19th Annual Report of the Pacific Northwest Electric Power and
Conservation Planning Council
September 1999 | document 99-14
SUBMITTED TO THE
COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES
UNITED STATES SENATE
COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
AND
COMMITTEE ON RESOURCES
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
October 1, 1998 through September 30, 1999
Letter: Judith A. Johansen
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer of Bonneville Power
Administration
September 1999
Dear Citizens of the Pacific Northwest:
As we enter the new millennium, the Pacific Northwest Electric Power
Planning and Conservation Act enters its 20th year. Through the Act,
the governors of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington continue to have
valuable tools to use in addressing regional fish, wildlife and energy
issues. The Northwest Power Planning Council, authorized by the Act
and created by the four states in 1981, gives citizens a voice and a
forum, and ultimately significant influence, over the investment of
Bonneville Power Administration revenues in energy, fish and wildlife
initiatives.
In this 19th annual report, we discuss our major activities during the
past year. The report is brief because details of our efforts are
provided in Council issue papers and other documents.
Much has changed in 19 years. The electricity industry is being
deregulated and opened to market competition, an important shift that has
unique implications in the Northwest because a major portion of our
electricity comes from the federal hydropower system. The Power
Planning Council is helping the region and its decisionmakers understand
and prepare for changes in the electricity industry.
In 1999, the Council completed several important reviews requested by
Congress to help improve public accountability of fish and wildlife
expenditures. These included a review of the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers? capital construction projects at mainstem dams, a review of
Bonneville's reimbursable fish and wildlife programs, and a review of
artificial production of fish in the Columbia River Basin. This is
the third year in which the Independent Scientific Review Panel (ISRP),
responding to a 1996 amendment to the Northwest Power Act, has reviewed
projects proposed for funding with Bonneville ratepayer funds through the
Council's Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program. And also
this year, the four Northwest Governors asked the Council to begin annual
reporting on the progress of efforts funded through the fish and wildlife
program to assure that Northwest electricity ratepayers are receiving the
best results for their considerable investment.
The complexity of fish, wildlife and energy issues, and the potential
impacts of large-scale change on the environment and economy of the
Pacific Northwest, underscore the importance of the Council's role in
the region. The Council continues to provide high-quality, objective
analysis of energy issues, oversee the region's largest fish and
wildlife mitigation and recovery program, and inform and involve the
public in decision-making.
Sincerely,
Todd Maddock
Chair
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE NORTHWEST POWER PLANNING COUNCIL
POWER ISSUES
A. Adapting to the changing utility world
1. The Northwest Energy
Review Transition Board
2. Bonneville's
subscription process for the 2001-2006 rate case
3. Power planning
4. Energy conservation and
renewable resources
FISH AND WILDLIFE ISSUES
A. Columbia River Basin fish and wildlife
decision-making
1. Review of major capital
improvements for salmon passage at mainstem dams
2. Review of artificial
production of fish in the Columbia River Basin
3. Review of the
Bonneville Power Administration's reimbursable account programs
4. The Multi-Species
Framework Project
5. The Columbia River
Basin Forum
6. Preparing for major
policy decisions
B. The Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife
Program
1. Annual project review
2. Fiscal Year 1999 and
draft Fiscal Year 2000 work plans
C. Other fish and wildlife initiatives in
Fiscal Year 1999
1. Caspian tern relocation
2. Ocean conditions
symposium
PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT
Fiscal Years 2000 and 2001 Council Budget
overviews
More Information
Council Members and Offices
THE NORTHWEST POWER
PLANNING COUNCIL
The Council is an agency of the states of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington, and was created as an interstate compact agency by the
legislatures of the four states following President Jimmy Carter's
approval of the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation
Act in December 1980. The Council's first meeting was in April 1981.
The Northwest Power Act gives the Council three distinct
responsibilities: 1) to assure the region an adequate, efficient,
economical and reliable electric power supply; 2) to prepare a program to
protect, mitigate and enhance fish and wildlife of the Columbia River
Basin that have been affected by the construction and operation of
hydropower dams; and 3) to inform the Pacific Northwest public about
energy issues and involve the public in decision-making.
This annual report is organized around the Council's three key
responsibilities.
