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Dear Friend, |
The fate of Snake River salmon — and the dams that endanger them — could be decided this summer. |
That’s right. After multiple decades of litigation, both sides agreed to pause the lawsuits for a year and work out a plan that does right by the salmon and Snake River communities. That pause ends at the end of July, but the good news is Senator Patty Murray and Governor Jay Inslee of Washington just released a draft report describing a real path forward. |
The report makes clear what tribes, environmental groups, and people like you have been saying for a long time — the best thing we can do to help Snake River salmon is to breach the dams, and we can make investments in the region that will more than make up for the economic services the dams currently provide. |
The report authors are asking for public input. Click here to make a public comment in support of the report’s conclusions and send a letter to your members of Congress urging them to support breaching the Snake River dams. |
Opponents of dam breaching will likely point to the predicted cost of breaching the dams and making investments in Snake River communities over the next 50 years as a reason to maintain the status quo. The truth is, the cost of keeping the dams and not making those investments is far higher — extinction of Snake River salmon and steelhead, destruction of a way of life for Native Americans, loss of fishing jobs, and billions more in spending to keep the aging dams providing the limited services they offer. The federal government has already squandered some $20 billion on failed and illegal plans to restore healthy salmon populations in the Snake and Columbia basin. It’s time we stop pouring more good money into bad ideas and invest in solutions that will actually work. |
We don’t have any more time to waste. Salmon populations and the highly endangered orcas that rely on them are headed towards extinction, but we can restore thriving salmon runs and literally pump life into Northwest ecosystems if we breach four dams on the lower Snake River. The dams stop salmon from accessing millions of acres of prime spawning habitat and make the lower Snake River a lethally hot gauntlet for these fish. |
After decades of campaigning, we finally have acknowledgement from state and federal officials that breaching the dams is key to protecting Snake River salmon and the orcas that rely on them. The Murray-Inslee report is a blueprint for kick starting the largest river restoration in history, providing long-overdue justice for Native American Tribes, and making investments needed to build a clean energy future that includes strong farming, fishing, recreation, and port businesses. |
We’re in the endgame on this, and we need your help to see it through. Join us in making a public comment on the draft report and contacting your members of Congress to support Snake River salmon. |
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Sincerely,
Todd True
Senior Attorney |
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Earthjustice, 50 California Street, Suite 500, San Francisco, CA 94111 |
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Photo Credits: A sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in Little Redfish Lake Creek, Sawtooth National Recreation Area, Idaho. (Neil Ever Osborne / Save Our Wild Salmon / ILCP) |
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