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Proposal Summary

Proposal GEOREV-1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)

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Archive Date Time Type From To By
12/12/2012 3:37 PM Status Draft <System>
2/28/2013 4:33 PM Status Draft ISRP - Pending First Review <System>
6/11/2013 1:16 PM Status ISRP - Pending First Review ISRP - Pending Final Review <System>
6/11/2013 1:17 PM Status ISRP - Pending Final Review Pending Council Recommendation <System>
12/3/2013 7:56 PM Status Pending Council Recommendation Pending BPA Response <System>

This online form is dynamically updated with the most recent information. To view the content as reviewed by the ISRP and Council for this review cycle, download an archived PDF version using the Download link(s) above.

Proposal Number:
  GEOREV-1983-436-00
Proposal Status:
Pending BPA Response
Proposal Version:
Proposal Version 1
Review:
2013 Geographic Category Review
Portfolio:
2013 Geographic Review
Type:
Existing Project: 1983-436-00
Primary Contact:
Mike Wick
Created:
12/12/2012 by (Not yet saved)
Proponent Organizations:
Westland Irrigation District

Project Title:
Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
 
Proposal Short Description:
The Umatilla Passage O&M Project is part of an integrated plan for the restoration of fish species in the Umatilla basin that was reviewed by the ISRP in 2007. This specific project’s role in the integrated plan is solely O&M of existing fish passage and hatchery acclimation facilities located on the mainstem Umatilla River. Habitat restoration is not implemented under this project..
 
Proposal Executive Summary:
The Umatilla Passage O&M Project’s main objective is to increase adult and juvenile migrant survival to ESA listed mid-Columbia steelhead, as well as chinook and coho salmon (re-introduced) in the Umatilla Basin by operating and maintaining ladders, bypasses, screen sites and trap facilities on the Umatilla River according to design criteria. A secondary objective of the project is to support the basin artificial production program by assisting CTUIR in the maintenance of the adult holding and spawning facilities and juvenile acclimation sites. Habitat restoration is not implemented under this project.

In the 1980’s the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An integral part of that effort was to address inadequate flow and migration conditions by constructing fish passage facilities on BOR and irrigation district dams, initiating a trap and haul program, implementing the Umatilla Basin flow enhancement project and conducting habitat restoration activities. Results of these efforts are documented through RME projects in the basin. This project performs maintenance activities on those existing passage facilities and at hatchery acclimation facilities operated by the CTUIR. The larger Umatilla Initiative suite of projects, which includes this project, was reviewed as a whole by the ISRP in 2007 (ISRP 2007-15) and is attached here to provide historical context of where this project fits within the activities occurring in the Umatilla basin to restore fish species. http://www.nwcouncil.org/media/32843/isrp2007_15.pdf

This project received a “meets criteria” recommendation once it was reviewed in context with the complete suite of Umatilla projects.

Purpose:
Habitat
Emphasis:
Restoration/Protection
Species Benefit:
Anadromous: 100.0%   Resident: 0.0%   Wildlife: 0.0%
Supports 2009 NPCC Program:
No
Subbasin Plan:
Fish Accords:
None
Biological Opinions:

Describe how you think your work relates to or implements regional documents including: the current Council’s 2014 Columbia River Basin Fish and Wildlife Program including subbasin plans, Council's 2017 Research Plan,  NOAA’s Recovery Plans, or regional plans. In your summary, it will be helpful for you to include page numbers from those documents; optional citation format).
Project Significance to Regional Programs: View instructions
RPA 34 Protect and Improve Tributary Habitat: In order for restoration efforts in the upper basin and hatchery programs to be effective in recovering fish species, the large passage facilities in the lower Umatilla River must provide optimal passage. These facilities must be maintained and operated according to criteria, which is the responsibility of the Umatilla Fish Passage O&M project. Inadequate passage conditions for both upstream and downstream migrants were the primary contributor to the disappearance of salmon and decline of steelhead in the Umatilla Basin. Although many passage improvements have been implemented, there are still critical times of the year when inadequate migration conditions exist. The objective of the project is directly related to the goals and objectives stated in the 2004 Umatilla/Willow Subbasin Plan (UWSP), Section 5, Management Plan, pg. 5-4 – 5-5; Flow and Passage Objective(s) 10: Maintain and enhance flow for homing and passage of steelhead and Chinook through the lower Umatilla River using flow restoration and enhancement; and 12: Maintain and enhance passage of adult and juvenile steelhead and Chinook throughout the Umatilla Subbasin with passage protection and restoration, directly relate to the O & M Project activities. In addition, Section 5.3.2.1 of the UWSP, Natural Production Objectives and Strategies, pg. 5-8 – 5-10, lists fourteen management strategies of which the O & M Project ties directly to strategies 1) Maintenance of Phase I and II of the Umatilla Project Act, by coordinating with the implementation of exchange water operations as they occur; and 14) Maintain passage efficiency through ongoing O & M activities. The project goal of assisting in the restoration and rebuilding of salmon and steelhead populations in the Umatilla Basin is directly related to the Council’s mandate to protect, mitigate, and enhance fish and wildlife affected by development and operation of the hydropower system. Though the project falls under the Columbia Plateau Ecological Province for which specific objectives and strategies will be adopted later, the project does address the Council’s Basin-level biological objectives listed in the 2000 Fish and Wildlife Program. More specifically, the project objective of increasing tributary survival directly addresses the three items listed in Section III.C.2.a.1. (Anadromous fish losses); halt declining population trends, restore natural populations, and increase adult runs.
In this section describe the specific problem or need your proposal addresses. Describe the background, history, and location of the problem. If this proposal is addressing new problems or needs, identify the work components addressing these and distinguish these from ongoing/past work. For projects conducting research or monitoring, identify the management questions the work intends to address and include a short scientific literature review covering the most significant previous work related to these questions. The purpose of the literature review is to place the proposed research or restoration activity in the larger context by describing work that has been done, what is known, and what remains to be known. Cite references here but fully describe them on the key project personnel page.
Problem Statement: View instructions

Many passage improvement projects have been implemented in the Umatilla subbasin since the mid-1980’s. Passage restoration activities were first focused on the most severe problems in the lower mainstem Umatilla River.  In order for these large passage facilities in the lower Umatilla River to provide optimal passage, these facilities must be maintained and operated according to criteria or adapted for special situations.

