
Trump halts efforts to tear out lower Snake River dams in Washington and Idaho
Trump said in a memo that his administration was 'committed to protecting the American people from radical green agenda policies that make their lives more expensive, and to maximizing the beneficial uses of our existing energy infrastructure and natural resources to generate energy and lower the cost of living.'
He revoked the Biden Administration's 'Restoring Healthy and Abundant Salmon, Steelhead and Other Native Fish Populations in the Columbia River Basin' memo, which Trump's administration said placed concerns about climate change above the nation's interests in reliable energy.
Trump's memo called for a withdrawal from actions that grew out of that memo, including an agreement between the federal government, the states of Washington and Oregon, and Northwest tribes signed in February 2024. The agreement stopped short of a federal decision to remove the dams, but supporters of the dams called it a roadmap to breaching them.
Removing the dams from Ice Harbor Dam near the Tri-Cities upriver to Lower Granite Dam near Lewiston, Idaho, 'would be devastating for the region,' Trump's memo said.
Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., who has fought to save the dams, thanked Trump for his 'decisive actions.'
Removing the dams would have 'threatened the reliability of our power grid, raised energy prices and decimated our ability to export grain to foreign markets,' Newhouse said.
But Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said, 'Donald Trump doesn't know the first thing about the Northwest and our way of life …. This decision is grievously wrong and couldn't be more short sighted.'
She said the agreement put the region on the path to recovering endangered salmon populations, while preserving the benefits of the lower Snake River dams.
The agreement led to a pause in a nearly 30-year-old court case over Columbia River system dams, with the stay now in jeopardy, Murray said.
Under the agreement the federal government was required to spend more than $1 billion, including $300 million from the Bonneville Power Administration, over a decade to restore native fish and their habitats.
The Department of Energy would help develop tribally sponsored clean energy infrastructure to help replace hydropower production should the four dams be torn down.
Studies would be conducted by the federal government or with federal funding on how the services now provided by the dams could be replaced, including the barging of farm products and other goods, irrigation, recreation and electricity production.
___
© 2025 Idaho Statesman.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tesla approves $29bn share award to Elon Musk
Tesla's board has signed off a $29bn (£21.8bn) share award to Elon Musk after a court blocked an earlier package worth almost double that sum. The new award, which amounts to 96 million new shares, is not just about keeping the electric vehicle (EV) firm's founder in the driving seat as chief executive. The new stock will also bolster his voting power from a current level of 13%. Money latest: He and other shareholders have long argued that boosting his interest in the company is key to maintaining his focus after a foray into the trappings of political power at Donald Trump's side - a relationship that has now turned sour. Musk is angry at the president's tax cut and spending plans, known as the big beautiful bill. Tesla has also suffered a sales backlash as a result of Musk's past association with Mr Trump and role in cutting federal government spending. The company is currently focused on the roll out of a new cheaper model in a bid to boost flagging sales and challenge steep competition, particularly from China. The headwinds have been made stronger as the Trump administration has cut support for EVs, with Musk admitting last month that it could lead to a "few rough quarters" for the company. Read more: Tesla faces losing billions after Musk-Trump fallout Tesla is currently running trials of its self-driving software and revenues are not set to reflect the anticipated rollout until late next year. Musk had been in line for a share award worth over $50bn back in 2018 - the biggest compensation package ever seen globally. But the board's decision was voided by a judge in Delaware following a protracted legal fight. There is still a continuing appeal process. Earlier this year, Tesla said its board had formed a special committee to consider some compensation matters involving Musk, without disclosing details. The special committee said in the filing on Monday: "While we recognize Elon's business ventures, interests and other potential demands on his time and attention are extensive and wide-ranging... we are confident that this award will incentivize Elon to remain at Tesla". It added that if the Delaware courts fully reinstate the 2018 "performance award", the new interim grant would either be forfeited or offset to ensure no "double dip". The new compensation package is subject to shareholder approval.


