Lower Columbia Congressional Reps Tout Securing $900K For Sea Lion Control

THE FOLLOWING IS A PRESS RELEASE FROM REP. KURT SCHRADER AND REP. JAIME HERRERA BEUTLER

U.S. Representatives Kurt Schrader (D-OR-05) and Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA-03) are pleased to announce their joint Community Project Funding request to protect endangered salmon, steelhead and other native fish species within the Columbia River system from sea lion predation, has been approved for $892,000.

The House Appropriations Committee — Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies included the funding request as part of its Fiscal Year 2022 Appropriations Bill. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife is the recipient and would use the funding on equipment and related needs to remove pinnipeds in the Columbia River and its tributaries. 

A SEA LION CHOWS DOWN ON A SALMON OR STEELHEAD AT WILLAMETTE FALLS. WHILE THE STATES OF OREGON AND WASHINGTON, ALONG WITH COLUMBIA BASIN TRIBES, HAVE SECURED FEDERAL AUTHORIZATION TO REMOVE SEVERAL HUNDRED CALIFORNIA AND STELLER SEA LIONS, AND HAVE IN FACT EUTHANIZED 26 SINCE THAT APPROVAL TOOK EFFECT, EFFORTS ARE HAMPERED IN PART BY NOT HAVING EQUIPMENT TO HANDLE THE ANIMALS IN LOCATIONS BEYOND BONNEVILLE DAM AND WILLAMETTE FALLS. FUNDING THAT REPS. SCHRADER AND HERRERA BEUTLER SECURED IN A SUBCOMMITTEE’S APPROPRIATIONS BILL MUST STILL BE PASSED BY THE FULL HOUSE AND SENATE AND BE SIGNED BY PRESIDENT BIDEN. (ODFW)

The need for sea lion removal has sharply increased in recent years, as a record number of California and Steller sea lions come to the Columbia, Willamette and Snake Rivers, posing an extreme threat to struggling salmon, steelhead, sturgeon and other fish in the waterways. NOAA Fisheries says sea lions especially prey on adult salmon and steelhead migrating upriver from the ocean to Bonneville Dam, Willamette Falls and other tributaries to the Columbia River, further threatening the growth of native fish populations.

“The record number of California and Steller sea lions we are seeing in the Columbia River and tributaries is alarming. They continue to threaten our native fish populations by preying on our salmon and steelhead, which takes a large toll on our Pacific Northwest ecosystem and economy,” Rep. Schrader said. “Bonneville Power Administration ratepayers and my constituents in Oregon’s 5th District pay hundreds of millions of dollars annually as part of the largest mitigation program in the country for threatened and endangered species. While we have made inroads with the crisis in recent years by changing laws and finding creative solutions, more work needs to be done to save our iconic salmon. The funding Congresswoman Herrera Beutler and I secured through our request would give our agencies more tools to keep working toward the ultimate goal of permanently ending the sea lion threat.”

“For too long, our Northwest fish numbers have been decimated by a growing population of sea lions moving into our region’s rivers to gorge on salmon, steelhead, and sturgeon. That’s why I worked with my colleague, Rep. Schrader, to get our sea lion removal legislation signed into law to stem the out-of-control predation of our native fish runs,” Rep. Herrera Beutler said. “With sea lion control measures now in motion, I’m pleased we were able to include funding to implement these enhanced efforts and give our fish runs a fighting chance to survive and thrive for generations to come.”  

Getting their Community Project Funding request approved in the House Appropriations Subcommittee is the latest action taken by Reps. Schrader and Herrera Beutler to address the ongoing sea lion predation problem in the Pacific Northwest. In recent years, the Representatives led the Oregon and Washington delegations and local stakeholders to amend the Marine Mammal Protection Act, which now allows wildlife managers and tribes to remove problem sea lions who are congregating around Bonneville Dam and Willamette Falls and tributaries in the area that are putting salmon and steelhead runs in jeopardy.  

But addressing the sea lion predation problem is just one part of an integrative salmon management strategy that involves other state, federal and tribal partners. The whole Pacific Northwest community must also continue working together on habitat restoration, increasing water supply and appropriately managing fisheries and hatcheries.