10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 2015 Salmon: New policy necessary to restore depleted runs Continued from Page 1A FLDO¿VKLQJ:'):ZLOODOVR reduce hatchery production of Under the interim policy, Chinook salmon at the three gillnetters were given a mor- hatcheries in the Willapa Bay tality rate of 14 percent for watershed by 36 percent to naturally spawning Chinook, curtail interference with natu- meaning they could only hit UDORULJLQ¿VKRQWKHVSDZQLQJ DFHUWDLQQXPEHURIWKRVH¿VK grounds. By 2018, the bulk of during the course of regular WKHKDWFKHU\¿VKSURGXFHGEH- ¿VKLQJ 2QFH WKDW SHUFHQW- fore the policy took effect will age was reached, commercial have returned. ¿VKLQJLQWKHDUHDZRXOGHQG %XW ORFDO ¿VKHUPHQ DQG In the past, they had been al- processors argue that there are lowed impacts of up to 40 QR ZLOG ¿VK LQ :LOODSD %D\ percent. Of the thousands of hatchery Instead, the new policy ¿VK WKDW UHWXUQ WR KDWFKHULHV will allow 20 percent a year there each year, some stray through 2018, stepping down and spawn on their own. to 14 percent thereafter. 7KHVH ¿VK QHYHU KDYH WKHLU Commission member Mi- ¿QV FOLSSHG WR PDUN WKHP DV randa Wecker had pushed for hatchery-origin and are indis- a 14 percent rate to be imple- WLQJXLVKDEOH IURP ZLOG ¿VK mented beginning this year LQ WKDW VHQVH ¿VKHUPHQ VD\ — a move that led gillnetters but that doesn’t make them and local seafood processors “wild.” KATIE WILSON — EO Media Group to protest outside of a con- “They may be deriva- ference last month in Long A normally staid science conference in north Long Beach, Wash. was the scene of tives of hatchery products Beach where she was sched- picketing last month to protest proposed cuts in Willapa Bay salmon gillnetting. Pacific from the past, but there are uled to give a talk about her County commercial fishermen are angry at the prospect of losing more fishing opportu- ZLOGVSDZQLQJ¿VKLQWKHED\ nity in light of recent steps by Washington and Oregon to move them off the Columbia that contribute to the overall time on the commission. Fishermen said that imme- River’s mainstem. run of the bay,” said Steve diate 14 percent would be a Thiesfeld, WDFW’s Region ³QDLOLQWKHFRI¿Q´ means less product coming vation groups that sued the gered Species Act listing is a ¿VK SURJUDP PDQDJHU ZKR The 20 percent they’ll now across the dock and less need GHSDUWPHQW LQ WKH ¿UVW SODFH very real possibility if the de- led the development of the receive through 2018 isn’t to hire as many people during to force it to develop a per- partment continues to fail to new policy and the various much better, though, said the summer, he said. manent salmon management meet its conservation goals. options presented to the com- Dean Antich, general manag- “In the big picture, we’re policy in Willapa Bay say the An ESA-listed salmon in the mission. er of South Bend Products, a in the slow wind-down as op- new policy is necessary to re- bay could have a huge im- NOAA has listed highly salmon-processing facility in posed to the fast wind-down.” store depleted runs of wild, SDFWRQWKHVKHOO¿VKLQGXVWU\ domesticated hatchery stocks South Bend. The policy pro- But, he added, it’s still a natural-origin Chinook. Wecker said in May. before, he said. YLGHV IRU YHU\ OLWWOH ¿VKLQJ wind-down. Wecker and others with Under the new policy, in From his perspective, time in some areas, which WDFW and the conser- WDFW have said an Endan- addition to limiting commer- there is no way to know what NOAA, the federal agency that typically manages marine ESA species, would decide. “But we know we’re not in a better place in terms of the health of those stocks,” he said. “In fact, we’re in a worse place.” “Roll the dice and take your chances? That’s not where we want to be,” Thies- feld added. “We’d rather be proactive, that’s what I heard the commission say, try to head it off before they even have to ask the question.” WDFW will also look at introducing new types of FRPPHUFLDO ¿VKLQJ JHDU RQ the bay. As has been the case on the Columbia River, this could mean looking at other styles of gear such as beach and purse