To accomplish this, the Umatilla Passage O&M (No. 198343600) and Umatilla Fish Passage Operations (N0. 198802200) were created. These projects were designed in such a way to insure irrigation districts, staff maintaining passage facilities (Umatilla Fish Passage O&M staff) and CTUIR and ODFW biologists must work together on a daily basis. This model was chosen by BPA as the best means to facilitate cooperation among these groups that have differing interests. The Westland Irrigation District implements the Umatilla Passage O&M (198343600), the Umatilla/Walla Walls Fish Passage Operations project (19880200) provides biological oversight of how these facilities are operated and maintained on a daily basis to ensure optimal passage conditions exist. River conditions affect passage at these facilities (i.e. flow, debris load, and sediment/bedload-transport/deposition) and change on a regular basis. These dynamics require changes in how the facilities are operated and changes in maintenance priorities. While irrigation district employees are qualified to maintain the facilities, they are not qualified to make decisions regarding how to operate the facilities in an optimal biological manner for fish. Thus, the Fish Passage Operations Project provides guidance and instruction with regard to facility operation.


What are the ultimate ecological objectives of your project?

Examples include:

Monitoring the status and trend of the spawner abundance of a salmonid population; Increasing harvest; Restoring or protecting a certain population; or Maintaining species diversity. A Project Objective should provide a biological and/or physical habitat benchmark by which results can be evaluated. Objectives should be stated in terms of desired outcomes, rather than as statements of methods and work elements (tasks). In addition, define the success criteria by which you will determine if you have met your objectives. Later, you will be asked to link these Objectives to Deliverables and Work Elements.
Objectives: View instructions
Maintain Passage at existing Irrigation Dams and Hatchery Facilities on the Umatilla River (OBJ-1)
Provide O&M at fish ladders and screens on the mainstem Umatilla river, as well as hatchery acclimation facilities .


The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Summary of Budgets

To view all expenditures for all fiscal years, click "Project Exp. by FY"

To see more detailed project budget information, please visit the "Project Budget" page

Expense SOY Budget Working Budget Expenditures *
FY2019 $449,652 $412,899

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $449,652 $412,899
FY2020 $449,652 $449,652 $435,222

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $449,652 $435,222
FY2021 $449,652 $449,652 $488,334

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $449,652 $488,334
FY2022 $449,652 $449,652 $416,422

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $449,652 $416,422
FY2023 $468,652 $468,652 $425,663

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $449,652 $408,405
Asset Management $19,000 $17,257
FY2024 $469,437 $564,437 $489,373

General $469,437 $407,007
Asset Management $95,000 $82,366
FY2025 $469,437 $469,437 $304,128

BiOp FCRPS 2008 (non-Accord) $469,437 $304,128

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 31-Mar-2025

Actual Project Cost Share

The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Current Fiscal Year — 2025   DRAFT
Cost Share Partner Total Proposed Contribution Total Confirmed Contribution
There are no project cost share contributions to show.

Discuss your project's recent Financial performance shown above. Please explain any significant differences between your Working Budget, Contracted Amount and Expenditures. If Confirmed Cost Share Contributions are significantly different than Proposed cost share contributions, please explain.
Explanation of Recent Financial Performance: View instructions
Base budget for this project of approximately 521,000 is sufficent to cover general annual expenses. But due to the nature of O&M project work, there are occassions when large ticket damage to infrastructure requires additional funding. As an example of this, it can be noted that the 2001 and 2012 spending was above this level. In 2011 high water event washed our a juvenile fish return pipe at one facility and had to be repaired. Due to the timing of the incident only an interim repair could be achieved in 2011, and the full repair occurred in 2012. Also of note, some years spending is slightly less than budgeted, in these situations maintainace and repair items were all routine in nature and actual expenses were less than normal maintanance activities.
Discuss your project's historical financial performance, going back to its inception. Include a brief recap of your project's expenditures by fiscal year. If appropriate discuss this in the context of your project's various phases.
Explanation of Financial History: View instructions
n/a

Annual Progress Reports
Expected (since FY2004):19
Completed:19
On time:19
Status Reports
Completed:79
On time:31
Avg Days Late:8

                Count of Contract Deliverables
Earliest Contract Subsequent Contracts Title Contractor Earliest Start Latest End Latest Status Accepted Reports Complete Green Yellow Red Total % Green and Complete Canceled
4011 19753, 24659, 28839, 35073, 39496, 44315, 49263, 54791, 59045, 62976, 67543, 72145, 75169, 78420, 81420, 84687, 87259, 89806, 91911, 94188, 96530 1983-436-00 EXP UMATILLA PASSAGE O&M Westland Irrigation District 03/19/2001 02/28/2026 Issued 79 402 0 0 0 402 100.00% 1
Project Totals 79 402 0 0 0 402 100.00% 1

Selected Contracted Deliverables in CBFish (2004 to present)

The contracted deliverables listed below have been selected by the proponent as demonstrative of this project's major accomplishments.

