A6 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 2022 Groups seek pause in long-running Columbia River salmon dispute By TODD MILBOURN Oregon Public Broadcasting Hearing: ‘Very impressed with the collaborations on climate solutions happening in Oregon’ Continued from Page A1 A legal dispute over the impact of hydroelec- tric dams on salmon runs in the Columbia River b asin has been winding its way through federal court for more than 25 years. It’s been on hold for the past year while stakehold- ers develop a long-term plan that protects fi sh while safe- guarding the region’s power system. On Thursday, a coali- tion of tribes, environmental groups and the U.S. govern- ment asked a federal judge for another year to craft that vision. Supporters say “business as usual is not an option” as they seek to restore historic runs of salmon and other fi sh. They say the construc- tion of more than a dozen dams has made it hard — and often impossible — for salmon to swim from North- west rivers to the ocean and back. “Salmon are running out of time and barreling toward extinction,” Erin Farris-Olsen, regional exec- utive director of the National Wildlife Foundation, said in a statement. “Time is of Ted S. Warren/AP Photo The Biden administration has released two reports arguing that removing dams on the lower Snake River may be needed to restore salmon runs to historic levels in the Pacifi c Northwest. the essence.” The request follows the release of a federal report that found removing some dams on the lower Snake River — a tributary of the Colum- bia — might be required to restore salmon runs to his- toric levels. According to the federal government, any- where from 7.5 to 16 mil- lion adult salmon and steel- head once swam the region’s waterways, providing food for over 130 wildlife spe- cies, such as orca, bears and wolves. Republican lawmakers, including U.S. Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, of Washing- ton state, and U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, of Oregon, wrote a letter to federal offi cials in support of keeping dams on the lower Snake. “The infrastructure on the Columbia River s ystem provides invaluable ben- efi ts to the Pacifi c North- west, including carbon-free energy, fl ood control miti- gation, irrigation, navigation and recreation benefi ts,” the lawmakers wrote in a state- ment. “Balancing these vital interests with species con- servation is not an easy task. It is made signifi cantly more diffi cult when science and collaboration is replaced by politically-motivated intervention.” Federal offi cials say it would be possible to replace the energy lost by remov- ing hydroelectric dams and it would cost $11 billion to $19 billion. Port: ‘We’ve got to be careful with our resources’ Continued from Page A1 The Port of Ilwaco left the task force in 2015. In 2016, some Port of Asto- ria commissioners urged the Port to end membership. The task force assists in the development, manage- ment and implementation of habitat restoration projects in the region. Denise Lӧfman, the exec- utive director of the task force, encouraged c ommis- sioners at Tuesday’s meet- ing to maintain the Port’s membership. Lӧfman pointed to the longtime relation- ship, as well as the contin- ued involvement of Clatsop County and a number of cit- ies, as selling points. “I know that CREST has not provided any support or real assistance to the Port in the last few years — as the Port has staff ed up, you hav- en’t really needed our help,” she said. “ … The county (and) all of the cities remain members of CREST and we would really, really like to continue to have the Port be a partner and be able to assist where we can.” Joshua Bessex/The Astorian The Port is doing a study on a tide gate at Vera Slough near the Astoria Regional Airport in Warrenton. Lӧfman also mentioned previous work the task force did with sediment manage- ment at the West Mooring Basin. Dirk Rohne, the commis- sion’s president, noted that the organization has done important and benefi cial work, but was skeptical if their work was still of value to the Port. “We’ve got to be careful with our resources,” he said. Lӧfman noted that in the mid-2000s, the task force had a staff member working “more than part time for the Port.” Will Isom, the Port’s executive director , said the Port has an environmental specialist who fi lls the day- to-day tasks that may have been previously done by outside contractors. Isom did not give an opinion about the agency’s member- ship in the task force. Commissioner James Campbell was the most vocal critic. “Can you point out to me, in the last 10 years, what they’ve done for us, for the Port? It’s another layer of government I don’t think we need,” he said. In recommending the Port end membership, Campbell cited the after- math of a tide gate project at the Astoria Regional Airport in Warrenton. Nearly two decades ago, the task force worked