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Commentaries and editorials

Trump Revokes
Columbia Basin Salmon Agreement

by Matthew Weaver
Capital Press, June 12, 2025

"I hope there's a lesson learned there."
-- Kurt Miller, CEO of the Northwest Public Power Association

Lower Monumental Dam. It is one of four dams on the lower Snake River targeted by special interests to be breached. (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) President Donald Trump has signed a presidential memorandum revoking the Biden administration's "Restoring Healthy and Abundant Salmon, Steelhead and Other Native Fish Populations in the Columbia River Basin" memorandum, calling it a stop to "the green agenda" in the basin.

Trump's action will likely be challenged in court, and lead Tribes and environmental groups to resume litigation that was stayed by Biden's memorandum.

Trump's new memorandum directs the U.S. Secretary of the Energy, Secretary of the Interior, Secretary of Commerce and Assistant Secretary of the Army For Civil Works to withdraw from agreements stemming from Biden's "misguided" executive action, including the December 2023 memorandum of understanding filed in connection with related litigation.

The memorandum of understanding was between the federal government; the states of Oregon and Washington; the Nez Perce Tribe; the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation; the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation; the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation and several environmental non-government organizations.

That agreement at the time was viewed as a pathway to breaching the four lower Snake River dams -- Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite dams.

"The specified agencies will coordinate with the Council on Environmental Quality to review and revise environmental review processes related to the matters in the MOU, save Federal funds, and withdraw from the MOU," the White House said in a fact sheet.

Also according to the fact sheet:

Kurt Miller, executive director and CEO of the Northwest Public Power Association, called Trump's decision a "necessary course correction."

"We're really pleased to see what was a really imbalanced agreement that threatened to harm millions of ag folks and electric utility customers going away," Miller told the Capital Press.

Miller, then the executive director of Northwest RiverPartners, was one of several regional stakeholders acting as intervenor defendants who felt the federal mediation process under the Biden administration ignored agricultural and electrical utility interests.

"It was inevitable," Miller said of Trump's revocation of the MOU. "The last administration forced this agreement through without any sort of collaboration. They left out perhaps the most important group of stakeholders: the people who would be harmed if the dams went away ... They literally met secretly, without telling us, and then dropped the (December 2023) announcement on us just barely before it went public. When we suggested changes, they accepted no changes. It was a really bad way to try to achieve something in this region, and I hope there's a lesson learned there. We want some sort of durable resolution, but forcing it through without including our stakeholders, it wasn't going to last."

Legal challenges expected

Trump's decision is at face value a "repudiation" of the commitments and agreements that allowed for a continued stay of the 2020 Columbia River System Operations biological opinion environmental impact statement litigation, recognized by Oregon U.S. Federal District Court Judge Michael Simon, said Darryll Olsen, board representative for the Columbia-Snake River Irrigators Association.

"The Trump Memorandum ensures that active litigation will resume, and the Tribes will be forced to bring to bare resource protections that they view are provided to them under the Stevens Treaties," Olsen said. "This action will likely backfire on the Federal Administration, enraging the Tribes, environmental groups, and Oregon-Washington State elected leadership."

The plaintiffs blasted Trump's action.

"The Trump administration is turning its back on an unprecedented opportunity to support a thriving Columbia Basin -- and ignoring the extinction crisis facing our salmon," Amanda Goodin, senior attorney for Earthjustice, a nonprofit law firm with more than 200 lawyers who represent environmental groups, said in a press release. "Unfortunately, this short-sighted decision to renege on this important agreement is just the latest in a series of anti-government and anti-science actions coming from the Trump administration. This administration may be giving up on our salmon, but we will keep fighting to prevent extinction and realize win-win solutions for the region."

"I think there is a way forward here that doesn't involve the courtroom," Miller said.

He wonders if all the competing interests can get together to discuss solutions that don't try to "destroy our critical hydro-infrastructure," and said the public power association's members want to discuss ways to support more Tribal fishery operations and programs.

"Are the plaintiffs willing to look at something that doesn't involve diminishing hydropower output or eliminating the dams?" he asked. "If they are, then I really believe there's an opportunity to do something good."

Related Pages:
Vilsack on Snake River Dams: Ag 'Well-Represented' in Mediation by Matthew Weaver, Capital Press, 8/1/23


Matthew Weaver
Trump Revokes Columbia Basin Salmon Agreement
Capital Press, June 12, 2025

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