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The Engineering of Culverts
Manmade infrastructure often interferes with natural waterways, which is one reason civil engineers turn to culverts, those pipes and concrete tunnels you often see beneath roadways. (Image and video credit: Practical Engineering) Read the full article
modern.architect
Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson has made a name for himself this year by battling the Trump administration in court. Now he wants to take on tribes.
Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson has made a name for himself this year by battling the Trump administration in court. Now he wants to take on tribal governments at the U.S. Supreme Court over salmon.
Ferguson's office on Thursday appealed a court order to fix road culverts that now block hundreds of miles of salmon streams in Washington.
Many culverts (big steel pipes or concrete tunnels that carry streams beneath roadways) are too narrow or too steep for salmon to swim through.
A lower court in 2013 gave the state 17 years to fix 450 of its most-damaging culverts, work that could cost hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars. A panel of judges on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in May refused to hear the stateās second appeal of that decision.
Twenty-one tribes sued Washington state over the culverts back in 2001.
āFailing culverts deny our treaty-reserved fishing rights that include the right for salmon to be available for harvest,ā Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission chair Lorraine Loomis said in a press release Friday. āThe right to harvest salmon was one of the few things we kept when we gave up nearly all the land in western Washington.ā
āTribal treaty rights are vitally important,ā Ferguson said in a press release announcing the appeal. āI appreciate and share the goal of restoring salmon habitat, but the state has strong legal arguments that the Ninth Circuit decision is overbroad.ā
In its appeal, the attorney generalās office argues that some culverts do not harm salmon and that the tribesā treaty rights to fish do not mean they are entitled to enough fish to provide a āmoderate livingā from fishing.
Even state officials were divided over Fergusonās action. Last week, Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz told Ferguson she āstrongly opposedā an appeal of the decision.
āIt's time to work collectively and focus on actions that address and actively aid the many concerns that our tribal governments - and so many of our non-tribal residents - have been raising for years,ā Franz said in an Aug. 11 letter to Ferguson.
Loomis said before the tribes first brought the case, the state was fixing culverts so slowly it would have taken 200 years to finish the job. In the past four years, Loomis said, the Department of Natural Resources and other state agencies have greatly accelerated their work to make culverts salmon-friendly.
The Supreme Court is expected to decide whether to hear Ferguson's appeal this fall.