FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: June 19, 2009
CONTACT: Bryan Irwin,
877-255-8772
CCA
Applauds Congressman Dicks for Salmon
Recovery Efforts
Increased Mitchell Act Hatchery Funding illustrates Congressman’s
continued commitment to restoring Northwest salmon runs
Vancouver, WA – The U.S.
House of Representatives passed the Fiscal Year 2010 spending bill
for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
which includes a significant increase in funding for Mitchell Act
Hatcheries in the Columbia River basin. Coastal Conservation
Association, the largest marine conservation organization in the
Pacific Northwest, applauded the increased funding and the tireless
efforts of Congressman Norm Dicks (D-WA) to advocate for the
recovery and preservation of Northwest salmon runs.
The Mitchell Act hatcheries
currently provide for the release of between 50 and 60 million
juvenile salmon and steelhead in Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
Congressman Dicks requested the long-overdue increase in funding for
the 17 federally-funded Mitchell Act fish hatcheries to implement
the recent recommendations of an independent scientific panel. The
purpose of the funding is to better align Mitchell Act hatchery
operations with the objectives of recovery, conservation and
selective harvest reforms.
Both the House
Appropriations Committee and the full House agreed to Congressman
Dicks’ request, approving an increase of $10 million (from $16
million to $26 million) for the Mitchell Act hatcheries. The
increase will fund activities that will increase production and
ensure the hatcheries are operated in a manner consistent with
requirements of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) to avoid harm of
listed salmon populations.
“Congressman Dicks has a
long history of advocacy on behalf of salmon and steelhead
populations in the Pacific Northwest,” said Bryan Irwin, executive
director of CCA in the Pacific Northwest. “In spite of these tough
economic times, he was instrumental in securing this significant win
for our endangered salmon runs, and for our region. We are grateful
that Congressman Dicks continues to play a leading role in salmon
recovery efforts.”
Citing
the congressionally-chartered Hatchery Scientific Review Group (HSRG)
that examined hatchery operations in the Columbia River basin, the
Congressman has focused on the group's recommendation that recovery
of wild salmon and steelhead will be impossible without limiting or
ending the genetic impacts caused by hatchery fish spawning with
wild fish. The additional funds proposed for Columbia River
hatcheries in the next year could provide for physical barriers to
segregate wild and hatchery populations, and could also fund
efforts—such as clipping the adipose fin—to distinguish hatchery
fish from wild fish and avoid the harvest of the wild salmon and
steelhead needed for recovery.
About CCA
Coastal Conservation Association is a non-profit organization
comprised of 200 chapters in 17 coastal states spanning the Gulf of
Mexico, Atlantic and Pacific coasts. In 2007, CCA expanded into the
Pacific Northwest and the organization has quickly grown to more
than 9,000 members and continues to launch chapters in both Oregon
and Washington. As the largest marine conservation organization in
the country, CCA’s strength is drawn from the tens of thousands of
recreational anglers who make up its membership. Across the country,
CCA’s grassroots influence is felt through state capitals, U.S.
Congress and, most importantly, in the conservation and restoration
of our marine resources.
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