After report on toxic salmon in Columbia River, Northwest lawmakers call for action 
By Maya Miller and Tony Schick US Source: opb 12/14/2022
Maya Miller  and Tony Schick
Credit: Kristyna Wentz-Graff / OPB
State and federal lawmakers in the Pacific Northwest, as well as the region’s tribal leaders, are calling for environmental policy changes and increased funding to address toxic contamination in salmon following an investigation by Oregon Public Broadcasting and ProPublica. Salmon is a pillar of tribal diets and culture, often served at ceremonies and largely considered a medicine.
 

Although tribal members and researchers have been raising concerns about this contamination for decades, federal and state governments have failed to consistently monitor the waters of the Columbia River Basin for pollution in fish. Given the gaps in testing, ProPublica and Oregon Public Broadcasting did their own, revealing levels of contaminants in Columbia River salmon that, when consumed at average tribal rates, would be high enough to put many of the 68,000 tribal members living in the basin at risk of adverse health impacts.

 
KLICKITAT RIVER Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1101Trans women banned from England Ladies angling teamthepinknews2023-11-29UK
1102Warming rivers in US West killing fish, imperiling industryapnews2021-08-27US
1103Scientists turn invasive carp into traitorsapnews2023-11-19US
1104The invasive fish threat to lakes and ponds and what needs to be done to eradicate itmsn2023-11-25US
1105Новости с водоемов Волгоградской областиohotniki2023-11-20RU
1106Impermanence is the Opportunity, Says Fish Philosopherwatershedsentinel2023-11-25US
1107Fish rearing facilities offer life support for endangered suckersijpr2023-11-25US
1108What low water levels could mean for Edmonton fish this wintermsn2023-11-18CA
1109Togos tilapia kingthefishsite2023-11-24TO
1110Какая судьба ждет каспийскую воблу?ohotniki2023-11-18RU
1111US regulators will review car-tire chemical that kills salmonseattletimes2023-11-05US
1112Trapped on Chinese squid-fishing ships, crews face beatings, malnutrition and morelatimes2023-11-07CN
1113Forever chemicals in fish worry Charleston anglerscharlestoncitypaper2023-11-10US
1114Survey shows uptick in Lake of the Woods walleye, sauger numbersechopress2023-11-24US
1115DNR, stakeholders to draft new Lake of the Woods management planechopress2023-11-24US
1116Americas eel RAS superstarthefishsite2023-11-15US
1117From taxi driver to trout supremothefishsite2023-11-17IN
1118Карась хорошо клюет до заморозковohotniki2023-11-17RU
1119Koi emerges as new source of souring relations between Japan and Chinaabcnews2023-11-10JP
1120Tasmanian salmon farms could face restrictions to save endangered fishtheguardian2023-11-06AU
1121Nepal’s water hyacinth helps exotic fish invade, harming native speciesmongabay2023-11-07NP
1122Federal Fisheries Department doing a poor job of monitoring fishing industryCBC News2023-11-07CA
1123A story about counting steelhead is an immersive journey to the river.montereycountyweekly2023-11-11US
1124Fishermen threaten to stop fishing, take legal action over massive block of offshore wind farmsportugalresident2023-11-12PT
1125Fishermen Catch Huge Blue Marlin Weighing Over 1,000lbs in Gulf of Mexiconewsweek2023-11-06US

215 216 217 44 of [218 - pages.]