Contract WE Ref Contracted Deliverable Title Due Completed
54791 G: 61 O&M at Westland Juvenile Sampling Facility complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 M: 61 O&M at Three Mile Site Spawning Facility complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 N: 61 O&M at Thornhollow Acclimation Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 O: 61 O&M at Pendleton Acclimation Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 P: 61 O&M at Imeques Acclimation Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 Q: 61 O&M at Minthorn Trapping Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 R: 61 O&M at South Fork of Walla Walla Spawning Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 K: 61 O&M at WEID Diversion Fish By-Pass and Sampling Area complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 L: 186 O&M at Three Mile Right Ladder and Trap complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 H: 186 O&M complete for Westland Ladder and Hydraulic System for Gate Operation 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 I: 186 O&M at Maxwell Diversion Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 J: 186 O&M at Three Mile Left Diversion Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 B: 186 O&M at Stanfield Diversion Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 C: 186 O&M at Stanfield Ladder complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 D: 186 O&M at Feed Canal Diversion Site complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 E: 186 O&M at Feed Canal Ladder complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012
54791 F: 186 O&M at Westland Fish Screens and Diversion complete 9/30/2012 9/30/2012

View full Project Summary report (lists all Contracted Deliverables and Quantitative Metrics)

Discuss your project's contracted deliverable history (from Pisces). If it has a high number of Red deliverables, please explain. Most projects will not have 100% completion of deliverables since most have at least one active ("Issued") or Pending contract. Also discuss your project's history in terms of providing timely Annual Progress Reports (aka Scientific/Technical reports) and Pisces Status Reports. If you think your contracted deliverable performance has been stellar, you can say that too.
Explanation of Performance: View instructions
Project performs O&M activities on fish passage facilities at 5 irrigation diversions and 5 hatchery acclimation facilies. Maintanance activites are completed thoughout the year on time and budget, status & annual reports are turned in on time.

  • Please do the following to help the ISRP and Council assess project performance:
  • List important activities and then report results.
  • List each objective and summarize accomplishments and results for each one, including the projects previous objectives. If the objectives were not met, were changed, or dropped, please explain why. For research projects, list hypotheses that have been and will be tested.
  • Whenever possible, describe results in terms of the quantifiable biological and physical habitat objectives of the Fish and Wildlife Program, i.e., benefit to fish and wildlife or to the ecosystems that sustain them. Include summary tables and graphs of key metrics showing trends. Summarize and cite (with links when available) your annual reports, peer reviewed papers, and other technical documents. If another project tracks physical habitat or biological information related to your project’s actions please summarize and expand on, as necessary, the results and evaluation conducted under that project that apply to your project, and cite that project briefly here and fully in the Relationships section below. Research or M&E projects that have existed for a significant period should, besides showing accumulated data, also present statistical analyses and conclusions based on those data. Also, summarize the project’s influence on resource management and other economic or social benefits. Expand as needed in the Adaptive Management section below. The ISRP will use this information in its Retrospective Review of prior year results. If your proposal is for continuation of work, your proposal should focus on updating this section. If yours is an umbrella project, click here for additional instructions. Clearly report the impacts of your project, what you have learned, not just what you did.
All Proposals: View instructions
  • For umbrella projects, the following information should also be included in this section:
  • a. Provide a list of project actions to date. Include background information on the recipients of funding, including organization name and mission, project cost, project title, location and short project summary, and implementation timeline.
  • b. Describe how the restoration actions were selected for implementation, the process and criteria used, and their relative rank. Were these the highest priority actions? If not, please explain why?
  • c. Describe the process to document progress toward meeting the program’s objectives in the implementation of the suite of projects to date. Describe this in terms of landscape-level improvements in limiting factors and response of the focal species.
  • d. Where are project results reported (e.g. Pisces, report repository, database)? Is progress toward program objectives tracked in a database, report, indicator, or other format? Can project data be incorporated into regional databases that may be of interest to other projects?
  • e. Who is responsible for the final reporting and data management?
  • f. Describe problems encountered, lessons learned, and any data collected, that will inform adaptive management or influence program priorities.
Umbrella Proposals: View instructions

Project Overview in Relation to Deliverables:

In the 1980’s the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR) and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An integral part of that effort was to address inadequate flow and migration conditions by constructing fish passage facilities, initiating a trap and haul program, and implementing the Umatilla Basin flow enhancement project.  As off site mitigation for FCRPC operations, BPA built fish passage facilities on BOR and Irrigation District dams and to protect the investment in this infrastructure, contracts with WID to perform maintenance activities on these passage facilities, as well as on acclimation facilities operated by the CTUIR.  Maintenance activities performed by this project fall into 4 main categories:

1)      Rock and debris removal from fish ladders, screens, by pass outlets and forbays

2)      Monitoring gate and screens passage criteria

3)      Repair and replacement of screen seals, fabric, drive mechanics, and trash racks

4)      General daily maintenance of fences, gates, roadways at facilities.

Original construction of the passage and hatchery facilities were implemented under separate ISRP reviewed projects, and CTUIR and ODFW biologists from the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project (#1988-022-00) provide biological oversight of maintenance activities on a daily basis to ensure optimal passage conditions exist.  This project’s role is operational in nature.

Background:

The lower 30 miles of the Umatilla River is heavily diverted for agricultural use. Historically, inadequate flow conditions in this river reach during critical portions of both adult and juvenile migration periods was the primary contributor to disappearance of salmon and decline of summer steelhead populations in the Umatilla River.

Beginning in the early 1980’s, CTUIR and ODFW began implementing a comprehensive plan to supplement steelhead and reestablish salmon runs in the Umatilla River Basin. A key component of the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan was a threefold approach to addressing the inadequate migration conditions. The three ingredients included construction of fish passage facilities in the lower river, trapping and transportation of adults and juveniles, and implementation of the Umatilla Basin flow enhancement project. The project is currently responsible for operation and maintenance of the lower river passage facilities.

