A2 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 2022 A GLIMPSE INTO THE PAST IN BRIEF Johnson offi cially qualifi es for ballot in governor’s race Former state Sen. Betsy Johnson has qualifi ed for the November election as an unaffi liated candidate for governor. “Damn straight,” she said in a statement. “This is a momentous day for Oregon.” Ben Morris, a spokesman for Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan, confi rmed that Johnson would be on the ballot alongside Democrat Tina Kotek and Republican Christine Drazan. Johnson, the former Democrat from Columbia County, submitted more than the 23,744 valid signatures required to qualify. — Oregon Capital Bureau Water main problem closes roads An emergency water main problem has closed roads in downtown Astoria, the city said in a statement. Repair work has shut down Duane Street between 10th and 11th streets, as well as 10th Street between Duane and Exchange streets, the city said. It is unclear when the roads will reopen, the city said Friday morning. People will have to reach buildings such as City Hall, the Astoria Library, the Merwyn Apartments and U.S. Bank by foot, the city said. North Coast spot open on state salmon committee The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is seeking an applicant to represent the North Coast on the Salmon and Trout Enhancement Advisory Program Committee. The deadline to apply is Sept. 16. The department prefers candidates with experience working with volunteers, community service, or natural resource and angling education. The volunteer position is a four-year term. Candidates must be able to attend two to three meetings a year, either virtually or in person. For more information, visit the department’s website. — The Astorian Oregon triples bag limit for invasive green crabs SALEM — New state regulations allow recreational crabbers to catch triple the number of invasive green crabs from Oregon’s bays and inlets. The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission increased the bag limit of European green crab from 10 to 35 per day. It’s part of a concerted eff ort to eradicate these inva- sive crustaceans, which are known to compete with native crabs for food. Green crabs themselves are fi ne to eat and some reci- pes even call for them. They are smaller than Dungeness or even the red rock crab, making them harder to clean. Mitch Vance, a shellfi sh project leader with the marine resources program at the Department of Fish and Wildlife, wants people to know for certain it is a European green crab they are harvesting. “Key characteristics that really help in the identifi ca- tion — fi ve spines on each side of the crab and between the eyes there are three rounded bumps,” he told KLCC. “It also has a very fan-shaped shell.” — KLCC Portland adopts limits on fossil fuel terminals The Portland City Council voted on Wednesday to limit the expansion of fossil fuel terminals in the city. Mayor Ted Wheeler said the move will bolster Port- land’s eff orts to combat climate change and help safe- guard the city in the event of a Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake. Dan Serres, the conservation director at Columbia Riv- erkeeper, called it “an important fi rst step to protect the health, safety, and climate of Portland’s residents.” The zoning code change prohibits the construction of new fossil fuel terminals and prevents any of Portland’s existing 11 terminals from expanding. — Oregon Public Broadcasting DEATHS Aug. 24, 2022 Deaths FORSYTHE, Zachary Patrick, 36, of Seaside, died in Seaside. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. Aug. 21, 2022 NELSON, Kimbirlli “KC,” 30, of Warren- ton, died in Portland. Hughes-Ransom Mor- tuary is in charge of the arrangements. ON THE RECORD Theft On the Record • Nicole Raelyn Horsley, 27, of Astoria, was arrested on Thursday at Fred Meyer in Warrenton for second-degree theft. 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Printed on recycled paper Subscription rates Eff ective January 12, 2021 MAIL EZpay (per month) ...............................................................................................................$10.75 13 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$37.00 26 weeks in advance ...........................................................................................................$71.00 52 weeks in advance ........................................................................................................ $135.00 DIGITAL EZpay (per month) .................................................................................................................