Complaint Filed In Federal Court Over Salmon Recovery Plan
Portland, OR June 17, 2008 2:32 p.m.
A handful of conservation groups filed a new complaint against the Bush Administration in federal court in Portland Tuesday. The groups say the Administration’s salmon recovery plan for the Columbia and Snake rivers is inadequate. Pete Springer reports.
Calling current salmon recovery plans reckless and illegal, conservation groups including the Sierra Club, Earthjustice, and the National Wildlife Federation are calling on Congress to help declining fish populations.
Todd True is with Earthjustice. He’s blunt when he describes the Bush Administration’s most recent salmon recovery plan, released last month.
Todd True: “The new plan is the same ol’ pig we’ve seen before. It’s dressed in a different tutu but it still can’t dance.”
They say warmer rivers and less snowmelt are affecting salmon and need to be addressed in the recovery plan.
The groups also renewed calls to remove four lower Snake River dams, which the government has ruled out.
The salmon plan they're objecting to is still under court review.
The Bush Administration has been trying for several years to write a Salmon Recovery plan that survives federal court scrutiny.
© 2008 OPB
Search OPB News
OPB News
Latest headlines from OPB News.
- Obama Campaign Organizes House Parties For Speech
- Zoo's New Elephant Meets The Herd
- Economists: Oregon In Long, Shallow Recession
- Rossi Debuts First General Election Ad In Washington Governor's Race
- Oregon Delegates Emotional At Convention
- Portland Still Struggling To Become A Major League City
- Merkley Gets 150 Seconds To Make His National Case
- Oregon Legislative Candidate Is Suddenly The Incumbent
