• Will Columbia-Snake River Salmon Be Saved?

    Leanne Roulson, WDAFS president, says if fish numbers continue to decline, her group has determined the plan isn’t aggressive enough to save them.
    “We’re all about preserving and conserving the fisheries resource, while the political aspects of it are not really relevant to the stances we take or the opinions we put out there.”

    Read the post, click here…

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  • New powerhouse start that will deliver 365 days of free energy from public water for NID.

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  • By Jeff Barnard
    Grants Pass, Oregon (AP) 6-09

    Two top members of President Obama’s environmental team were in the Northwest during late May but pointedly not speaking about the tense conflict between salmon and hydroelectric dams in the Columbia Basin.

    NOAA chief Jane Lubchenco and White House Council on Environmental Quality chairwoman Nancy Sutley attended closed-doors sessions in Portland with scientists, government officials and Indian tribes, and were scheduled on to tour one of the lower Snake River dams in Eastern Washington that conservationists and some Indian tribes want removed to restore endangered salmon.

    article…

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  • 06.21.2009

    A scientist goes looking for a shrub and discovers a nearly lost world of tidal beavers thriving in a rare habitat in the Skagit Delta. His discovery raises questions for salmon-recovery projects based on incomplete information — likened to a kind of ecological amnesia about what was here before.

    ARTICLE

    06.04.2009

    Indian Country News

    Obama officials come to NW to learn salmon issues

    By Jeff Barnard

    Grants Pass, Oregon (AP) 6-09

    Two top members of President Obama’s environmental team were in the Northwest during late May but pointedly not speaking about the tense conflict between salmon and hydroelectric dams in the Columbia Basin.

    NOAA chief Jane Lubchenco and White House Council on Environmental Quality chairwoman Nancy Sutley attended closed-doors sessions in Portland with scientists, government officials and Indian tribes, and were scheduled on to tour one of the lower Snake River dams in Eastern Washington that conservationists and some Indian tribes want removed to restore endangered salmon.

    article…

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  • Management Team / Documentation…

    http://www.yubaaccordrmt.com

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  • by Beverly Ogle

    Tasmam Koyom Cultural Foundation, Paynes Creek

    A Salmon Story in it’s truest Spirit.


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  • 07.06.2009

    Salmon begin long journey back to Yakima Basin

    Full Story

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  • April 23, 2009
    Clara motioned that the Maidu Summit Consortium offer its full support to Bill Jacobsen and Tyrone Gore (Sierra Salmon Alliance) to continue their efforts for the consideration of Traditional Cultural Properties (TCPs) in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission re-licensing of the Yuba-Bear Hydroelectric Project (FERC 2266). The Summit authorizes the Sierra Salmon Alliance to speak on their behalf in this process. Ben seconded the motion. Four member organizations approved.

    The Maidu Summit is a consortium of Mountain Maidu groups composed of two recognized rancherias (Greenville and Susanville), two petitioning tribes (Tsi’Akim and United Maidu Nation), three non-profit organizations (Tasmam Koyom Cultural Foundation, Maidu Cultural and Development Group, and Roundhouse Council), and two Indian organizations (Maiduk We’ye and Mountain Maidu Preservation Association).

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  • The Agenda of Sierra Salmon Alliance:

    SALMON PASSAGE
    FERC RELICENSING LEADERSHIP
    COMMUNITY & TRIBAL COALITION BUILDING
    YOUTH MENTORSHIP PROGRAM
    WATERSCAPE PLANNING
    ENDANGERED NATIVE PLANT RESTORATION
    HYDROPOWER REFORM POLICY DEVELOPMENT

    Alliances

    Just because we are in the Sierra’s does not mean that tribal and community people can not participate. Our call is about
    everyone. Every community has something to “call back,” that which has been lost. From prairie dogs to red-legged frogs, we can help each other.

    We have drifted too far from Creator. It is time for all people, of all color, to acknowledge that we are people of the earth.
    As we know this, we begin our collective walk toward meaning, toward sharing our unique gift of self, and realizing our highest vision of life.

    Saving Sierra Salmon grows from a region on the map of the earth where people have joined together to share their voice
    in the FERC relicensing process. We hope to connect our voice with your voice. Let us put a pin on the map of where we are, so that we may connect our collective vision.

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  • Yakima Tribe Reintroduces Salmon

    Full Story

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