 Another key component of the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan was the initiation of artificial propagation programs to supplement summer steelhead and restore salmon to the basin. Adult holding and spawning and juvenile acclimation satellite facilities were identified as needed for Umatilla Hatchery production. The project assists the Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M Project in the maintenance of these satellite facilities.

 It is assumed that properly maintained passage facilities will increase survival for adult and juvenile migrants. This should, in turn, assist in the restoration effort in the basin by helping ensure that physical passage facilities are providing adequate passage conditions.

In order for the large passage facilities in the lower Umatilla River to provide optimal passage, these facilities must be maintained and operated according to criteria or adapted for special situations. To accomplish this, this project, the Umatilla Passage O&M (No. 198343600) and Umatilla Fish Passage Operations (No. 198802200) were created. These projects were designed in such a way so that those that operate the diversion facilities and CTUIR and ODFW biologists must work together on a daily basis. This model was chosen by BPA as the best means to facilitate cooperation among these groups that have differing interests. The Westland Irrigation District implements the O&M, and the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project provides biological oversight of how these facilities are operated and maintained on a daily basis to ensure optimal passage conditions exist. River conditions affect passage at these facilities (i.e. flow, debris load, and sediment/bedload-transport/deposition) and change on a regular basis. These dynamics require changes in how the facilities are operated and changes in maintenance priorities. While irrigation district employees are qualified to maintain the facilities, they are not qualified to make decisions regarding how to operate the facilities in an optimal biological manner for fish. Thus, the Fish Passage Operations Project provides guidance and instruction with regard to facility operation.



The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Review: 2022 Anadromous Fish Habitat & Hatchery Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-NPCC-20230310
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: 2022 Anadromous Fish Habitat & Hatchery Review
Approved Date: 4/15/2022
Recommendation: Implement
Comments: Bonneville and Sponsor to consider review remarks in project documentation if appropriate. This project supports hatchery mitigation authorized under the Northwest Power Act (Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program) for the Umatilla Hatchery program. See Policy Issues I.b., II.a. and II.b. and III.a.

[Background: See https://www.nwcouncil.org/2021-2022-anadromous-habitat-and-hatchery-review/]

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-ISRP-20230309
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: 2022 Anadromous Fish Habitat & Hatchery Review
Completed Date: 3/14/2023
Final Round ISRP Date: 2/10/2022
Final Round ISRP Rating: Not Applicable
Final Round ISRP Comment:

This proposal is for operations and maintenance (O&M) of fish screens and fish ladders at five dams and diversions in the lower 33 miles of the Umatilla River, which allow juveniles and adults of wild and hatchery Chinook and coho salmon, and ESA listed steelhead trout, as well as a few bull trout to pass these migration barriers. The proponents also provide O&M for five aquaculture facilities to acclimate juvenile salmonids or hold and spawn adults in the Umatilla and Walla Walla rivers.

The ISRP found this proposal to be Not Applicable under the review process and does not request response from the proponents.

Nevertheless, the proponents should carefully address several points in their future proposals and annual reports.

  1. SMART objectives. The goals and objectives appear sound, overall, but need to be framed as SMART objectives (see proposal instructions). For example, suggested wording for the two main objectives could be:
    1. "Perform cleaning, repair, and maintenance of mechanical, electrical, and hydraulic systems to maximize passage of adult and juvenile salmonids at five migration barriers in the lower 33 miles of the Umatilla River, through FY 2027.
    2.  Provide operations and maintenance services required to mitigate high flow events that cause flooding of facilities, through 2027.” 

  2. Summary of criteria and functioning of fish passage facilities. The proponents state that project activities are evaluated primarily by whether the operations and maintenance meet the criteria for fish passage outline by NOAA Fisheries, apparently in a NMFS (2011) document. These criteria are not presented in this proposal but are linked in the proposal for Umatilla and Walla Walla Fish Passage Operations (198802200).  

    The citation is: NMFS (National Marine Fisheries Service). 2011. Anadromous Salmonid Passage Facility Design. NMFS, Northwest Region, Portland, Oregon. 

    If the objective is to meet these criteria on a daily basis, then the ISRP asks the proponents to, first, present the criteria in a table. Second, please provide a table showing the dates each fish ladder and screen was inspected and whether fish passage was likely impeded or not based on the inspection. For example, you could color code these entries (red vs. green shading) to provide a quick visual summary of how well the facilities were functioning. These data are critical to evaluate whether these facilities are meeting the objectives laid out in the proposal. 

  3. Lamprey passage. The proposal indicates O&M activities are to be conducted to minimize adverse effects on Pacific lamprey, apparently by minimizing effects on bed materials that provide habitat for their larvae. However, adult lampreys also need to pass upstream over migration barriers to reach their spawning grounds. The proponents should clarify what O&M activities are undertaken to ensure passage of adult lamprey, in addition to that of salmonids. 

  4. Update to current program objectives. The proponents refer to biological objectives listed in the Council’s 2000 Fish and Wildlife Program, but the current plan was approved in 2014 with a 2020 addendum (see: https://www.nwcouncil.org/reports/2014-columbia-river-basin-fish-and-wildlife-program). Please update these objectives, if needed, using the most recent plan amendments, and reference this plan. 

  5. Maintenance costs. In the proposal and the presentation to the ISRP, the proponents emphasized that funds are lacking to maintain more than 30 drum screens, which will create major problems for fish passage when these eventually fail. The costs for needed maintenance were not specified in the proposal but should be presented to the Fish and Wildlife Program to allow planning for them. 

  6. Climate adaptation for future flooding. The Umatilla River sustained a “500-year” flood in February 2020, which damaged various fish passage and fish holding facilities, and all facilities required substantial maintenance. The ISRP suggests that, given ongoing climate change, severe events like these will increase future O&M costs. Climate adaptation for these facilities will require thinking carefully about infrastructure improvements and increased maintenance. 