with the Port to make improve- ments to the Vera Slough tide gate, which included raising the water levels to add acres of wetlands. How- ever, Port staff have indi- cated that the water table is too high, causing fl ooding and erosion to some of the airport’s infrastructure. “I really got a bitter taste in my mouth about that,” Campbell said. A grant obtained from Business Oregon will allow the Port to perform a study on the tide gate. Commissioner Robert Stevens and Commissioner Scott McClaine agreed with Campbell and Rohne’s concerns. “I don’t see anything coming our way at all,” Campbell said. “If it does, we can go back in,” Stevens replied. quasi-extinction thresh- olds, she said. That will likely increase to 77% by 2025. DeCoteau asked the committee to consider developing federal fl ood policies and guidelines to ensure properly function- ing fl ood plains and to pro- tect and restore cold water refuge areas to shelter fi sh populations from warming water. “Tribes are dispropor- tionately impacted by cli- mate change due to our high dependence on the First Foods and relative vulnerability of our infra- structure. Yet tribes have been inequitably funded in natural resource and wild- life conservation,” she said. “Stable, long-term funding streams are the greatest tool available to allow tribes to engage in direct climate impact deci- sion-making and allow us to bring our traditional ecological knowledge and contemporary science capacities to the manage- ment and policy tables for the shared benefi t of everyone.” Tyler Bell, the d irec- tor of the Rocky Mountain region for Westervelt Eco- logical Services, stressed the importance of con- servation within private industries. The company owns over 600,000 acres of working forests around the world and over 30,000 acres of conserved lands. Bell asked Congress to support the private res- toration industry through public restoration funding and to develop streamlined regulations and guidance. She also asked that grant language for restoration and conservation projects include the private sector. Francis Chan, who researches ocean chem- istry and ecology at Ore- gon State University, said the Oregon C oast is in a unique position to address climate change. “We’re ground zero, which is a bad place to be. But I think we’re also ground zero for investiga- tion,” he said. Chan added that he wants to expand the uni- versity’s collaboration with local fi shermen, who can deploy sensors and provide observations. In addition to oceanic heat waves, he said cli- mate change has increased zones of water with low oxygen levels. “Dunge- ness crabs, the most valu- able fi shery on the W est C oast, can suff ocate in the pots of fi shermen before they’re brought to market,” he said. Chan asked for contin- ual investment in ocean research, innovation and workforce development. Elaine Placido, the e xecutive d irector of the Lower Columbia Estu- ary Partnership, said the program plans to expand research, mapping and monitoring eff orts using funding from the federal i nfrastructure law. Their projects include fl ood plain restoration near Clatskanie and monitoring the mouth of the Columbia. Placido said adapt- ing to climate change will require new infrastructure, integrating resilient native plant species on shorelines and identifying pockets of cold water that could serve as refuge for fi sh. Bonamici highlighted her Coastal and Ocean Acidifi cation Research and Innovation Act, which Congress passed as part of the $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act in late July. It aims to increase invest- ments in coastal research and monitoring and study the socio economic impacts of climate change. “We need to do more,” the congresswoman said. “Important actions we could and should take include investing in ocean- based climate solutions like blue carbon, building a stronger blue economy and bolstering the health of our ecosystems to pro- tect our coastal communi- ties and marine industries.” After the hearing, Bonamici said there’s more to do, and more to learn. “I hope we can take some good lessons back, that addressing these ocean health issues and address- ing issues of healthy estu- aries and healthy coast- lines, it’s good for the community, it’s good for the economy and it’s good for the planet,” she said. Castor said she was “very impressed with the collaborations on climate solutions happening in Oregon. And you’ve got to get out of Washington. You really do. It’s impossible to have your fi nger on the pulse of what’s happening across the country unless you get out.” Ballot title: ‘There’s a lot of facets to this industry, but we’re well entrenched in the area’ Continued from Page A1 Cities on the North Coast have taken steps to restrict vacation rentals. At the county level, the debate has mostly been dominated by the con- cerns of people in wealthy enclaves where part-time res- idents and second homes are