seines that may have been used in the past. 7KH JRDO LV WR ¿QG JHDU that improves survival rates for natural-origin salmon and steelhead, Theisfeld said. On the Columbia Riv- er, following the passage of Measure 81 by former Or- egon Gov. John Kitzhaber, ¿VKHUPHQ IURP ERWK 2UHJRQ and Washington have tested seines on the river’s main- stem for several years. The resulting mortality numbers, however, have remained high, VD\ ¿VKHU\ PDQDJHUV ZLWK WDFW and the Oregon De- partment of Fish and Wildlife. Food carts: ‘My greatest hope is that this becomes a destination point’ this becomes a destination point,” Executive Director Jim patch to the north of it. Mc- Knight said, adding one food Grath added that the grassy cart could lead to others. patch would require a zoning He said the Port needs to change. look at issues of parking and Estrada attended the meet- the potential impact on adja- ing and handed out samples of cent restaurants. Estrada said her clam chowder to commis- she will not be serving coffee sioners and the audience. She like Journey’s End Espresso explained her hope to serve and is a totally different con- passengers from the Astoria cept than the Bridgewater Bis- Riverfront Trolley and cruise tro. VKLSV DORQJ ZLWK ¿VKHUV DQG Commissioner Stephen other visitors to the waterfront. Fulton said he has seen 25 food The boat is self-contained carts in a pod in Portland, add- and requires no utilities, Estra- ing the Port needs to look at a da said, and is kept on a trail- long-term plan for the siting of er so she can take it to other such mobile food venues. events. She seeks a month-to- Permit and Project Manager month lease to try the concept. Robert Evert reported on Rip- “My greatest hope is that ley’s effort to start a food cart Continued from Page 1A Daily Astorian file Teresa Estrada stands next to a 28-foot-long gillnetter she is converting to a food cart for selling chowder. serving aviators, U.S. Coast Guardsmen and employees of Lektro and other companies at the Astoria Regional Airport. But Warrenton’s zoning does not allow for any mobile food carts on industrial land, he said, so the Port is speak- ing with the city of Warrenton WR¿QGDORRSKROH)XOWRQVDLG the city is growing and inter- preting their ordinances more strictly, adding Life Flight’s temporary headquarters is a nonconforming use only al- lowed for a year. Ripley’s position, Evert said, is that his operation is no different from the cafe former- ly located in the Port’s airport terminal building. Commis- sioner John Raichl added there used to be a food cart serving burgers at the airport more than a decade ago. In other news: • The Port Commission adopted a 2015-16 budget of $16,189,603. It includes approx- imately $6.3 million for capital outlays, including a $5 million, state and federally funded airport overlay project; $4.4 million for materials and services; $2.9 mil- lion for personnel services; and $1.5 million for debt service. It also approved of taxing property in Clatsop county at 12.56 cents per $1,000 of assessed value and FRQ¿UPHG &ODWVRS &RPPXQLW\ Bank as the Port’s depository. • Knight said a member of the Port’s ad hoc Pier 3 boat- yard committee will report WKHLU¿QGLQJVDWWKH3RUW&RP- mission’s July 21 meeting. The committee has been discussing changes to the hours, fees, op- erations and possibly the long- term location of the boatyard. Indictments: County could get more than $300,000 from grant program Continued from Page 1A in 2013. The grant program takes savings from prison costs and gives the money back to each county for other uses such as drug treatment, transitional leave and work release. “The theory is, let’s send the money that would other- wise be used to lock people up, and let’s give (the mon- ey) back to the counties so each county can best decide how to spend it,” Marquis said. The funding for the grant program is expected to be between $25 million and $40 million statewide, depending on what is ap- proved by the Legislature this session. The money is split up based on how many felons are on probation in each county. Based on the fig- ures, Clatsop