Miami Herald
3 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
There's one simple reason wannabe dictators attack education
Creating a dictatorship can be a messy endeavor: Wrongful imprisonments, torture, extrajudicial executions and a corrupt cabal of sycophants feigning to act under the guise of law, while in actuality subserviently showing fealty to their master, can reflect poorly on wannabe dictators seeking to conceal their true intentions. Thus, one of the first targets of these wannabe dictators is education. Denying honest and quality education to their intended subjects can often build the same social control mechanisms all dictatorships thrive upon, but with fewer overt injustices and less bloodshed. An excellent example of both the power of the lack of an education, and the power of achieving one, can be found in the book 'The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave.' In it, Douglass discusses how education initially became his greatest curse, but eventually became his greatest blessing. As any American historian will tell you, it was unlawful to teach a slave how to read. As Douglass explained, keeping him ignorant of his status kept him accepting of it — but after secretly learning to read, he became aware of the reality of his situation, which led him to become one of America's most famous abolitionists. Douglass' journey from illiteracy to education is why propagating ignorance is one of the most powerful weapons would-be dictators can wield. Ignorance is where people have the capacity to learn but fail to do so. Sometimes this is self-inflicted, based upon the myth that 'ignorance is bliss.' But oftentimes, it is intentionally created by those in power withholding crucial information and resources, to keep people unaware that they are living in a burgeoning dictatorship until it is too late for them to do anything about it. Despite all the pretensions about making America great again, the real reason behind government officials' current attacks on American education is simple: Ignorance is frequently synonymous with obsequious acceptance, while education gives one the knowledge — and thus the capacity, to question, to investigate and to challenge what one is told. It is also logical that weakening the ability to obtain an honest and quality education negatively impacts the nation through brain drain that can deleteriously affect technological, medical and scientific advancements by creating a milieu where misinformation and gullibility replace creative and critical thinking skills, imagination and a knowledge of history essential to recognizing when dangerous societal trends start repeating. For example, the Achilles heel of the Big Lie — a tactic historically employed by both the extreme left and the extreme right — is the ability of educated people to recognize such lies and denounce them. Since many wannabe dictators want to minimize much of the ugliness often required to achieve their goals, they are not going to openly state that their lust for absolute power is the true incentive behind their quest to destroy education. Instead, they invent villains — like critical race theory or diversity, equity and inclusion. They arbitrarily withhold funding from educational institutions that do not do their bidding. And they destroy agencies that support honest and quality education. Perhaps the truth about the real motivation behind the denial of honest and quality education can be discerned in the words of another man who, like Douglass, became aware, through education, of his status in the nation he lived in, and ultimately lost his life fighting to change it. These are the words of the martyred anti-apartheid activist Stephen Biko, who was killed in police custody in South Africa in 1977: 'The most potent weapon in the hands of the oppressor is the mind of the oppressed.' David R. Hoffman is a retired civil rights and constitutional law attorney. He lives in South Bend, Indiana.


San Francisco Chronicle
3 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Rep. Nancy Mace kicks off South Carolina GOP gubernatorial bid. She says she's 'Trump in high heels'
WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina is running for governor, entering a GOP primary in which competition for President Donald Trump's endorsement — and the backing of his base of supporters — is expected to be fierce. Mace, who last year won her third term representing South Carolina's 1st District, made her run official during a launch event Monday at The Citadel military college in Charleston. She plans to start a statewide series of town halls later this week with an event in Myrtle Beach. 'I'm running for governor because South Carolina doesn't need another empty suit and needs a governor who will fight for you and your values," Mace said. "South Carolina needs a governor who will drag the truth into sunlight and flip the tables if that's what it takes.' Mace told The Associated Press on Sunday she plans a multi-pronged platform aimed in part at shoring up the state's criminal justice system, ending South Carolina's income tax, protecting women and children, expanding school choice and vocational education and improving the state's energy options. Official filing for South Carolina's 2026 elections doesn't open until March, but several other Republicans have already entered the state's first truly open governor's race in 16 years, including Attorney General Alan Wilson, Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and Rep. Ralph Norman. Both Wilson and Evette have touted their own connections to the Republican president, but Mace — calling herself 'Trump in high heels' — said she is best positioned to carry out his agenda in South Carolina, where he has remained popular since his 2016 state primary win helped cement his status as the GOP presidential nominee. Saying she plans to seek his support, Mace pointed to her defense of Trump in an interview that resulted in ABC News agreeing to pay $15 million toward his presidential library to settle a defamation lawsuit. She also noted that she called Trump early this year as part of an effort to persuade GOP holdouts to support Rep. Mike Johnson to become House speaker. 'No one will work harder to get his attention and his endorsement,' she said. 'No one else in this race can say they've been there for the president like I have, as much as I have and worked as hard as I have to get the president his agenda delivered to him in the White House.' Mace has largely supported Trump, working for his 2016 campaign but levying criticism against him following the Jan. 6, 2021, violence at the U.S. Capitol, which spurred Trump to back a GOP challenger in her 2022 race. Mace defeated that opponent, won reelection and was endorsed by Trump in her 2024 campaign. A month after she told the AP in January that she was 'seriously considering' a run, Mace went what she called 'scorched earth," using a nearly hour-long speech on the U.S. House floor in February to accuse her ex-fiancé of physically abusing her, recording sex acts with her and others without their consent, and conspiring with business associates in acts of rape and sexual misconduct. Mace's ex-fiancé said he 'categorically' denied the accusations, and another man Mace mentioned has sued her for defamation, arguing the accusations were a 'dangerous mix of falsehoods and baseless accusations.' 'I want every South Carolinian to watch me as I fight for my rights as a victim," Mace said, asked if she worried about litigation related to the speech. "I want them to know I will fight just as hard for them as I am fighting for myself.' Mace, 47, was the first woman to graduate from The Citadel, the state's military college, where her father then served as commandant of cadets. After briefly serving in the state House, in 2020 she became the first Republican woman elected to represent South Carolina in Congress, flipping the 1st District after one term with a Democratic representative. ___