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Commentaries and editorials

Nine New Bills Filed to Reverse Biden
Administration's Snake River Dams Agreement

by Annette Cary
Tri-City Herald, May 15, 2024

"We will not let radicals dictate to us our way of life and we will not let the dams be breached."
-- U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Washington

Well over 100 people rallied Monday night at Howard Amon Park in Richland in opposition to breaching the four lower Snake River dams in Eastern Washington. (Annette Cary photo) Pasco, WA -- Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., has filed a package of nine bills to reverse parts of a new agreement that he sees as the de facto breaching of the lower Snake River dams and to remind the White House who has authority over the dams.

"I have consistently reminded the Biden administration that the authority over the lower Snake River dams remains in the hands of Congress," Newhouse said.

"This package is not only a staunch reinforcement of that fact, but a testament to our commitment to protect these critical pieces of infrastructure," he said.

The package would prohibit breaching the four Snake River hydroelectric dams in Eastern Washington if certain power production replacement goals, including for reliability and consumer costs, could not be met or if breaching would make the river less navigable for barging or increase the cost of moving products on the river.

It also would give the Bonneville Power Administration authority over changes to how much water is spilled over the dams rather than used to produce electricity, require acoustic deterrence of sea lions feeding on salmon near the Bonneville Dam and find alternate ways to pay for fish and wildlife programs now paid for by users of electricity from the dams. The agreement announced by the Biden administration in December halts mediation over the Columbia River System Operations, including the lower Snake River dams for up to a decade and provides more than $1 billion for wild fish restoration.

The agreement was negotiated behind closed doors by the White House Council on Environmental Quality with the states of Washington and Oregon and four Northwest tribes.

The agreement does not call for breaching the four Eastern Washington dams from from Ice Harbor Dam near Pasco to Lower Granite Dam near Lewiston, Idaho.

But it mentions breaching 68 times, Newhouse pointed out. That makes clear the goal of the administration, despite Congress holding authority over the dams, he said.

Newhouse also is concerned that requiring more water to be spilled over the dams could make the dams functionally useless and cause energy prices to skyrocket.

Spill helps juvenile salmon pass the dams unless so much water is spilled that gases in the water -- including oxygen, carbon dioxide and nitrogen -- kill the fish.

The package of bills proposed by Newhouse has cosponsors from several Republican representatives in Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana.

Various bills in the package also have support from organizations that include the Public Power Council, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, the Port of Benton, Cowlitz PUD and the Pacific Northwest Waterways Association.

Should Newhouse succeed in moving the bills through the House, they could face a tough road in the Democrat-majority Senate.

Here are what the bills proposed to protect the lower Snake River dams would do:

The other two bills are resolutions saying that hydropower is vital to energy development and disapproving of the agreement negotiated by the Biden administration.

Republican cosponsors for some or all of the bills include Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington; Cliff Bentz of Oregon; Russ Fulcher of Idaho; and Matt Rosendale and Ryan Zinke, both of Montana.


Annette Cary covers Hanford, energy, the environment, science and health for the Tri-City Herald. She's been a news reporter for more than 30 years in the Pacific Northwest.
Nine New Bills Filed to Reverse Biden Administration's Snake River Dams Agreement
Tri-City Herald, May 15, 2024

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