There are eight Council members ? two from each state. Council
members are appointed by the Governors to three-year terms. A list of
Council members and their office locations is at the end of this report.
POWER ISSUES
A. Adapting to the changing utility
world
1. The Northwest Energy Review
Transition Board
The Council is adapting its power planning mission to continuing
changes in the utility industry, changes that primarily are the result of
a trend toward greater market orientation, increased competition and less
regulation. This trend is the product of a number of changes including the
low price of natural gas, improvements in gas-fired generation technology,
increasing access to transmission lines, increasing competition in
wholesale power sales and the beginning of competition among power
suppliers at the retail level.
These trends can be beneficial in many respects, but also cause some
concern. For example, competition could mean that consumers have more
choices and greater flexibility to tailor their electricity purchases to
their needs. Some fear that competition, unless implemented correctly,
will lead to higher rates for some in the Northwest. Competition also may
discourage investments in conservation, or any other resource that is more
expensive than the market price of power, may shift costs unfairly from
one class of customers to another, and may impact the reliability of power
services.
To address these concerns, the governors of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington convened in 1996 the Comprehensive Review of the Northwest
Energy System. After approximately a year of intense meetings and
discussion, the Comprehensive Review Steering Committee proposed a set of
recommendations. The governors then appointed the Northwest Energy Review
Transition Board to oversee refinement and implementation of those
recommendations. The Transition Board members are John Etchart, Montana
Council member; Todd Maddock, Council chairman and an Idaho member; Tom
Karier, Washington Council member; and John Savage of the Oregon Office of
Energy, representing Oregon. The Power Planning Council provides staffing
to the Transition Board.
In 1999, the Transition Board focused on two issues: developing
proposals for increased access to, and regulation of, federal transmission
lines, and drafting a contingent cost recovery mechanism for the
Bonneville Power Administration. In these efforts, the Transition Board
has provided a regional forum to address and support work by congressional
staff, and other parties who are addressing these issues at the national
level, and will continue to work on them as the legislative process
proceeds.
a. Transmission
To address a recommendation of the Comprehensive Review that Bonneville
be separated into separate transmission and generation organizations, the
Transition Board adopted 11 recommendations for implementing Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission jurisdiction over Bonneville's vast system
of high-voltage transmission lines. These recommendations propose specific
changes in the Federal Power Act and Bonneville's organic statutes
regarding FERC jurisdiction. They are intended to create federal oversight
of Bonneville's transmission that is similar to FERC's regulation of
privately owned transmission lines while at the same time recognizing and
accommodating the ways in which Bonneville and its situation in the region
are different than FERC-jurisdictional utilities. The purpose is to ensure
open, non-discriminatory transmission access that will support a
competitive wholesale power market.
In a related development, in May 1999 FERC issued a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking that calls for regional transmission organizations (RTOs) to be
in place around the country by the end of 2001. FERC did not specify how
these organizations should be structured ? as for-profit or
not-for-profit transmission companies or as independent system operators
? but stressed that they should be independent, ensure a fair market and
assume responsibility for system reliability. While FERC addresses the
role of non-jurisdictional transmission owners, including a specific
discussion of Bonneville's unique circumstances, its requirements for
jurisdictional utilities are more specific. The Council intends to work
with interests in the region, characterized by a significant percentage of
publicly owned transmission, to develop a constructive response to FERC's
call for the formation of RTOs.
b. Contingent cost recovery
In developing its recommendations regarding transmission, the
Transition Board noted that Bonneville is subject to uncertainties in its
costs and its markets such that the agency might not be able to recover
all of its costs or ensure the security of its third-party debt. An
important goal of the Comprehensive Review and, thus, the Transition
Board, is to align the benefits and risks of
access to federal power. The Board believes
this is particularly critical when access to federal power is coveted but,
of necessity, limited. Bonneville's current subscription proposal leaves
the possibility, albeit small, that transmission customers who are not
able to benefit from federal power will be called upon to help meet
Bonneville's power costs through surcharges on transmission rates while
power customers still pay less than market power rates. Were that to
occur, it would be both unfair and adverse
to the region's political cohesiveness. The Board believes the
chances of this occurring should be minimized to the greatest extent
practicable.
