

 

 

Arguments for removal of Snake River dams are laughable, absurd

 

 

The article, “Ruling brings opportunity to rebuild fisheries, expand green economy” (Viewpoint, 8-18) is rife with mischaracterizations, to put it politely. The authors claim to speak for Northwest businesses on the topic of a recent court ruling on a federal salmon plan. This is simply absurd.

If you look behind the curtain, those purporting to speak for “business” are merely anti-hydro and dam-removal extremists aligned with a small slice of specialty chefs, elite food retailers and commercial fishing representatives (all of whom could better help save wild salmon by not killing, selling or serving them) along with eco-apparel retailers.

This is hardly representative of Northwest businesses, which include farmers, ports, high-tech, manufacturing, food processing, wood products, energy generation and many, many more, including a myriad of small local enterprises.

Furthermore, the letter the authors reference – which asks President Barack Obama, members of Congress and Gov. Chris Gregoire to convene a new process to craft yet another salmon plan – suggests that they have conveniently forgotten the last six years when state, federal and tribal sovereigns worked together in an unprecedented collaborative process to do just that.

The plan for salmon that resulted from this process is being implemented and is working, as witnessed by record and near-record returns in many adult salmon runs this decade. The anti-hydro and dam-removal groups simply don’t like the plan because it doesn’t support their agenda for ripping out some of the Northwest’s cleanest, greenest and most reliable sources of power around – the hydro energy generated by the Snake River dams.

Fortunately, the public doesn’t buy this nonsense. Polling done by DHM Research in Portland for several years now shows the public believes that removing the Snake dams is an extreme solution that would do more harm than good. In fact, the public’s opposition to removing the Snake dams has only increased over time, from 68 percent opposed in 2007 to 73 percent opposed in 2011. And citizens consistently identify hydro energy as the Northwest’s most practical, clean, reliable and renewable energy resource.

And the suggestion that the Snake River dams are “relatively small” is just laughable. They provide more than 1,000 megawatts of clean energy, enough to light a city the size of Seattle – and then some. They generate power to back up wind resources when the wind isn’t blowing, which happens a lot. Along with the rest of the Northwest’s hydro system, they generate billions of dollars for the Northwest’s economy, provide hundreds of thousands of local, family-wage jobs and keep our carbon footprint half that of the rest of the country.

These jobs and environmental benefits certainly can’t be replaced by a few “fishing and other salmon-based jobs” as the authors purport. And, isn’t the aim of fishing to catch and kill the very salmon these folks say they want to protect? Sounds fishy to me.

Terry Flores is executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, an alliance of farmers, utilities, ports and business that promote the economic and environmental benefits of the Columbia and Snake rivers and salmon-recovery policies based on sound science.



 

 

 

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