  7. M&E matrix – support. As habitat projects and monitoring projects are not presented as part of an integrated proposal or plan, the need for a crosswalk to identify the linkages between implementation and monitoring is extremely important for basins or geographic areas. The ISRP is requesting a response from the Umatilla Basin Natural Production Monitoring and Evaluation Project (199000501) to summarize the linkages between implementation and monitoring projects in the basin. We ask your project to assist them in creating the summary and provide information to them about what is being monitored for your implementation project and where and when the monitoring occurs. A map or maps of locations of monitoring actions would be helpful in this regard.
Documentation Links:
Review: 2013 Geographic Category Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-NPCC-20131122
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: 2013 Geographic Category Review
Proposal: GEOREV-1983-436-00
Proposal State: Pending BPA Response
Approved Date: 11/5/2013
Recommendation: Implement with Conditions
Comments: Implement with conditions through FY 2018: Sponsor to address ISRP qualifications in contracting and in future reviews. See Programmatic Issue and Recommendation C for long term maintenance.
Conditions:
Council Condition #1 ISRP Qualification: Qualification #1—Sponsor to address ISRP qualifications in contracting and in future reviews
Council Condition #2 Programmatic Issue: C. Provide Long-term Maintenance of Fish Screens—See Programmatic Issue and Recommendation C for long term maintenance

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-ISRP-20130610
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: 2013 Geographic Category Review
Proposal Number: GEOREV-1983-436-00
Completed Date: 6/11/2013
Final Round ISRP Date: 6/10/2013
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

Although this project does not engage in habitat restoration per se, it serves as part of a suite of projects that aim to improve habitat and fish access to the Umatilla River and its tributaries. As the project title implies, the objectives are to maintain fish passage facilities, primarily in the lower river (irrigation diversions), but the project also maintains hatchery salmon acclimation ponds in the Umatilla River subbasin. The maintenance of fish passage facilities is carried out by the Westland Irrigation District, while project oversight is provided by the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project. The technical background and significance to regional programs were adequately explained. River conditions, for example discharge, debris load, and bedload transport, can affect fish passage and screening efficiencies. Maintaining and operating passage facilities according to established criteria are important regional functions.

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management (Evaluation of Results)

Inadequate up- and downstream passage was identified as the primary cause for the extirpation of Chinook and coho salmon and decline of summer steelhead in the Umatilla subbasin. In the 1980s, ODFW and CTUIR began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An important part of this plan was to construct fish passage facilities on BOR and irrigation dams. Once built, these structures needed to be maintained. Project personnel remove rocks and debris from fish ladders, screens, by-pass outlets, and forebays. They ensure that gates and screens meet passage criteria, repair screens, and maintain trash racks. Additionally, the project assists the Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M project maintain juvenile acclimation sites. Project personnel do not initiate changes to maintenance activities; all such changes originate from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operations project.

The history and accomplishments of the project were adequately explained. Results were described in general terms as maintenance and repairs on fishways and pipes. Although the proposal states that improvements in Chinook and steelhead passage and survival have occurred as a result of these maintenance actions, no biological data were presented. Likewise, the proposal states that adjustments to maintenance activities have occurred following feedback from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operation project, but no specific examples were given. An example or two would have helped illustrate project results and adaptive management.

Because this is an operation and maintenance project that performs no RM&E, there was no evaluation of results. However, the ISRP believes that O&M projects such as this one can assist RM&E projects by providing infrastructure for tag detection and other monitoring activities.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions

The project is closely linked to the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations, Umatilla Basin Power Repay, Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M, Umatilla Basin Natural Production M&E, and Juvenile Salmonid Outmigration and Survival in the Lower Umatilla River Basin projects. Project personnel work closely with CTUIR and ODFW. Biological oversight is provided by staff from the Umatilla/Walla Walla Fish Operations project. No emerging limiting factors where listed.

The relationship of the fish passage O&M work to other habitat-related projects in the Umatilla subbasin was adequately described. No emerging limiting factors were identified, and the project does not involve tagging fish to estimate passage survival at the irrigation diversions, although this function could be added at some point in the future.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables and work elements were clearly explained. However, the proposal gave somewhat more detail about the fish passage O&M methods than the acclimation pond maintenance methods, for example, how are the ponds cleaned when not in use?

Two deliverables were identified. One was to preserve passage at Umatilla water diversion sites by maintaining fencing, removing debris, cleaning trash racks, adjusting flow gates, and performing annual repairs as needed. The other deliverable was to help maintain hatchery acclimation sites by performing repairs as needed to intake structures, screens, spawning areas, and other hatchery infrastructure. No scientific data are collected, although there are anecdotal records of fishes recovered during the cleaning operations.

General Comment

The project sponsors are providing support for other projects in an effective manner. Collaboration with sponsors of other projects appears to be excellent.


===========QUALIFICATIONS FOLLOW================

Qualification #1 - Qualification #1
This is a straightforward project to maintain and repair fish passage facilities at five irrigation diversions and to maintain five acclimation ponds. As part of a larger suite of habitat restoration projects in the Umatilla subbasin it meets scientific criteria. The qualification is that project staff should work with other Umatilla habitat projects to develop ways of monitoring migrant mortality at the passage facilities to verify that the maintenance actions are meeting objectives. In addition, opportunities to use the screening facilities for monitoring downstream migrants (through tag recoveries) should be considered if the ability to detect marked individuals is in place.
First Round ISRP Date: 6/10/2013
First Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
First Round ISRP Comment:

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

Although this project does not engage in habitat restoration per se, it serves as part of a suite of projects that aim to improve habitat and fish access to the Umatilla River and its tributaries. As the project title implies, the objectives are to maintain fish passage facilities, primarily in the lower river (irrigation diversions), but the project also maintains hatchery salmon acclimation ponds in the Umatilla River subbasin. The maintenance of fish passage facilities is carried out by the Westland Irrigation District, while project oversight is provided by the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project. The technical background and significance to regional programs were adequately explained. River conditions, for example discharge, debris load, and bedload transport, can affect fish passage and screening efficiencies. Maintaining and operating passage facilities according to established criteria are important regional functions.