The Board believes that the use of transmission charges as part of
contingent cost recovery should be a last resort and limited. It has
proposed that FERC review transmission surcharges proposed by Bonneville.
Those surcharges would recover no more than $100 million in any year, up
to a cumulative total of $600 million. The surcharge could be imposed only
if Bonneville had fully utilized the authority available under Section
4(h)(10)(c) of the Northwest Power Act. It could also be implemented only
if Bonneville were implementing or had implemented a cost-based rate
adjustment mechanism that would bring power rates to the lower of:
(1) a level substantially equivalent to the rates paid by those who have
not been able to purchase from Bonneville, or (2) a level necessary to
restore reserves to a point that will ensure a desired certainty of
Treasury repayment. These calculations should take into account the
effects of any cost reductions achieved through Bonneville's cost
management efforts. The Transition Board's draft proposal provides that
any transmission surcharge be regarded as a loan from the transmission
business line to the power business line, along with repayment conditions
and interest provisions.
2. Bonneville's subscription process
for the 2001-2006 rate case
Responding to another recommendation of the Comprehensive Review,
Bonneville has proposed to sell its power by subscription during the next
rate period. The goals of the subscription strategy are to ensure that
Bonneville is able to meet its financial obligations, thereby helping
secure the long-term benefits of Bonneville power for the region, while
spreading the benefits of the Federal Columbia River Power System as
broadly as possible, with special attention to residential and rural
customers in the Northwest. Bonneville hopes the subscription process will
allow the agency to fulfil its obligations to mitigate the impact of the
hydropower system on fish and wildlife. Through the subscription strategy,
Bonneville also intends to provide incentives for the development of
conservation and renewable energy.
As it has become increasingly likely that Bonneville will be an
attractive supplier of power over the next several years, the issues
surrounding subscription have shifted to concerns regarding the allocation
of federal power among different customer groups. A successful
subscription process is critical for Bonneville. The Council and
Transition Board have been monitoring development of the subscription
process and will be working over the coming months to help ensure its
success.
3. Power planning
Reliability study
Recent studies of the Northwest's power system loads and resources
indicate that in some future months the demand for electricity could
outstrip both the capability of the existing resources within the region
and the ability to import additional power. This situation is not new, but
the problem could be exacerbated by increasing competition in the industry
and continued growth in demand for power. In the past, when utilities were
less subject to competition, utilities acquired new power plants to
provide an industry-standard level of reliable service ? including
reserve generation and an adequate transmission and distribution system.
Regulators allowed utilities to recover these costs in rates ? even for
facilities that might be used only during occasional periods of high
demand. Today, wholesale power supply is dictated largely by market
conditions, many independent power suppliers ? without captive customer
bases ? have entered the market, and it is unclear whether
industry-standard reliability can be maintained. In a competitive market,
many utilities are reluctant to include costs in their rates that might
make them uncompetitive. There may be little incentive to build new power
plants to serve infrequent periods of higher than normal loads or forced
outages of some generating facilities. These concerns are exacerbated in
the Pacific Northwest, where we get most of our power from hydroelectric
dams ? a supply than can be highly variable from one year ? and season
? to the next. Adding to these concerns are proposals for significant
changes in river operations that are being contemplated for fish and
wildlife recovery efforts.
The Power Planning Council has initiated a study to address these
concerns. Initially, the Council's study is focusing on refining the
analysis of future conditions to better define the likelihood and extent
of the reliability problem. Using a computer model of the entire West
Coast electricity market, the Council will assess the likely market
response ? for example, what level of resource development would we
expect market incentives to induce? Can the hydro system be used more
flexibly without violating fish and wildlife flow and reservoir elevation
targets? Transmission system constraints and the role of demand-side
resources such as interruptibility and peak shaving measures also will be
considered. If it appears the market response to potential reliability
problems is not adequate, the Council will identify policy alternatives,
including market incentives and potential regulatory actions.
A committee of electricity industry experts is advising the Council.
The study should be completed in the fall.
