Indian Country Today: Puyallup Tribe seeks court order to stop Electron Hydro from opening fish-killing dam’s water intake

News Release by the Puyallup Tribe | May 24, 2021

The Puyallup Tribe on Thursday asked a federal court judge in its case against Electron Hydro LLC to issue an order blocking the company from opening a water intake as it stumbles through attempts to get the dam operational.

The Puyallup River is home to Chinook salmon, which are important to tribal and non-tribal fishers alike and a critical food source of endangered Southern Resident orcas. The river is also home to steelhead and bull trout. All three species are protected under the Endangered Species Act. The century-old dam has long been a killer of salmon and has never complied with the Endangered Species Act.

In July 2020, the company began the first phase of construction to improve efficiencies at the dam under a series of local, state, and federal permits. Within the first two weeks of the multi-week project, the company had violated every one of its permits. The company placed thousands of square yards of artificial turf into the Puyallup River. The action released crumb rubber and turf mats for miles downstream. Within the last few weeks, the continued river surveys conducted by tribal biologists have found large turf mats, one measuring 32 square feet, are still strewn along the entire river downstream of the dam. The same month it dropped artificial turf into the water, the company conducted maintenance of the dam’s forebay. That action killed thousands of fish. The tribe filed suit in December under the Clean Water Act and Endangered Species Act.

“Everything they did last summer makes it worse,” said the Puyallup Tribal Council, the tribe’s elected governing body. “The intake sucks in fish and kills them. Their illegal activity last year reduced the already struggling populations. The fish population simply cannot absorb any further losses without significant risk of just disappearing altogether. We have no trust in the company to protect fish.”

The motion and declarations can be found through this link: https://share.puyalluptribe-nsn.gov/nextcloud/index.php/s/J6taLBfaHcnJSkx

About the Puyallup Tribe of Indians

The Puyallup People have lived along the shores of what is now called Puget Sound since time immemorial. The Puyallup Tribe of Indians is a sovereign nation of more than 5,000 members and one of the largest employers in Pierce County. It serves its people and neighbors with generosity and is committed to building a sustainable way of life for future generations. Learn more about the Puyallup Tribe.

About the Puyallup Tribal Council

The Puyallup Tribal Council is the elected governing body of the Puyallup Tribe of Indians. The council consists of Chairman Bill Sterud, Vice Chairwoman Sylvia Miller, David Z. Bean, Annette Bryan, James Rideout, Anna Bean, and Monica Miller.