WikiLeaks Document Release
               http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RS22414
                                              February 2, 2009



                       Congressional Research Service
                                       Report RS22414
          The Columbia River Basin's Fish Passage Center
       Nic Lane, Resources, Science, and Industry Division; Adam Vann, American Law Division

                                              February 23, 2007

Abstract. Senate and conference committee reports (S.Rept. 109-84 and H.Rept. 109-275) on the 2006 Energy
and Water Development Appropriations Act (P.L. 109-103) instructed BPA to cease funding the FPC and
transfer the FPC's functions to other existing entities, and BPA responded by determining that it would transfer
the FPC functions to two entities. A number of organizations sued to block transfer of the FPC's functions,
and on January 24, 2007, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit the court ruled that BPA's decision
to transfer the FPC's functions violated the Administrative Procedure Act.
                                                                                                                    Order Code RS22414
                                                                                                               Updated February 23, 2007




                                                        The Columbia River Basin's
                                                            Fish Passage Center
                                                                         Nic Lane
                                                    Analyst in Environment and Resources Management
                                                         Resources, Science, and Industry Division

                                                                          Adam Vann
                                                                       Legislative Attorney
                                                                      American Law Division
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                                        Summary

                                              The Fish Passage Center (FPC) provides technical assistance and information to
                                        fish and wildlife agencies and tribes on the passage of juvenile and adult salmon and
                                        steelhead through the mainstem Columbia River. It is an element of the Northwest
                                        Power and Conservation Council's fish and wildlife program, which was created by the
                                        Northwest Power Act (P.L. 96-501). The Council's fish and wildlife program is funded
                                        by the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) with revenue from the sale of electric
                                        power in the Pacific Northwest. Some parties in the region contend that the FPC does
                                        not provide unbiased scientific analysis, but instead advocates specific policy positions.
                                             Senate and conference committee reports (S.Rept. 109-84 and H.Rept. 109-275)
                                        on the 2006 Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act (P.L. 109-103)
                                        instructed BPA to cease funding the FPC and transfer the FPC's functions to other
                                        existing entities, and BPA responded by determining that it would transfer the FPC
                                        functions to two entities. A number of organizations sued to block transfer of the FPC's
                                        functions, and on January 24, 2007, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit the
                                        court ruled that BPA's decision to transfer the FPC's functions violated the
                                        Administrative Procedure Act.


                                        Background
                                             Under the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act of 1980
                                        (the Northwest Power Act, 16 U.S.C. �839), Congress required that the Pacific Northwest
                                        Electric Power Planning and Conservation Council (now known as the Northwest Power
                                        and Conservation Council) develop and adopt a program to protect fish and wildlife,
                                                                                    CRS-2

                                        enhance their habitat, and mitigate habitat damage.1 The act required that the program be
                                        based on broad regional consultation with agencies, tribes, customers, and the public.2
                                        Congress further mandated that BPA fund the Council program through revenue collected
                                        from electric power ratepayers.3

                                             One element of the Council's fish and wildlife program is the Fish Passage Center
                                        (FPC), which was established to address concerns about impacts to fish from the Federal
                                        Columbia River Power System (FCRPS), a system of 31 federal dams primarily on the
                                        Snake and Columbia rivers in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. (See Figure 1.) Eight
                                        dams, four on the lower Columbia River and four on the lower Snake River, are the
                                        primary impediments to upstream and downstream fish migration in the Columbia Basin.
                                        The FPC provides technical assistance and information to state and federal fish
                                        management agencies, tribes, and the public on the passage of juvenile and adult salmon
                                        and steelhead through the mainstem Columbia River hydrosystem.4 It also plans and
                                        implements the annual Smolt Monitoring Program and the Gas Bubble Trauma study,
                                                             Figure 1. Major Columbia River Basin Dams
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                                                         Source: [http://www.nwd.usace.army.mil/ps/colbsnmap.asp]



