6 OCTOBER 1, 2003 Smoke Signals 2003 water feature The Columbia River is Full of Surprises Despite too many dams, over-fishing, ignorant timber and irrigation practices and dredging, one of the Northwest's most important water resources still produces fish runs. In the 2001 edition of Honoring Our River, a student anthology, 8-year-old Katie Finley, wrote: We're mad at you Us bugs are mad at you You pollute our habitat Us turtles too You dump garbage in our water And us frogs won't forget And us snakes too. Though Katie Finley may not have had all of the fine points at her dis posal when writing this, the facts cer tainly back up her outrage: D An Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund site was established at the Portland Harbor in 2000, but the Superfund recently declined to fund a clean-up; The Environmental Toxicology Section in the Oregon Department of Human Services advised based on mercury tests of edible fish tissue that all species of resident fish in the main stem of the Willamette River (a Columbia tributary) be eaten only in moderate amounts; B Dams block ancient salmon and steelhead runs every 50 or so miles along much of the length of the 1,214-mile river; and while some have facilities to help the fish get through, "one-third of all salmon habitat in the Northwest has been blocked by a few dams that do not allow fish passage," according to the Federal Caucus, a group of nine lead ing federal agencies responsible for the well-being of Northwest fish. B In the spring of this year, a fed eral judge in Portland called inad equate a federal plan to save endan gered salmon migrating through the What's Bubbling Up It's clean but it isn't always clear. There are bubbles in the water in Grand Meadows. The problem, according to Tribal Housing Authority Develop ment and Construction Coor dinator Duane Hussey, is that the water goes through a great drop in height very quickly as it comes out of the mountains from the spring source, and then through a few bottlenecks along the way to Grand Mead ows, all of which force air into the water. This is not like pockets of air, which are just bled off au tomatically through strategi cally, located air release valves, said Tribal Engineer Eric Scott. "This is 'entrained air,'" which is the equivalent of a lot of little bubbles not so easily separated from the wa ter. "If it sits a minute, it'll all clear up," said Hussey. J3 u o a. Tribal Elder Maxine Leno, who lives in the Grand Meadows devel opment, agrees. "I don't have any discoloration," she said. "It's just kind of bubbly sometimes, but not Columbia and Snake River system. B Many environmentalists fear that an upcoming dredging project will dump enough river bottom sludge to fill the Rose Garden 119 times on delicate fish habitats (See Smoke Signals 51503 issue). Ten to 16 million adult salmon and steelhead returned to the Columbia each year in the days before the great white influx of the mid-1800s, accord ing to estimates cited by the Federal Caucus. Today, we're lucky to see a million swimming back up the river, and 80-percent of those are raised in hatcheries. Twelve salmon and steel head species in the Columbia and Snake Rivers are now listed under the Endangered Species Act. And because so few fish are still wild, every har vest takes a greater toll on wild fish than on hatchery fish, which contin ues a disastrous dilution of the wild stocks. While it is tempting to blame the dams for the on-going decimation of these ancient fish runs, dams are only a part of the problem. "Dams were the primary cause," said John Harrison, Information Of ficer for the Northwest Power Plan ning Council, but blame also is due to a number of less obvious practices: B The resource was over-fished from late in the 19lh Century through the 1920s and 30s. B Forest practices caused much dam age. They included "splash dams." "Typically, at the turn of the cen tury," said Harrison, "a few (trees) were cut to fall over a river tribu tary. A reservoir would build up behind. More would be cut and dragged into the pond. Ultimately, all the time either. It doesn't taste bad or anything." "Bugged by it?" asked Tribal mem- i r Many Grand Meadows Residents Rely On Bottled Water Tribal Elder Donna Stronach holds up a glass of water from the tap at her son's house in Grand Meadows. The local water authority has said local water lines need to be flushed more and the Tribe has said they are willing to try the idea if it helps clear up the problem. ber Jon George. "Naw. We're not. We know what it's caused by. It clears up. You put it in a glass and it clears up in less than a minute. Tastes just fine. Grand Ronde Water's some of the "If d" It's A Mystery The Columbia River has suffered some great environmental humiliations but efforts to turn bad practices around seem to be making headway. With countless factors playing a part, however, nobody knows yet if the river really is better for the long run. they would dynamite the dam and all of the trees in the water would sluice down into the river. It was devastating for salmon spawning habitat. Irrigation practices have hurt the fish runs. Withdrawing water from salmon spawning streams has al lowed temperatures to rise above what is healthy for fish. Cattle drinking from rivers and streams have destroyed vegetation along stream banks and polluted the waters with their wastes. Vegeta tion keeps water cool in the summer and its lack allows the water to heat up as well as increase erosion. In the face of all these issues, the Co lumbia is now nevertheless experienc ing the second year in a row of record in Grand best around. Comes off the springs on the hillside." But Tribal Elder and Tribal Council member Val Grout drinks bottled water instead. "It's cloudy," she said. "It's been that way ever since I've been here." She brought up the matter at a water board meet ing two years ago, but has just gotten used to it since. "I've learned to live with it," she said and isn't even sure there is anything wrong with it. "Maybe because it's not clear, I wonder." The fix can not focus on the extreme drop out of the moun tains, said Scott, because the system relies on gravity to bring the water through the system, and while easing the drop might lessen the turbu lent flow, it also would defeat the purpose of having a grav ity fed system. On the other hand, when the water is down to the level of local homes and businesses, then different-sized pipes, the newer ones with air release valves and the older ones without, have an fish runs that nobody can fully explain. "The big unknown," according to Harrison, "is the ocean. Conditions vary and are cyclical. If the ocean en vironment is good and there is an ad equate food supply, then they do well, obviously. If ocean conditions are poor, we see the impact in fewer returning fish." It is not as if everybody has been sit ting still as the fish runs declined, but neither is it true that the efforts have showed steady improvement over the years. Still, the success of the last few years has been hard to argue with. "I don't want to be polly-annish about it," said Harrison, "but compared to where we were 20 years ago, we're see ing some success. You can't deny the fact." Meadows? impact that can be fixed. "More loops," said Scott, referring to pipes laid out in a circular pat tern, which gives the air time and space to rise to the top and be bled off; and to reduce the bottlenecks, ret rofitting with pipes of similar sizes. "We've been looking at that for a couple of years now," said Karl Ekstrom, Manager of the local wa ter system. "Originally we were go ing to take care of it piece by piece but now we're going to try to take care of that all at one time." The project is not yet scheduled, however, and Ekstrom was unable to predict when it might be. He sug gested a simple way to lessen the in convenience. "With that system, there are. sev eral dead end lines, and they should be flushed regularly," Ekstrom said. "The Health Division requires pub lic systems to be flushed on a regu lar basis. If you're getting com plaints, they you would flush a little more regularly." "If that would help the problem," said Public Works Director John Mercier, "I'd be glad to try it."