$8.25 The Seaside Museum & Historical Society is off ering black and white or color canvas photos of the Prom as part of an annual raffl e fundraiser. Report says benefi ts of dams must be replaced before breaching Finding was issued by Inslee, Murray By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — The benefi ts provided by four giant hydroelectric dams on the Snake River must be replaced before the dams can be breached to save endangered salmon runs, according to a fi nal report issued Thursday by Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Washington U.S. Sen. Patty Murray. That is especially true regarding the reliable and carbon-free electricity the dams generate, the report concluded. If the four Snake River dams were ultimately removed, it would be larg- est such project in U.S. his- tory. In 2012, the Elwha Dam on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula was removed to restore habitat. At the time, the National Park Service said the elim- ination of the Elwha Dam was the largest such project in U.S. history. Congress will ulti- mately decide if the feder- ally-owned dams will be removed, and would have to appropriate money for the work. The issue is not a matter of electricity versus salmon, Thursday’s report said. “We believe that is an oversimplifi ed binary choice, and it is one that we do not accept or see as inev- itable,” Inslee and Murray wrote. But, “the science is clear that — specifi c to the lower Snake River — breach of the dams would provide the greatest benefi t to the salmon,” the report said. Breaching the dams would signifi cantly improve the ability of salmon and steelhead to swim from their inland spawning grounds to the Pacifi c Ocean, where they spend most of their lives, and then back to their orig- inal spawning grounds to procreate and die, the report said. Major benefi ts of the dams besides electric- ity include making the Snake River navigable up to Lewiston, Idaho, allow- ing barges to carry wheat and other crops to ocean ports. Eliminating the dams would require truck and rail transportation improve- ments to move crops, the report said. The dams also provide irrigation water for farmers and recreation opportunities for people. A draft report released in June concluded the ben- efi ts provided by the dams would cost between $10.3 billion and $27.2 billion to replace. The dams have many supporters, including two Ted S. Warren/AP Photo The Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River is seen from the air near Colfax in Washington state. MAJOR BENEFITS OF THE DAMS BESIDES ELECTRICITY INCLUDE MAKING THE SNAKE RIVER NAVIGABLE UP TO LEWISTON, IDAHO, ALLOWING BARGES TO CARRY WHEAT AND OTHER CROPS TO OCEAN PORTS. GOP members of Congress representing eastern Wash- ington state, where the dams are located. The dams are also supported by barge companies, farmers and other business interests. U.S. Rep. Dan New- house and U.S. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers recently introduced a bill to protect the dams. But the chairman of the Yakama Nation has said the dams must be breached. “Our people are salmon people,” tribal council chairman Delano Saluskin said earlier this year. “When the salmon thrive, we thrive; but when they suff er, our people suff er too.” Exploring the Columbia River basin in 1805, Lewis and Clark wrote of water- ways so full with salmon that you could all but walk across on their backs. In the late 1800s, up to 16 million salmon and steelhead returned to the Columbia River basin every year to spawn. Over the next century and a half, overfi shing whittled that number down. By the early 1950s, just under 130,000 Chinook were returning to the Snake River. Construction of the fi rst dam on the lower river, Ice Harbor, began in 1955. Lower Monumental fol- lowed in 1969, Little Goose in 1970 and Lower Granite in 1975. The dams stretch from Pasco, Washington, to near Pullman, Washington, and stand between migrat- ing salmon and 5,500 miles spawning habitat in central Idaho. The dams have fi sh lad- ders, but too many of the salmon die as they swim through the dams and across slackwater reser- voirs on their migrations. In 1991, Snake River salmon and steelhead were listed as endangered spe- cies, requiring produc- tion of a federal recovery plan. Over the next three decades, environmental organizations sued the fed- eral government six times, arguing that the recovery plan was inadequate. The most recent law- suit, in 2016, resulted in a four-year study of the envi- ronmental impact of the dams. Although it found that breaching the dams would be the most eff ective salmon recovery action, federal agencies ultimately decided against it. The U.S. government has spent more than $17 billion trying to recover Snake River salmon, through improvements to fi sh ladders and other mea- sures, with little to show for it. In 2017, the number of Chinook salmon returning to the Snake River dropped below 10,000. Dam supporters blame declining salmon runs on other factors, such as changing ocean conditions. Inslee and Murray said there are “clear areas of common agreement.” “People of every per- spective share a desire to see progress on the under- lying issues and relief from the uncertainty created by litigation,” the report said. Inslee and Murray said it is clear that, with ade- quate money, it is possible to replace most of the ser- vices and benefi ts provided by the dams and to mitigate the loss of others. Government must move forward to provide replace- ments for the benefi ts of the dams “so that breaching of the lower Snake River dams is a pathway that can be credibly considered by pol- icymakers in the future,” the report said. Going forward, Inslee and Murray — both Demo- crats — committed to: • Substantially expand salmon habitat and passage throughout the Columbia River basin and the Puget Sound. • Improve the siting pro- cess necessary to build the clean energy resources needed. • Leverage the invest- ments made in the Biden administration’s Infra- structure Investment and Jobs Act and the Infl ation Reduction Act to support energy replacement, infra- structure enhancement and salmon recovery and habi- tat restoration.