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management (Evaluation of Results)

Inadequate up- and downstream passage was identified as the primary cause for the extirpation of Chinook and coho salmon and decline of summer steelhead in the Umatilla subbasin. In the 1980s, ODFW and CTUIR began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An important part of this plan was to construct fish passage facilities on BOR and irrigation dams. Once built, these structures needed to be maintained. Project personnel remove rocks and debris from fish ladders, screens, by-pass outlets, and forebays. They ensure that gates and screens meet passage criteria, repair screens, and maintain trash racks. Additionally, the project assists the Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M project maintain juvenile acclimation sites. Project personnel do not initiate changes to maintenance activities; all such changes originate from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operations project.

The history and accomplishments of the project were adequately explained. Results were described in general terms as maintenance and repairs on fishways and pipes. Although the proposal states that improvements in Chinook and steelhead passage and survival have occurred as a result of these maintenance actions, no biological data were presented. Likewise, the proposal states that adjustments to maintenance activities have occurred following feedback from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operation project, but no specific examples were given. An example or two would have helped illustrate project results and adaptive management.

Because this is an operation and maintenance project that performs no RM&E, there was no evaluation of results. However, the ISRP believes that O&M projects such as this one can assist RM&E projects by providing infrastructure for tag detection and other monitoring activities.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions

The project is closely linked to the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations, Umatilla Basin Power Repay, Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M, Umatilla Basin Natural Production M&E, and Juvenile Salmonid Outmigration and Survival in the Lower Umatilla River Basin projects. Project personnel work closely with CTUIR and ODFW. Biological oversight is provided by staff from the Umatilla/Walla Walla Fish Operations project. No emerging limiting factors where listed.

The relationship of the fish passage O&M work to other habitat-related projects in the Umatilla subbasin was adequately described. No emerging limiting factors were identified, and the project does not involve tagging fish to estimate passage survival at the irrigation diversions, although this function could be added at some point in the future.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables and work elements were clearly explained. However, the proposal gave somewhat more detail about the fish passage O&M methods than the acclimation pond maintenance methods, for example, how are the ponds cleaned when not in use?

Two deliverables were identified. One was to preserve passage at Umatilla water diversion sites by maintaining fencing, removing debris, cleaning trash racks, adjusting flow gates, and performing annual repairs as needed. The other deliverable was to help maintain hatchery acclimation sites by performing repairs as needed to intake structures, screens, spawning areas, and other hatchery infrastructure. No scientific data are collected, although there are anecdotal records of fishes recovered during the cleaning operations.

General Comment

The project sponsors are providing support for other projects in an effective manner. Collaboration with sponsors of other projects appears to be excellent.


===========QUALIFICATIONS FOLLOW================

Modified by Dal Marsters on 6/11/2013 1:17:09 PM.
Documentation Links:
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-NPCC-20090924
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Approved Date: 10/23/2006
Recommendation: Fund
Comments: The project sponsors are to work with the Council and others to structure an ISRP/Council review of the coordinated subbasin activities in the Umatilla at some point in the next two years."

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-ISRP-20060831
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Completed Date: 8/31/2006
Final Round ISRP Date: None
Final Round ISRP Rating: Does Not Meet Scientific Review Criteria
Final Round ISRP Comment:
The Response emphasizes the ISRP Programmatic Comment that the projects making up the Council's "Umatilla Initiative" are not susceptible to scientific peer review in isolation one from another. The Response notes, for example, that this particular project has responsibility only for operation and maintenance of facilities used by other projects, and has no information on benefits to Fish and Wildlife. It refers the ISRP to other proposals, such as #198802200, in which such information might be found. The response "agreed" with the ISRP comment that "The facilities that are maintained in this project should be called for in other projects that are referenced in this one. Justification for this project should be specifically provided in the group of individual projects that use the facilities maintained and operated by this one." (ISRP review June 2006)

Programmatic Comments on the Umatilla Initiative:

This complex Umatilla Initiative includes numerous individual projects, most of which are scientifically justifiable only in the larger context of the plan into which they fit. However, for whatever reason, they have been presented to the ISRP as individual proposals. The cross-referencing in the responses to other proposals where information may be found, is not sufficiently helpful to reviewers to make possible a meaningful scientific review. Please see the response review on 198802200. 198343600 (Umatilla Passage O&M), 198802200 (Umatilla Fish Passage Operations), and 198902700 (Power Repay Umatilla Basin Project), totaling ~$7.2M over the three years, deal with the same project and issues. It remains a difficult task to sort this project out from the others, and to obtain a coherent response on the issues and fish response, in order to conduct a scientific peer review that would lead to project approval.

This project and others like it are individual parts of what the Council has referred to as the "Umatilla Initiative." As such, none of them is a stand-alone project that can be subjected to scientific peer review on its own merits but needs to be reviewed in the larger context of a plan for restoration of anadromous fishes in the Umatilla Basin. The plan described in the Umatilla Subbasin Plan includes several major efforts, listed below: (These are drawn from recollections of the ISRP review of the Umatilla/Willow Subbasin Plan.)