4. Energy conservation and renewable
resources
Regional Technical Forum
Responding to another recommendation of the Comprehensive Review, in
April 1999 the Council approved the formation of the Regional Technical
Forum (RTF). The RTF is an advisory committee of between 12 and 15 persons
who will develop evaluation protocols and track the region's progress in
acquiring energy conservation and renewable resources. The Forum also will
develop new approaches to achieving conservation savings and prepare an
annual report that profiles successful conservation and renewable energy
projects. In addition, the RTF will provide recommendations to Bonneville
regarding implementation of the Conservation and Renewable Resource rate
discount. Bonneville will be providing a limited rate discount for
customer investment in conservation and renewables. The RTF's
recommendations will include a list of recommended measures and savings
estimates and criteria for renewables projects. The RTF will track
implementation of conservation and renewables associated with the
discount. Members of the Forum were selected for their technical
expertise. The Forum's budget will be supplied by the Council in the
first year and shared by the Council and the Bonneville Power
Administration in future years.
FISH AND WILDLIFE ISSUES
A. Columbia River Basin fish and
wildlife decision-making
The Council is working with state, federal and tribal governments to
improve the coordination of fish and wildlife mitigation and recovery
planning, and decision-making, while at the same time implementing and
preparing to amend its own Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program.
Efforts are under way to improve the coordination of existing fish and
wildlife mitigation and recovery processes and also to discuss
alternatives for improving decision-making and governance in the future.
As well, in July 1999, the Governors of Idaho, Montana, Oregon and
Washington asked the Council to prepare an annual report that provides an
accounting and assessment of Bonneville's fish and wildlife
expenditures. The Governors asked that the initial report also document,
to the degree possible, past expenditures, program successes and failures.
Through the annual report on the program, the Governors intend that the
region be assured that the best results are being achieved for the
significant investment in the Columbia River Basin.
Here is a brief review of major efforts the Council undertook or
participated in this year:
1. Review of major capital improvements
for salmon passage at mainstem dams
In the Conference Report on the Fiscal Year 1998 Energy and Water
Development Appropriations Act, Congress directed the Council, with
assistance from the Independent Scientific Advisory Board (ISAB), to
review the mainstem capital construction program of the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers at hydroelectric projects on the Columbia and Snake rivers. In
the review, the Council and the ISAB evaluated the technical need for
various fish-passage strategies at the dams. In its review of the Corps?
program, the ISAB reported, in part:
"Regional salmon restoration plans and their implementation by the
Corps can benefit from more biologically driven decisions addressing a
broader diversity of life history types and species. Other grounds for
decisions, such as the desire to retain familiar technologies,
politically driven choices of projects and sites, and narrow concepts of
the species and stocks to be protected, need to be exchanged for tests
based on the criteria of biological effectiveness. Some of the projects
we reviewed met these criteria very well, although others did not.
Common principles from our review of projects need to be incorporated
into revised plans. A process for developing and incorporating new
biological and ecological insights of value for fish passage should be
part of the fish passage decision process."
The report is available from the Council (Document ISAB-99-4).
2. Review of artificial production of
fish in the Columbia River Basin
In the same conference report, Congress asked the Council, with the
assistance of the ISAB, to review all federally funded artificial
production programs in the basin and report to Congress with "a
formal recommendation for a coordinated policy for the future operation of
federally funded hatcheries" and a recommendation for "how to
obtain such a coordinated policy." The Council and the Scientific
Review Team, which included four ISAB members, two additional scientists
with expertise in fish production and a scientist from the Council staff,
completed a draft set of recommendations for public comment in May 1999.
The draft, document ISAB 99-7, is
available from the Council or at the Council's web site. In general, the
Council recommends that the purposes and rationale for fish hatcheries in
the Columbia basin be reviewed over the next three years in the context of
current scientific thinking about the role of artificial production for
both harvest purposes and to rebuild naturally spawning runs. The Council
planned to submit its recommendations, which are based on an application
of scientific and management principles, to Congress in October.
