Another Loss
Empty Nets: Indians, Dams, and the Columbia River by Roberta Ulrich. ISBN 0-87071-469-4. Chapter 5: Another Loss.
- Dalles Dam: Celilo Falls, Columbia River fisshing
 - 1940s: Indians → 10% salmon commercially captured
 - 1951: engineering and fishery support and manipulation
 - moved to protest from Bonneville to Dalles: 1947; compensation
- argued for annual payment from dam
 - 1948 discussions over McNary and Dalles, including compensation before Dalles had been authorized
 
 - orders and protests over McNary
- “they did have a property interest in the fish”; → 1990s Endangered Species Act protection
 - hydroelectric dam industry would invalidate salmon; “the Chinook and the Blueback would go the way of the buffalo”
 
 - authorized Dalles in 1950 Rivers and Harbors Act, which included a chapter to “The Indian Fishery Problem”
- only pay to abandon rights in extreme; will continue to live in manner to the millennium
 - long-range solution integration and assimilation → termination
 
 - Oregon Warm Springs, Umatilla, and Burns-Paiute escaped termination
 - tribes and fisheries both tried to delay and preevent Dalles, but constructed regardless starting 1952 (approved 06/01/1951)
 - negotiations began in late 1951: treaty rights exchanged for settlement
 - 1953 challenge to Corps against in-lieu sites and treaty rights
 - 1953–1954 Celilo settlements
- intro of Nez Perce into Celilo fisher tribes
 - Wy’am Tommy Thompson, Olney Patt Sr.
 - per capita distribution of money; WWarm Springs placed in treasury for development before 1980s
 
 - backwater flooded villages due to the Dalles
- OG village included
 - poor sanitation at Celilo; conflicts, no law enforcement and improvements → dozed in 1956
 
 - “flowage easements”; flood land where pool roe
- Corps deals made with BIA, not owners
 - land/allotments bought outright; drowned in-lieus
 
 - Celilo village displacement, poor management and treatment, slow relocation
 - 1956 fall fishing season; dam closed in 1957
 - “The policy of termination was incarnated in the destruction.”