Current:Home > FinanceUS acknowledges Northwest dams have devastated the region’s Native tribes -AssetScope
US acknowledges Northwest dams have devastated the region’s Native tribes
View
Date:2025-04-16 09:01:35
SEATTLE (AP) — The U.S. government on Tuesday acknowledged for the first time the harms that the construction and operation of dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers in the Pacific Northwest have caused Native American tribes.
It issued a report that details how the unprecedented structures devastated salmon runs, inundated villages and burial grounds, and continue to severely curtail the tribes’ ability to exercise their treaty fishing rights.
The Biden administration’s report comes amid a $1 billion effort announced earlier this year to restore the region’s salmon runs before more become extinct — and to better partner with the tribes on the actions necessary to make that happen. That includes increasing the production and storage of renewable energy to replace hydropower generation that would be lost if four dams on the lower Snake River are ever breached.
“President Biden recognizes that to confront injustice, we must be honest about history – even when doing so is difficult,” Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and White House Council on Environmental Quality Chair Brenda Mallory said in a written statement. “In the Pacific Northwest, an open and candid conversation about the history and legacy of the federal government’s management of the Columbia River is long overdue.”
The document was a requirement of an agreement last year to halt decades of legal fights over the operation of the dams. It lays out how government and private interests in early 20th century began walling off the tributaries of the Columbia River, the largest in the Northwest, to provide water for irrigation or flood control, compounding the damage that was already being caused to water quality and salmon runs by mining, logging and salmon cannery operations.
Tribal representatives said they were gratified with the administration’s formal, if long-belated, acknowledgement of how the U.S. government for generations ignored the tribe’s concerns about how the dams would affect them, and they were pleased with its steps toward undoing those harms.
“This administration has moved forward with aggressive action to rebalance some of the transfer of wealth,” said Tom Iverson, regional coordinator for Yakama Nation Fisheries. “The salmon were the wealth of the river. What we’ve seen is the transfer of the wealth to farmers, to loggers, to hydropower systems, to the detriment of the tribes.”
The construction of the first dams on the main Columbia River, including the Grand Coulee and Bonneville dams in the 1930s, provided jobs to a country grappling with the Great Depression as well as hydropower and navigation. But it came over the objections of tribes concerned about the loss of salmon, traditional hunting and fishing sites, and even villages and burial grounds.
As early as the late 1930s, tribes were warning that the salmon runs could disappear, with the fish no longer able to access spawning grounds upstream. The tribes — the Yakama Nation, Spokane Tribe, confederated tribes of the Colville and Umatilla reservations, Nez Perce, and others — continued to fight the construction and operation of the dams for generations.
“As the full system of dams and reservoirs was being developed, Tribes and other interests protested and sounded the alarm on the deleterious effects the dams would have on salmon and aquatic species, which the government, at times, acknowledged,” the report said. “However, the government afforded little, if any, consideration to the devastation the dams would bring to Tribal communities, including to their cultures, sacred sites, economies, and homes.”
The report was accompanied by the announcement of a new task force to coordinate salmon-recovery efforts across federal agencies.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Pacific and Caribbean Island Nations Call for the First Universal Carbon Levy on International Shipping Emissions
- How Johns Hopkins Scientists and Neighborhood Groups Model Climate Change in Baltimore
- Federal Regulators Waited 7 Months to Investigate a Deadly Home Explosion Above a Gassy Coal Mine. Residents Want Action
- Small twin
- Spoilers! What to know about that big twist in 'The Diplomat' finale
- Crooks up their game in pig butchering scams to steal money
- Takeaways from AP’s report on how immigration transformed a Minnesota farm town
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- CeeDee Lamb injury update: Cowboys WR exits vs. Falcons with shoulder injury
Ranking
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Critics Say Alabama’s $5 Billion Highway Project Is a ‘Road to Nowhere,’ but the State Is Pushing Forward
- Cheese village, Santa's Workshop: Aldi to debut themed Advent calendars for holidays
- Then & Now: How immigration reshaped the look of a Minnesota farm town
- Small twin
- Florida’s convicted killer clown released from prison for the murder of her husband’s then-wife
- I went to the 'Today' show and Hoda Kotb's wellness weekend. It changed me.
- Apple's AI update is here: What to know about Apple Intelligence, top features
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Lifting the Veil on Tens of Billions in Oil Company Payments to Governments
A presidential campaign unlike any other ends on Tuesday. Here’s how we got here
Adding up the Public Health Costs of Using Coal to Make Steel
Travis Hunter, the 2
Arkansas chief justice election won’t change conservative tilt of court, but will make history
Tucker Carlson is back in the spotlight, again. What message does that send?
Pacific and Caribbean Island Nations Call for the First Universal Carbon Levy on International Shipping Emissions