This article discusses two landmark judicial decisions of 1994: Idaho Department of Fish & Game v. National Marine Fisheries Service and Northwest Resource Information Center v. Northwest Power Planning Council. Despite agency attempts to restore depleted salmon runs in the Columbia River system caused by hydroelectric development and operations, both decisions held that the agencies violated the law by not acting fast enough or going far enough in restoration efforts. Professor Blumm explains how the decisions and their aftermath could have a significant effect on efforts to preserve and restore beleaguered Columbia River salmon runs
In the mid-nineteenth century, as the pace of American westward expansion accelerated and tension be...
In the U.S. portion of the Columbia Basin, salmon populations are five times lower than 150 years ag...
This article criticized the Idaho district court\u27s resolution of the Nez Perce Tribe\u27s water r...
This article, part of a series of articles on the effect of the Northwest Power Act (NPA) on restori...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
On the eve of what would become a series of listings of Columbia Basin salmon under the Endangered S...
After rejecting three federal biological opinions (BiOps) for favoring federal Columbia Basin hydroe...
In an article published two years ago, one of us made the claim that the federal agencies in charge ...
Salmon remain the cultural and economic soul of the Pacific Northwest, a species whose very life cyc...
Salmon remain the cultural and economic soul of the Pacific Northwest, a species whose very life cyc...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
Salmon are perhaps the quintessential indicator species for water quality, as they require both suff...
This brief essay reviews the implementation of two prominent decisions interpreting the Northwest Po...
Snake River salmon, historically constituting the most abundant salmon runs in the Columbia River Ba...
In the U.S. portion of the Columbia Bassin, salmon populations are five times lower than 150 years a...
In the mid-nineteenth century, as the pace of American westward expansion accelerated and tension be...
In the U.S. portion of the Columbia Basin, salmon populations are five times lower than 150 years ag...
This article criticized the Idaho district court\u27s resolution of the Nez Perce Tribe\u27s water r...
This article, part of a series of articles on the effect of the Northwest Power Act (NPA) on restori...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
On the eve of what would become a series of listings of Columbia Basin salmon under the Endangered S...
After rejecting three federal biological opinions (BiOps) for favoring federal Columbia Basin hydroe...
In an article published two years ago, one of us made the claim that the federal agencies in charge ...
Salmon remain the cultural and economic soul of the Pacific Northwest, a species whose very life cyc...
Salmon remain the cultural and economic soul of the Pacific Northwest, a species whose very life cyc...
One of the nation’s most longstanding environmental-energy conflicts concerns the plight of numerous...
Salmon are perhaps the quintessential indicator species for water quality, as they require both suff...
This brief essay reviews the implementation of two prominent decisions interpreting the Northwest Po...
Snake River salmon, historically constituting the most abundant salmon runs in the Columbia River Ba...
In the U.S. portion of the Columbia Bassin, salmon populations are five times lower than 150 years a...
In the mid-nineteenth century, as the pace of American westward expansion accelerated and tension be...
In the U.S. portion of the Columbia Basin, salmon populations are five times lower than 150 years ag...
This article criticized the Idaho district court\u27s resolution of the Nez Perce Tribe\u27s water r...