                                        1
                                            16 U.S.C. �839b(h)(1)(A).
                                        2
                                            16 U.S.C. �839b(h)(2)-(5).
                                        3
                                            16 U.S.C. �839b(h)(10)(A).
                                        4
                                         Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Mainstem Amendments to the Columbia River
                                        Basin Fish and Wildlife Program (Portland, OR: 2003), p. 27.
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                                        which supplies daily information for in-season river management decisions aimed at
                                        protecting salmon and steelhead. The FPC also provides agencies and tribes with reservoir
                                        operation information and analysis, including current and historical data, to support their
                                        decisions and requests to the federal agencies operating the FCRPS. Additionally, the FPC
                                        coordinates the implementation of the regional comparative survival study.5

                                        Regional Controversy
                                             The FPC has been at the center of some controversy in the Pacific Northwest. Many
                                        agencies and tribes concerned primarily with salmon recovery have confidence in the
                                        center's technical analyses and consider FPC staff to be a valuable resource when
                                        reviewing FCRPS operations and impacts on fish. Others are concerned that the FPC does
                                        not provide unbiased analysis, but rather advocates policy positions favoring fish
                                        protection.

                                              Representatives of the Fish and Wildlife Service, the Oregon Department of Fish and
                                        Wildlife, and the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, among others, have
                                        provided statements in support of the FPC. They indicate that their jobs require them to
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                                        provide the best scientific information on effects of the FCRPS on fisheries resources to
                                        their respective agencies and to the region as a whole and that they have relied heavily on
                                        the scientists at the FPC for information and analysis. They stress that, in their opinion
                                        and consistent with independent review, the work conducted by the FPC scientists is at
                                        a high level of scientific rigor and merit, and that no other group in the region has had to
                                        endure such levels of scrutiny as the FPC staff.6

                                              The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Science Center and the University
                                        of Washington's Columbia Basin Research Center have both expressed concern that the
                                        FPC's approach mingles an advocacy role with a scientific one and that this commingling
                                        of advocacy and analysis shades the FPC's analytical products. Staff of those two research
                                        institutions also feel that the FPC data are difficult to work with and that the data sources
                                        and underlying analyses are not always clear.7 The Council established a Fish Passage
                                        Center Oversight Board in 20008 to assess why the FPC did not enjoy the same reputation
                                        for independent analytical quality as other scientific bodies in the region.9




                                        5
                                            Available at [http://www.fpc.org/about_fpc.html].
                                        6
                                          State, federal, and tribal fishery agencies, Joint Technical Staff Memo (Jan. 25, 2006), available
                                        at [http://www.fpc.org/documents/joint_technical/06-06.pdf].
                                        7
                                         Fish Passage Center Oversight Board Meeting Notes (Oct. 2, 2002), available at [http://www.
                                        nwcouncil.org/fw/fpcob/2002_10.pdf].
                                        8
                                          Northwest Power Planning Council, Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program (2000),
                                        p. 28, available at [http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/2000/2000-19/Default.htm].
                                        9
                                         Fish Passage Center Oversight Board Meeting Notes (Oct. 2, 2002), available at [http://www.
                                        nwcouncil.org/fw/fpcob/2002_10.pdf].
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                                        Legal Issues
                                             The debate over the FPC's role in the Columbia Basin came to a head in 2005 during
                                        congressional debate over the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act of
                                        2006. First, in its report of the appropriations bill, the U.S. Senate Appropriations
                                        Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development instructed that BPA "may make no
                                        new obligations from the Bonneville Power Administration Fund in support of the Fish
                                        Passage Center" because there were universities in the region that collect the relevant data
                                        and could fulfill the functions of the FPC while saving money for taxpayers.10 Similarly,
                                        the conference committee report for the act directed that "[t]he Bonneville Power
                                        Administration may make no new obligations in support of the Fish Passage Center."11
                                        The committee report also stated that the conferees "call upon the Bonneville Power
                                        Administration and the Northwest Power and Conservation Council to ensure that an
                                        orderly transfer of the Fish Passage Center functions ... occurs within 120 days of
                                        enactment of this legislation."12