3. Review of the Bonneville Power
Administration's reimbursable account programs
In the Fiscal Year 1999 Conference Report on Energy and Water
Development Appropriations, Congress asked the Independent Scientific
Review Panel, which conducts an annual review of projects proposed for
funding by Bonneville through the Council's fish and wildlife program, to
begin an annual review of programs that are reimbursed in whole or in part
by Bonneville. These include projects funded through the Corps of
Engineers (fish passage facilities at dams, wildlife mitigation and
hatcheries) and the Bureau of Reclamation (the Leavenworth hatchery
complex), and by Bonneville outside the Council's program, such as the
Lower Snake River Compensation Program. The purpose of the annual review
is to determine the consistency of the reimbursable projects with the
scientific criteria included in Section 4(h)(10)(D) of the Northwest Power
Act, the section that directed the Council to create the ISRP in 1996. In
general, the section directs the ISRP to determine whether projects
proposed for funding through the Council's program are based on sound
science and have provisions for monitoring and evaluation. With this
review, all Columbia River projects funded in part or in whole by
Bonneville will be subject to annual scientific review. This year, because
it was the first for the ISRP review of reimbursable programs, the panel's
report focuses on how best to structure the review in future years. The
report is available from the Council (Document ISRP
99-1).
4. The Multi-Species Framework Project
The Multi-Species Framework Project is bringing state, federal and
tribal governments together with stakeholders to review alternative
approaches to fish and wildlife policy from a basin-wide perspective. The
Framework Project responds to recent scientific advice urging emphasis on
restoring environmental conditions for multiple species, rather than
individual populations. The project is particularly timely in light of
recent Endangered Species Act listings, which cover almost the entire
Columbia River Basin and include species other than salmon. Framework
analysts and stakeholders have been working together to evaluate the
ecological and human effects of alternative policy initiatives that range
from status quo river operations to major operational changes including
breaching mainstem dams. A final report is expected in November 1999.
The Council also has been tracking the work of a Federal caucus of
river and power agencies that is preparing to make decisions on the
operation and configuration of the federal Columbia River dams as part of
the Endangered Species Act process. The caucus? work builds on several
areas of federal study, including: 1) the PATH (Plan for Analyzing and
Testing Hypotheses) analysis of the biological effects of hydropower,
which is part of the Corps of Engineers? Lower Snake River Juvenile
Salmon Migration Feasibility Study; 2) the Drawdown Regional Economic Work
Group's appraisal of the economic impacts of removing the four federal
dams on the lower Snake River, which also is part of the Corps? Snake
River Feasibility Study; and 3) a study of the effects of restoring one
million acre-feet of water in the Snake River Basin to augment flows for
salmon and steelhead migration. The caucus is cooperating with the
Multi-Species Framework Project, and will integrate land, water, hatchery
and harvest considerations in the federal analysis. Federal hydropower and
land management agencies are participating.
5. The Columbia River Basin Forum
As information is generated, the Council is participating in efforts to
coordinate state, federal and tribal policy discussions. In addition to
ongoing discussions within the Power Planning Council and federal
agencies, the Columbia River Basin Forum operates under a state, tribal
and federal agreement committing the parties to coordinate policy
development, eliminate duplicative efforts and improve the financial
administration of fish and wildlife programs. The Forum is expected to
review the information that emerges from the Multi-Species Framework
Project, the Federal Caucus and other sources, discuss policy options and
develop recommendations to decision-making bodies.
6. Preparing for major policy decisions
The results of this information-gathering and policy discussion will
inform decisions by agencies that have statutory authority regarding
Columbia River Basin fish and wildlife. These include the Power Planning
Council, the National Marine Fisheries Service and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. By the end of 1999, the Power Planning Council will
begin amending its fish and wildlife program, which guides the investment
of Bonneville Power Administration fish and wildlife revenues and other
federal hydropower actions. The Council expects to rely heavily on the
Multi-Species Framework Project analysis, any recommendations that emerge
from the Columbia River Basin Forum, and recommendations from others.
Meanwhile, in early 2000 the National Marine Fisheries Service and other
federal agencies are expected to make Endangered Species Act decisions
regarding the operation and configuration of the federal hydropower dams.
Further improvements in these processes are needed, but real progress
in coordination has occurred. The impending decisions involving the
operation and configuration of the hydropower system, and the investment
of the system's revenues, will have immense impact on the Columbia River
and its resources.
