Federal funds jump for salmon recovery
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
BOISE (AP) - Idaho's share of the federal funding available
for salmon recovery efforts could be boosted by a million dollars, Idaho
Sen. Mike Crapo announced Thursday.
Crapo said the decision by Senate budget writers to increase
Idaho's share to $6 million bodes well for future salmon recovery efforts.
The Republican junior senator introduced the legislation
earlier this month as a way to ensure Idaho is included in future federal
salmon recovery funding efforts.
The Senate Appropriations Committee voted to increase it for the next
fiscal year, but it still needs full Senate approval.
Crapo, chairman of the Senate's Fisheries, Wildlife and Water Subcommittee,
said the bill "makes Idaho a full partner with Oregon, Washington,
California and Alaska" in regional salmon recovery programs.
The money will benefit projects ranging from tribal hatcheries to stream
diversions along tributaries of the Salmon River.
"It was only two years ago that Idaho became eligible to share in
federal salmon recovery dollars, despite having more than half the habitat
for Northwest Chinook salmon," Crapo said in a statement.
The Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund was initially established under
the Clinton administration in 2000, improving habitat in the lower Columbia
River region but leaving out the headwaters in Idaho. Four of the 26 salmon
populations on the endangered species list spawn in Idaho's Snake River.
However, Idaho was not included initially because it is not a Pacific
shore state, as are California, Oregon, Washington and Alaska, which all
share a total of $90 million each year. An additional $10 million goes
to American Indian tribes.
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