County could receive more than $300,000 over two years. Marquis suggests the available money go toward the Sheriff’s Office Commu- nity Corrections (Probation) Division. The county has not yet decided who will receive the funding. Considering all the state data, Marquis wants residents to realize the county is not crawling with criminals and the vast majority of locals and vis- itors are not breaking any laws. The data helps with track- ing and forecasting trends around the state. “The one takeaway from this is there is an actual mea- surable way to look at what is the profile of Clatsop County compared to other similar counties in Oregon,” Marquis said. Farmers: Growers are ‘in a state of shock’ Continued from Page 1A defended the spraying and acknowledged breaking ranks would affect other growers, but stated it was respecting consumer wishes. “Our priority is to main- tain our longstanding re- lationship with these cus- tomers,” according to a company statement. Two days later, the Wil- lapa-Grays Harbor Oyster Growers Association told DOE it was giving up the permit. “We felt at the time, it was the best decision we could make. Things were just spiraling out of con- trol,” Sheldon said. “We felt like we had to take a hit and step back.” Since then, the associa- tion has hired a public rela- tions firm to help it respond to criticism. “What really got us was the social media,” said Wil- lapa Bay shellfish grower Ken Wiegardt, a fifth-gener- ation farmer. Sheldon said growers are “in a state of shock” over the events. He said he had actu- ally hoped growers would be perceived as being respon- sive to environmental con- cerns by using imidacloprid. Imidacloprid was to re- place carbaryl, an older in- secticide, the use of which has resulted in lawsuits and increasing regulations and that the Willapa Bay and Grays Harbor shellfish in- dustry agreed to phase out more than a decade ago. Imidacloprid is widely used on land crops. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Washington State Department of Agri- culture approved using it specifically in the bay and harbor. Shellfish growers were to apply 1/16th as much imida- cloprid per acre as they did carbaryl, which was used between 1963 and 2013. Imidacloprid wasn’t go- ing to be as lethal to burrow- ing shrimp, but growers said they would be more precise about when and where they sprayed. The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recommend- ed DOE deny the permit, ar- guing that field trials in the bay had not yet conclusively determined that imidaclo- prid would not be detrimen- tal. Nevertheless, DOE con- cluded there would be no significant unavoidable adverse impacts, includ- ing to bees that pollinate the peninsula’s cranberry bogs, among other plants. As a condition to issuing the permit, DOE demanded monitoring of the pesticide’s effects. With no current permit to spray for burrowing shrimp, it’s unclear what’s next for shellfish growers. Washington State Uni- versity research scientist Kim Patten has spent more than a decade studying how to control burrowing shrimp and hasn’t found a practical alternative to pesticides. Going back to carbaryl isn’t an option. The EPA no longer registers it as an aquatic pesticide, and DOE has closed off any chance growers could revive their old permit to use it, DOE spokesman Chase Gallagh- er said. Growers will miss at least one year of spraying, but they can’t let the matter drop for long, Sheldon said. “This is not an abandon- ment of this (spraying) pro- gram,” he said. “We’re go- ing to try to do a better job of getting the truth out.” Our people make The Planetree Difference Congratulations Spirit of Caring Award Winner Dr. Jennifer Lycette! The Spirit of Caring Awards honor individuals who personalize, humanize and demystify the healthcare experience. “Her care for each patient is evident with all the compliments we hear... She motivates her clinic to be excellent, to have leadership and compassion.” – Award nomination for Dr. Jennifer Lycette &YDIBOHF4U"TUPSJB0SFHPOt XXXDPMVNCJBNFNPSJBMPSHt"1MBOFUSFF%FTJHOBUFE)PTQJUBM