B. The Columbia River Basin Fish and
Wildlife Program
1. Annual project review
Each year in September, the Council recommends projects to the
Bonneville Power Administration to implement the Columbia River Basin Fish
and Wildlife Program. These recommendations culminate a nearly year-long
process of project proposal and review. Project proposals are reviewed by
the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority, which represents the
region's state, federal and tribal fish and wildlife agencies, and by the
Independent Scientific Review Panel, a group of 11 scientists nominated
for this specific task by the National Academy of Sciences. The Basin
Authority and the ISRP rank projects using criteria approved by the
Council, and the reviews and rankings are made available for public
comment before the Council recommends projects to Bonneville for funding.
The Basin Authority submitted its project-funding recommendations to
the Council in mid-April in its draft Fiscal Year 2000 Annual
Implementation Work Plan. Some 435 project proposals were submitted to
Bonneville for Fiscal Year 2000 funding. These were compiled by Bonneville
in a common database and then divided by the Basin Authority into
subregions and subbasins for review by watershed and non-watershed
technical work groups and by three caucuses of managers representing
anadromous fish, resident fish and wildlife. The Basin Authority
recommended projects for funding if the managers believed they met goals
established by the caucuses and the Council.
The Basin Authority recommended a budget for the coming fiscal year of
$141,126,857. While this is higher than the $127 million established for
Bonneville's direct fish and wildlife program expenses in the 1996 fish
and wildlife budget memorandum of agreement, the managers recommended the
Fiscal Year 2000 budget be augmented with money from a
contingency/inflation reserve, unobligated Fiscal Year 1998/1999 project
funds, interest on those unobligated funds, and unused capital investment
funds.
Meanwhile, the ISRP report on Fiscal Year 2000 project proposals was
completed in mid June, and a public comment period on both reports was
scheduled to last through August. The Council plans to make its Fiscal
Year 2000 funding recommendations when it meets in Spokane on
September 20 and 21.
Of the initial 435 project proposals compiled by Bonneville, some were
umbrella proposals that simply linked groups of projects together. Thus,
the ISRP reviewed a total of 397 project proposals. The panel placed each
proposal in one of five categories: 1) fund; 2) fund in part; 3) fund for
one year; 4) delay funding until deficiencies are corrected; and 5) do not
fund. The panel also identified proposals that were particularly
innovative or adequate for multi-year funding approval.
The ISRP agreed with 68 percent of the Basin Authority's
recommendations to fund projects (Basin Authority's category Tier 1) or
fund if money is available (Tier 2). The ISRP recommended delayed funding
for another 19 percent of the projects assigned by the Basin Authority to
Tier 1 or Tier 2. The recommendation to delay funding means the ISRP
identified some critical element of the project proposal that needed to be
supplied or corrected, but that overall the project likely would be sound
when that need was addressed.
In July, the Council and its staff conducted a series of meetings
around the region with project sponsors to discuss the ISRP
recommendations. The Council also planned to conduct consultations with
project sponsors, as necessary, to address concerns raised by the ISRP.
The ISRP's report (Acrobat PDF
format) is available from the Council in two volumes. Volume One provides
an overview of the ISRP's review process and the project
recommendations; Volume Two contains summary reviews of each project
including specific comments from the ISRP and the scientific peer review
group that assisted the panel.. The Basin Authority's draft Fiscal Year
Annual Implementation Work Plan is available from the Authority,
503-229-0191.
2. Fiscal Year 1999 and draft Fiscal
Year 2000 work plans
The projects recommended to Bonneville for funding each year are
compiled in a work plan. For the current fiscal year's work plan, the
Council recommended $131.4 million in projects. Of this amount, about $92
million is devoted to anadromous fish (primarily salmon and steelhead)
projects, $16 million to resident fish (those that do not spend time in
the ocean), $15 million to wildlife projects, and about $8 million is
dedicated to administrative costs.
Independent scientific review is a cornerstone of the Council's
program, albeit a relatively new one. The current fiscal year is only the
second in which the Independent Scientific Review Panel (ISRP) has made
recommendations to the Council, and the first year in which the panel
reviewed individual project proposals.