1. Water is pumped from the Columbia River into the Umatilla Basin with the twin objectives of supplementing supplies for irrigation and supplementing instream flows for fish. Water is over-allocated for irrigation, which leads at times to dewatering of the lower 30 to 50 miles of the Umatilla River. The pumping system was constructed by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (BUREC), which continues to maintain it. However, charges for electricity to operate the pumps, are funded by BPA as recommended by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council under its Fish and Wildlife Program. The Bureau of Reclamation is developing plans for a Phase III construction project, which would enlarge the capacity of the system.

2. The Umatilla Hatchery was constructed and operates with BPA funds as recommended by the Council. Chinook salmon have been restored to the Umatilla River as a result of hatchery operations. Dewatering of the lower river at times still requires trapping and transportation of adult and juvenile fish around the lower section of the river.

3. Habitat improvement is being undertaken in the Umatilla Basin to restore its utility for spawning and rearing of salmon and steelhead. Fish produced as a result of habitat improvement there will still be affected by flow conditions, including dewatering in the lower reaches of the Umatilla River.

4. A study of lamprey is underway to identify limiting factors and find ways to restore their abundance in the Umatilla Basin. Flow conditions and other passage problems are likely to be primary limiting factors among those to be found in the Umatilla River.

Identification of Particular Subjects that Warrant Review:

Our curiosity has been especially aroused with regard to the water pumping measure adopted to improve instream flows in the Umatilla River (Proposal #198902700 Power Repay). We find that virtually no attention has been given to evaluation of effectiveness of this measure in achieving one of its primary stated objectives to improve stream conditions for fish. For example, the ISRP, in our review of June 2006 asked the proponents if there is a cap to the volume of water that might be requested to be pumped, and if so, what is the cap? It appears that the answer to that question is not straightforward, or perhaps not available. We are told in the response to proposal #198802200 (pages 2 and 3) that requests for pumped water, made by this project, (or by the Stanfield Irrigation District?), are made to the Bureau of Reclamation through the Oregon Water Resources Department (OWRD). The latter agency does the accounting for both the exchange and storage portions of the Umatilla Basin Project (UBP of BUREC). The responses describe a complex system for deciding when and where to pump the water and release it, but the most complete description, found in proposal #198802200, explains only that "The volume of water to be pumped depends on which "phase" of the UBP is being exchanged." (page 2)

The Response to #198802200 also notes "Currently, there is no M & E specific to the passage program being conducted although an updated passage conditions assessment has been proposed for 07-09 under project 19000501. However, this passage assessment component is not identified for funding at this time." (page 2). The ISRP has previously called attention to the need for a monitoring and evaluation plan to be described in each proposal. Without inclusion of M & E information, the ISRP is unable to discover to what degree or whether anadromous fishes actually benefit from actions proposed. Nor have we been able to identify a proposal that would monitor and/or evaluate the effects on fish of the passage facilities in the Umatilla River.

It remains unclear why the total cost of the Power Repay Project #198902700 ($1.5 million) is charged to the Council's Fish and Wildlife Budget, when the pumped water is shared "bucket for bucket' with irrigators.

Conclusions
Although a rigorous pursuit of Congress' charge to the ISRP would result in a conclusion of "not fundable" based upon the criteria we are instructed to use and the information we have been given, we conclude that would be disruptive rather than constructive at this particular time. However, we strongly urge Council to pursue a scientific peer review of the Umatilla Initiative, as soon as possible.

There is a need for review of the Umatilla Initiative from a larger perspective than can be provided by review of individual project proposals, such as we have in hand.

Firstly, for the ISRP review we recommend that a unified proposal be developed that would encompass the four major efforts listed above. It would address each of the 10 subjects listed in the standard proposal form that then form the basis for ISRP review. In particular, specific plans for monitoring and evaluation are needed in order to establish expected or measured benefits to fish. This suggests that, for example, the proponents might benefit by reorganizing their efforts under a single head. That would provide a unified perspective, leading to clarification of the fact that the success of all of the individual efforts are affected by the pumping of water from the Columbia River. Monitoring and evaluation should then focus upon documenting flow manipulations and measuring the effects on fish passage and survival.

Secondly, we recommend that the Council ask the Independent Economic Advisory Board to conduct an analysis of the Umatilla Initiative to address specifically two key questions:
1. Since pumped water is shared "bucket for bucket" between irrigators and fish, what is the appropriate charge to Council's Fish and Wildlife Program of the cost of pumping water from the Columbia River into the Umatilla Basin? (Presently estimated at $1.5 million per year.)
2. Are there more cost-effective measures that could restore water for fish into the Umatilla River; e.g., what might be the relative cost/benefits of purchase of lands and their associated water rights versus the present cost of electricity to pump water from the Columbia River?
Documentation Links:
Explain how your project has responded to the above ISRP and Council qualifications, conditions, or recommendations. This is especially important if your project received a "Qualified" rating from the ISRP in your most recent assessment. Even if your project received favorable ratings from both the ISRP and Council, please respond to any issues they may have raised.
Response to past ISRP and Council comments and recommendations: View instructions
Final ISRP rating was: Meets Criteria. See ISRP Umatilla Initiative Review (ISRP 2007-15) <a href="http://www.nwcouncil.org/media/32843/isrp2007_15.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.nwcouncil.org/media/32843/isrp2007_15.pdf</a><br/> <br/> Numerous Fiscal Year (FY) 2007-2009 proposed projects in the Umatilla Basin received final<br/> Independent Scientific Review Panel’s (ISRP) recommendations of “Not Fundable (Qualified)”<br/> or Fundable (Qualified) mainly due to the interrelationship between the numerous projects could not be articulated in any one project’s proposal. In response, the fish managers in the basin put together a comprehensive report, Umatilla Projects Review: A presentation of the multiple-component Umatilla Basin Fisheries Restoration Program, invited the ISRP for site visits and presentations. At the completion of this comprehensive review, this project received a “meets criteria” recommendation. Project activities remain the same since the last review. Please see ISRP 2007-15, Umatilla Initiative Review. <a href="http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/isrp/isrp2007-15.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.nwcouncil.org/library/isrp/isrp2007-15.pdf.</a> Attached in the link section of the proposal.


