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CRT 2014 Review and Salmon Restoration. Chinook salmon harvested near Brisco , BC circa 1935, 1150 miles from mouth of Columbia Bill Green Ktunaxa Nation Council Canadian Columbia River Inter-tribal Fisheries Commission Lake Roosevelt Forum 2013. Striving for consensus: CRT 2014 Review.
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CRT 2014 Review and Salmon Restoration Chinook salmon harvested near Brisco, BC circa 1935, 1150 miles from mouth of Columbia Bill Green Ktunaxa Nation Council Canadian Columbia River Inter-tribal Fisheries Commission Lake Roosevelt Forum 2013
Striving for consensus:CRT 2014 Review • Working with Columbia Basin Trust and Canadian Columbia River Forum since early 2000s • Collaboration with US tribes and Canadian First Nations (Okanagan and Secwepemc) since 2010 • Formal engagement with BC and Canada since late 2011 • Participation in universities symposia • Recently, working with Columbia River local governments • THANKS!
CRT Renewal Principles • FN participation in negotiations • Protection of aboriginal and treaty rights • Ecosystem management (co-equal) • Libby/Koocanusa Canada:US co-management • Redress of historic impacts
CRT Renewal Principles (cont) • First Nations participation in economic benefits • Adaptability to climate change • Enhanced protection of cultural heritage resources • Salmon restoration
A quick history • Grand Coulee caused loss of upper Columbia salmon late 1930s/early 1940s • CRT arose from the completion of Grand Coulee • Canadian First Nations began advocating for redress of salmon loss in 1950s • Construction of Canadian CRT dams made salmon restoration much more difficult
A quick history (cont) • Canadian Columbia River Inter-tribal Fisheries Commission formed early 1990s with a specific mandate of salmon restoration • Negotiated salmon passage provisions at Keenleyside, Brilliant and Waneta dam expansion projects • 2003 IJC application - unsuccessful • Canadian special claims process - unsuccessful • Feasibility, benefits and impact assessment workshop and report - 2007
CRT and Salmon Restoration Why? • Historical reasons • CRT is about dams and flows - fundamental parts of the solution to salmon restoration • CRT is about transboundarycooperation in river management. We cannot achieve salmon restoration without this. • Ecosystem function needs salmon • THE TIME IS NOW!
Salmon restoration - getting close • Working with US tribes on fish passage/salmon restoration concept paper • Encouraged by US draft regional recommendation • Encouraged by public and local government support: We strongly support agencies and First Nations & Tribes on both sides of the border exploring the technical and financial feasibility of restoring salmon to the Canadian portion of the Columbia River
A short term next step • Arising from 2007 FIB workshop • Goal is three year experimental reintroduction of chinook salmon to the transboundary reach of the Columbia River (upstream of Grand Coulee Dam) • Seeking to learn, NOT a long-term commitment
Experimental salmon reintroduction workplan 2013 - 2015 OBJECTIVES • To identify an appropriate chinook salmon donor stock or suite of donor stocks (small contributions from a number of appropriate donor stocks) and life history stage; • To learn about the migratory behaviour, habitat selection and survival of the reintroduced fish within the transboundary reach to inform possible next steps in a salmon re-introduction program; • To make the general public and political leaders aware of the extirpation of upper Columbia salmon (and consequences thereof) and of the possibility of re-introduction.
Experimental salmon reintroduction planning • Identify donor stocks and issues related to donor stocks (underway) • Experimental design • Preliminary evaluation of genetics, disease, ecological and other risks • Preliminary cost estimates • Late 2015: Submit information to approval authorities to request conceptual approval • Late 2015/2016: seek funding for implementation