The IJC extends deadline for interested parties to submit their views with respect to a request from the Canadian Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fishery Commission concerning Grand Coulee Dam
August 15, 2005
Today, the International Joint Commission (IJC) extended to October 31 the deadline for interested parties to submit their views with respect to a request from the Canadian Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fishery Commission concerning Grand Coulee Dam.
On April 25, 2003, the Canadian Columbia River Inter-Tribal
Fishery Commission (CCRIFC) asked the International Joint Commission
(IJC) to issue such further Orders as may be necessary in order to require
the Applicant for the IJC's 1941 Order of Approval for Grand Coulee
Dam and Reservoir, the Government of the United States, to make suitable
and adequate provision for protection and indemnification of the interests
of aboriginal peoples in Canada whose fisheries are alleged to have
been damaged by the construction and operation of the Grand Coulee Dam
and Reservoir.
Copies of the IJC's Order of Approval and of all correspondence
with respect to this matter are available on the IJC's website (see
www.ijc.org/conseil_board/columbia/en/columbia_home_accueil.htm
and www.ijc.org/rel/boards/ccrifc/request_ccrifc-e.htm,
respectively).
After receiving confirmation from the Canadian government
on June 3, 2004 that the CCRIFC can represent First Nations in this
matter, and after then seeking further information from the IJC's International
Columbia River Board, the IJC wrote to the CCRIFC on February 28, 2005
asking the CCRIFC to clarify within 60 days whether it is alleging that
damage to the First Nations' fisheries for which a remedy is being asked
was caused by raising the natural levels of the Columbia River at and
above the international boundary, or whether it was caused by the construction,
maintenance or operation of the Grand Coulee Dam, or by some other factor(s).
The IJC's letter also said that if the CCRIFC is not alleging
that all the damage was caused by raising the natural levels of the
Columbia River at and above the international boundary, the CCRIFC should
provide arguments, directed, among other things, to the provisions of
conditions 1 and 2 of the IJC's 1941 Order of Approval and to the penultimate
paragraph of Article VIII of the Boundary Waters Treaty, on which those
conditions are based, as to how the IJC has jurisdiction to grant the
relief that the CCRIFC has requested.
After asking for and receiving a seven-day extension of
the period for their response, the CCRIFC replied to the IJC on May 5, 2005.
The IJC invites any views that interested parties may
have with respect to this matter. Comments should be received by the
International Joint Commission no later than October 31, 2005, at any
of the following addresses:
Secretary, Canadian Section, 234 Laurier Ave.
West, 22nd floor, Ottawa ON K1P 6K6; fax: (613) 993-5583;
or e-mail: commission@ottawa.ijc.org.
Secretary, U.S. Section, 1250 23rd Street, NW, Suite
100, Washington, D.C. 20440; fax: (202) 467-0746; or e-mail: commission@washington.ijc.ca.
For more information, visit www.ijc.org
or telephone (613) 995-2984 or (202) 736-9000.
The International Joint Commission prevents and resolves
disputes between the United States of America and Canada under the 1909
Boundary Waters Treaty and pursues the common good of both countries
as an independent and objective advisor to the two governments.