In Fiscal Year 1999, the ISRP drew the Council's attention to the
quality of project proposals. In reviewing them, the ISRP found that fully
40 percent did not contain adequate information for a thorough review. The
Council responded by directing Bonneville and its contractors to address
the scientists? concerns when implementing those approved by the
Council. Meanwhile, the ISRP asked the Council to make it clear that
project information must improve. The panel conducted workshops with
project proponents so that proposals for Fiscal Year 2000 and beyond
contain adequate information.
For Fiscal Year 2000, the Basin Authority has recommended some $141
million in projects (see above). The annual budget for the work is set at
$127 by memorandum of agreement between the federal government, Indian
tribes and the Council. If the Council approves the higher budget, the
additional money would come from carryover funds, as it did this year, and
reprogramming some elements of the current budget.
C. Other fish and wildlife initiatives
in Fiscal Year 1999
1. Caspian tern relocation
In an effort to protect the region's multimillion-dollar investment
in salmon mitigation and recovery, the Council in November 1998 approved a
request from the region's state, federal and tribal fish and wildlife
managers to contribute $235,000 to an effort to relocate a nesting colony
of Caspian terns near the mouth of the Columbia River. In the spring, the
terns ? as many as 10,000 nesting pairs ? lay their eggs on the open
sand of Rice Island near Astoria, Oregon. Rice Island is a disposal site
for sand dredged from the bottom of the river's shipping channel by the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The birds prey on juvenile salmon in the
Columbia River estuary. Scientists estimate that between 1997 and 1998,
Caspian terns consumed as many as 25 million young salmon.
With the Council's contribution, and contributions from other
agencies, vegetation was planted on the island and low fences were erected
to deter the terns in the hope they would nest elsewhere ? away from the
concentration of salmon smolts in that area of the estuary. By the spring
of 1999, it appeared the effort had some success. Fewer terns nested on
Rice Island, and more were nesting at an alternative site on East Sand
Island, which is located about eight miles west of Rice Island and owned
by the Corps of Engineers. Because the terns are protected under the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act, they cannot be lethally removed unless the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service issues a permit.
The National Marine Fisheries Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Corps of Engineers and researchers from Oregon State University and the
Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission are working on a plan to
further reduce the size of the Rice Island tern colony in 2000. Part of
the plan includes investigating alternative nesting sites. The Council is
continuing to monitor the relocation effort and, in September, notified
the Fisheries Service that a management plan for 2000 should be in place
by November, or the Council would be unable to approve future project
funding.
2. Ocean conditions symposium
In July 1999, the Council hosted a day-long symposium in Portland on
the consideration of ocean conditions in management of Columbia River
salmon. Invited scientists gave presentations on the effects of climate on
salmon populations, the impacts of estuary conditions on salmon and ideas
for management strategies that account for ocean conditions. The Council
is required by law to account for ocean conditions in making its annual
project funding recommendations to the Bonneville Power Administration to
implement the fish and wildlife program.
PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT
One of the Council's primary tasks is to fulfill the directive of the
Northwest Power Act to inform and involve Northwest citizens about the
Council's activities. Section 2(3) states a purpose of the Act is
"to provide for the participation and consultation of the Pacific
Northwest states, local governments, consumers, customers, users of the
Columbia River System (including federal and state fish and wildlife
agencies and appropriate Indian tribes) and the public at large within the
region" in the Northwest's planning for electrical power and
protection of fish and wildlife resources. Section 4(g)(1) of the Act
requires the Council to develop "comprehensive programs" to
ensure public involvement and to "inform the Pacific Northwest public
of major regional power issues."
To involve the public, the Council arranges consultations and public
meetings to discuss and explain key issues. For example, in 1998 the
Council arranged public meetings and consultations regarding the
recommendations of the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority and the
Independent Scientific Advisory Board for projects to fund through the
Council's fish and wildlife program in Fiscal Year 1999. This is an
annual effort, which culminates in September with the Council's project
recommendations to Bonneville. As well, the Council's staff worked with
the Multi-Species Framework Project management committee to arrange public
meetings around the region to solicit comments on framework activities.
The Council also convened public meetings around the region to explain
progress and receive comments on the review of artificial production of
fish in the basin.