common. Impartiality The referendum’s chief petitioner, Charles Dice, of Cove Beach, is challeng- ing the way District Attorney Ron Brown prepared the bal- lot title. Dice’s Portland land use attorney, Daniel Kearns, argues that the ballot title, as worded, is not impartial, fails to describe the purpose of the measure and contains emotionally loaded language designed to persuade voters to reject the measure, accord- ing to the petition for judicial review in Circuit Court. Kearns asks the court to invalidate the proposed bal- lot title and certify an alterna- tive one that he believes more clearly spells out the primary eff ect of the measure, which would be to “reinstate the prior land use regulations,” he wrote. The county’s development code has specifi cally allowed vacation rentals in Arch Cape Lydia Ely/The Astorian A house displays a sign advertising vacation rentals in Arch Cape. since 2003. In a letter to the county counsel last year, Kearns wrote that a “funda- mental (tenet) of land use law that is important here is the notion that uses expressly listed as allowed in one zone but not in another implies that ... those uses are prohibited in all zones where they are not specifi cally listed.” Dice lives in an area zoned Coastal Residential. He and Cove Beach resi- dents aligned with him have retained Kearns, who wrote to the community development director in 2020: “Because STRs are not listed as being allowed in the (Coastal Res- idential zone), they are pre- sumptively not allowed.” Kearns argues that short- term rentals, never an explic- itly mentioned use in the county code except in Arch Cape, were permitted in viola- tion of that code. Owners of vacation rent- als have pointed out that peo- ple have rented their beach homes for decades. Adding them to the 16 zones, they argue, aligns the code with a long-established practice and precedent. After county commission- ers passed the ordinance, they directed county staff to cre- ate a plan to impose a limita- tion on the number of vaca- tion rentals allowed in specifi c zones — a fact mentioned in the ballot summary — in response to worries that vaca- tion rentals would continue to multiply unchecked. In Cove Beach, rentals make up about 30% of housing stock. In the petition, Kearns writes that the county’s men- tioning these pending caps is “irrelevant, manipulative, emotionally charged, and merely an attempt to calm the concerns county voters have about the proliferation of unlawful STRs,” as well as “an attempt to sway voters to defeat the measure.” In addition, Kearns takes issue with the county’s claim in the ballot summary that the ordinance would lead to “revoking the authorization of all unincorporated STRs out- side of Arch Cape” and the loss of about $700,000 in lodg- ing taxes — a fi gure based on fi scal year 2021-22 data — as vacation rental owners can’t renew their permits. “None of this is true; all of it is emotionally charged lan- guage by referring to specula- tive tax and revenue implica- tions that could theoretically happen if the county takes (or fails to take) future actions unrelated to the measure,” Kearns wrote, adding that the claim is intended to “mislead voters and prejudice them against the measure with inac- curate statements about tax revenue.” ‘Social disruption’ A separate challenge to the ballot title criticizes it from the opposite direction. Marie Gwydir-Moore, who works in the vacation rental industry and owns a rental in the unincorporated Surf Pines neighborhood, wrote in a petition that the projected $700,000 loss, far from irrelevant, understates the “substantial economic and social disruption that will be caused to the entirety of Clat- sop County” if voters approve the measure. Gwydir-Moore, who lives on the North Coast part time, elaborated in an interview: “This is more than $700,000 that’s just going to the county. Short-term rentals bring in millions of dollars that trickle (down) to the business own- ers, the retail shops, the con- tractors, the housekeepers. These are real people that are living in the community, and if they’re struggling now, what the hell’s going to hap- pen to them when they lose their jobs?” The impact on the peo- ple whose jobs depend on the continuation of vacation rent- als in unincorporated areas has largely been lost in the conver- sation, she said. “There’s a lot of facets to this industry, but we’re well entrenched in the area,” she said, “and if so many people are involved in hospitality, and you just wipe out all these vacation rentals, what happens to the economy?” Please ADOPT A PET! BAMBI 3 year old female Pit Terrier Exploring or enjoying the comforts of home, Bambi is a super snuggler who speaks love as a second language. See more on Petfinder.com CLATSOP COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER • 861-PETS 1315 SE 19th St. • Warrenton | Tues-Sat 12-4pm www.dogsncats.org THIS SPACE SPONSORED BY A-TOWN COFFEE