Restore Salmon to the Snake River

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Wild salmon bring nutrients from the briny ocean back to the high mountain streams, create an environment that help other fish -- like steelhead and pacific lamprey -- thrive, and are a critical food source for endangered orcas. These four dams on the Lower Snake River prohibit salmon from returning to their birthplace to spawn, thus endangering their ability to reproduce and thrive.

For years, the federal agencies responsible for these dams have refused to act to protect wild salmon. That changed when a federal court judge ordered the Army Corps of Engineers, Bonneville Power Administration, and Bureau of Reclamation to develop a plan to restore wild salmon and directed them to consider  range of options including dam removal on the lower Snake River.

Now, these agencies are seeking your input on what they should do to bring salmon back. Removing the four dams on the lower Snake River is the single most important action to restore a pathway for salmon to thousands of miles of pristine cold-water streams in the wilderness of central Idaho, southeast Washington, and Northeast Oregon.

Take action today! Tell the Army Corps of Engineers, Bonneville Power Administration, and Bureau of Reclamation to remove the four dams on the lower Snake River and help restore wild salmon.

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