To inform the public, the Council produces a newsletter as well as
special informational materials, media briefings and several types of news
releases, including a periodic report on successful fish and wildlife
projects. The Council also regularly updates its Internet web site (www.nwcouncil.org)
and uses other approaches to inform interested citizens about fish,
wildlife and energy issues. The Council also holds all its regular
meetings, committee meetings and working sessions in public. In addition,
the Council holds public hearings and consultations on many issues.
Fiscal Years 2000 and
2001 Council Budget overviews
The Council's role is changing, particularly in power planning, as
the result of restructuring in the electricity industry and efforts to
improve the accountability of fish and wildlife mitigation and recovery
planning. We recognize that as we go through these changes, it is
important to ensure healthy financial conditions for the Bonneville Power
Administration. In an effort to be responsive, the Council will continue
the budget constraints it began in 1995.
The Council's Fiscal Year 2000 budget is $7,091,000 compared to the
Fiscal Year 1999 budget of $7,155,000. The Council will seek cost savings
in order to further reduce its budget in Fiscal Year 2001 to $6,874,000.
)We will do this by:
- Constraining the personal service budget with workload adjustments
and maintaining the current service level budget.
- Maintaining a reduced level of energy system analysis contract
services by reallocating staff workloads and deferring projects to
other entities where possible, and re-prioritizing resources for only
the most essential studies and analyses.
- Further reducing travel costs by restricting both regional and
out-of-region travel for staff, and by absorbing inflationary impacts
as well as additional travel for work sessions.
- Increasing efficiencies in operations and administration, in
general, to absorb approximately 2 percent projected inflation for
Fiscal Year 2000 and Fiscal Year 2001.
- Reallocating staff where possible.
The Council's proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2000 is $7,091,000, an
increase of $367,000 from our initial budget for the fiscal year. The
increase results primarily from increases in central office budgets for
operating costs, contract services, travel and staffing in support of
added responsibilities. A detailed analysis of the revised Fiscal Year
2000 budget is available in Section J, Table 19, and Appendix A of the
Council's budget, which is available as Document 99-8
from the Council's central office.
More Information
For additional details about the Northwest Power Planning Council's
activities, budgets, meetings, comment deadlines, policies or bylaws, call
1-800-452-5161 or visit our web site.
Copies of our publications are available at the web site or by calling the
800 number above. All Council publications are free.
Council Members and
Offices
IDAHO
Todd Maddock, Chair
601 22nd Avenue
Lewiston, Idaho 83501
Telephone: 208-798-8956
Fax: 208-799-5123
Mike Field
450 W. State (UPS and DHL only)
Box 83720
Boise, Idaho 83720-0062
Telephone: 208-334-2956
Fax: 208-334-2112
MONTANA
John Etchart
Stan Grace
Capitol Station
Helena, Montana 59620-0805
Telephone: 406-444-3952
Fax: 406-444-4339
OREGON
Eric Bloch
851 S.W. Sixth Avenue, Suite 1020
Portland, Oregon 97204
Telephone: 503-229-5171
Fax: 503-229-5173
John Brogoitti
Northwest Power Planning Council
11 S.W. Byers Avenue
Pendleton, Oregon 97801
Telephone: 541-276-0657
Fax: 541-276-0995
WASHINGTON
Frank L. "Larry" Cassidy, Vice Chair
Vancouver:
c/o Flo-Rite Products
P.O. Box 2187
Vancouver, WA 98668
Vancouver telephone: 360-693-6951
Vancouver fax: 360-699-4093
Olympia:
1111 Washington Street, Mail Stop 43200
Olympia, WA, 98501-1091
Olympia telephone: 360-902-2302
Olympia fax: 360-902-2319
Tom Karier
W. 705 First Avenue ? MS1
Spokane, WA 99201-3909
509-623-4386
Fax: 509-623-4380
CENTRAL
851 S.W. Sixth Avenue, Suite 1100
Portland, Oregon 97204
Telephone: 503-222-5161
Fax: 503-820-2370
Toll Free: 1-800-452-5161
Executive Director: Steve Crow
Power Division Director: Dick Watson
Fish and Wildlife Director: Bob Lohn
Public Affairs Director: Mark Walker
General Counsel: John Shurts
Administrative Officer: Jim Tanner
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