                                              BPA selected two entities to take over the functions of the FPC. On January 26,
                                        2006, BPA announced that the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSMFC) and
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                                        the Battelle Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) would assume the duties of
                                        the FPC on March 21, 2006.13 Specifically, BPA indicated that PSMFC would (1) manage
                                        the Smolt Monitoring Program; (2) perform functions associated with related data
                                        collection and management; and (3) conduct routine analysis and reporting of that data.
                                        PNNL was selected to (1) oversee, coordinate and facilitate broader, non-routine scientific
                                        analysis of that data, including independent peer review; and (2) manage the analysis
                                        itself, which would be performed by biometricians and scientists selected by and under
                                        contract to PNNL via request for qualifications. In addition, BPA proposed that the
                                        Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority assume coordination of the policy interests
                                        of regional fishery agencies and tribes on flow and spill issues. This would be done under
                                        a modification to its current BPA contract, pending approval of its members.14

                                             In response to BPA's decision to transfer the FPC's functions to other entities, a
                                        number of organizations, including the Northwest Environmental Defense Center, Public
                                        Employees for Environmental Responsibility, and the Northwest Sportfishing Industry
                                        Association, filed a petition for review challenging the BPA's decision.15 On March 17,
                                        2006, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit granted the parties' request for a
                                        stay of the transfer of the FPC's functions pending resolution of the dispute.16


                                        10
                                             S.Rept. 109-84, at 179 (2005).
                                        11
                                             H.Rept. 109-275 (conference report), at 174 (2005).
                                        12
                                             Id.
                                        13
                                          BPA press release. See [http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/BPAnews/2005/NewsRelease.cfm?
                                        ReleaseNo=695].
                                        14
                                             Ibid.
                                        15
                                          A separate petition for review of the BPA's decision filed by the Confederated Tribes and
                                        Bands of the Yakama Nation was later consolidated with this petition.
                                        16
                                             Northwest Environmental Defense Center et al. v. Bonneville Power Administration, No. 06-
                                                                                                                        (continued...)
                                                                                   CRS-5

                                             On January 24, 2007, the Ninth Circuit ruled that BPA's decision to transfer the
                                        functions of the FPC to two other entities violated the �706 of the Administrative
                                        Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. �706.17 Under the APA, a federal agency's actions are
                                        to be set aside if they are "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not
                                        in accordance with law."18 The court first held that BPA could not base its decision to
                                        transfer the FPC's functions on the language found in a Senate subcommittee report and
                                        a conference committee report because "legislative history, untethered to text in an
                                        enacted statute, has no compulsive legal effect."19 The court further noted that treating
                                        legislative reports as binding law undermines the legislative process because it gives the
                                        force of law to language that has not been subject to the constitutional requirements of
                                        bicameralism and presentment.20 The court also found that this treatment of legislative
                                        history as binding law frustrated the purposes of the Northwest Power Act, which
                                        establishes a participatory process in which various interests collaborate to advise BPA
                                        on how best to exercise its discretionary authority.21 Finally, the court rejected BPA's
                                        argument that its decision to transfer the functions of the FPC was based on a thorough
                                        analysis conducted independent of the directives in the legislative reports.22 Therefore,
                                        the court held that BPA's decision to transfer the functions of the FPC to other entities
                                        based on the language in legislative reports was arbitrary and capricious and contrary to
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                                        law.23




                                        16
                                          (...continued)
                                        70430 (9th Cir. March 17, 2006) (order granting stay).
                                        17
                                          Northwest Environmental Defense Center et al. v. Bonneville Power Administration, -- F.3d
                                        --, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 1493 (9th Cir. 2007).
                                        18
                                             5 U.S.C. � 706(2)(A).
                                        19
                                             2007 U.S. App. LEXIS at *35.
                                        20
                                             Id. at *40.
                                        21
                                             Id. at *43-44.
                                        22
                                             Id. at *51-56.
                                        23
                                             Id. at *58.