Project Level: Please discuss how you’ve changed your project (objectives, actions, etc) based on biological responses or information gained from project actions; because of management decisions at the subbasin state, regional, or agency level; or by external or larger environment factors. Specifically, regarding project modifications summarize how previous hypotheses and methods are changed or improved in this updated proposal. This would include project modifications based on information from recent research and literature. How is your new work different than previous work, and why?
Management Level: Please describe any management changes planned or made because of biological responses or information gained from project actions. This would include management decisions at the subbasin, state, or regional level influenced by project results.
Management Changes: View instructions
This project provides O&M at passage facilities as described above. Changes to maintenance activities due to new biological information occurs under oversight from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operation project.

The table content is updated frequently and thus contains more recent information than what was in the original proposal reviewed by ISRP and Council.

Public Attachments in CBFish

ID Title Type Period Contract Uploaded
00019753-1 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Progress (Annual) Report 10/2004 - 09/2005 19753 12/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
00004011-1 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Progress (Annual) Report 10/2003 - 09/2004 4011 12/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
P103854 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities; Operations and Maintenance Progress (Annual) Report 10/2005 - 09/2006 28839 10/2/2007 12:29:36 PM
P104842 Westland Irrigation District 2007 Annual Report Progress (Annual) Report 10/2006 - 09/2007 35073 12/10/2007 12:58:40 PM
P109578 Umatilla Fish Passage O & M FY2008 Annual Report Progress (Annual) Report 10/2007 - 09/2008 39496 12/30/2008 4:23:31 PM
P114256 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation and Maintenance Progress (Annual) Report 10/2008 - 09/2009 44315 11/23/2009 12:06:56 PM
P119544 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; October 2009 - September 2010 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2009 - 09/2010 49263 1/14/2011 4:55:00 PM
P123865 Emergency Repair Budget Estimate Other - 54791 11/22/2011 5:16:59 PM
P123867 Stanfield Erosion Pictures Other - 54791 11/23/2011 9:13:53 AM
P123868 Emergency Repair Plan Other - 54791 11/23/2011 9:15:19 AM
P124770 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation and Maintenance; 10/10 - 9/11 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2010 - 09/2011 54791 1/23/2012 8:38:29 AM
P125255 2012 Repair Engineers Cost Estimate Other - 54791 2/21/2012 10:03:31 PM
P125256 2012 Repair Conceptual Design Other - 54791 2/21/2012 10:07:08 PM
P125257 2012 Repair BOG Presentation Other - 54791 2/21/2012 10:19:06 PM
P126658 2012 Repair Final Design Other - 54791 5/23/2012 11:10:39 AM
P127802 2012 Stanfield Repair Final Design Other - 54791 8/21/2012 2:09:07 PM
P130168 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities O & M; 10/11 - 9/12 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2011 - 09/2012 59045 1/16/2013 8:55:11 AM
P135629 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 10/12 - 9/13 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2012 - 09/2013 62976 4/9/2014 1:27:35 PM
P144290 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance Annual Report Fiscal Year 2014 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2013 - 09/2014 67543 8/10/2015 11:06:20 AM
P150224 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation and Maintenance; 10/14 - 2/16 Progress (Annual) Report 10/2014 - 02/2016 72145 10/7/2016 10:21:05 AM
P156663 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 3/16 - 2/17 Progress (Annual) Report 03/2016 - 02/2017 75169 9/18/2017 10:39:03 AM
P161959 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 3/17 - 2/18 Progress (Annual) Report 03/2017 - 02/2018 78420 9/7/2018 4:27:36 PM
P173036 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 10/10 - 9/11 Photo - 5/7/2020 5:44:05 PM
P173035 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 10/10 - 9/11 Photo - 5/7/2020 5:44:05 PM
P173034 Umatilla Basin Fish Facilities Operation & Maintenance; 10/10 - 9/11 Photo - 5/7/2020 5:44:05 PM

Other Project Documents on the Web

None


The Project Relationships tracked automatically in CBFish provide a history of how work and budgets move between projects. The terms "Merged" and "Split" describe the transfer of some or all of the Work and budgets from one or more source projects to one or more target projects. For example, some of one project's budget may be split from it and merged into a different project. Project relationships change for a variety of reasons including the creation of efficiency gains.
Project Relationships: None

Additional Relationships Explanation:

The Umatilla salmon and steelhead restoration program is large and complex with many separate components that are necessary to address fish restoration goals, which are further detailed in the ISRP’s Umatilla Initiative Review (2007-15).  This project provides for operational O&M activities on mainstem passage facilities and hatchery acclimation facilities.  However many other projects in the basin address biological needs of fish species in habitat restoration, hatchery programs, RME, and coordination and oversight of the various projects.  The project could be viewed in terms of having a relationship to several projects connected to the Umatilla River, more specifically it is linked to:


1) project #198802200 – Umatilla Fish Passage Operations, oversees O & M Project activities to assure passage criteria are being met, and operates passage and trapping facilities at Threem Mile Falls dam which are maintained by the Passage O & M Project.

2) project #198902700 – Umatilla Basin Project Power Repay, is a congressionally mandated project (Umatilla Basin Act) to exchange Columbia River water to irrigators for water left instream in the Umatilla for fish benefits.  Flow enhancement resulting from the Basin Project are coordinated with operation of the passage facilities the proposed project provides O & M for.

3) project #1983343500 – Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O & M, acclimates juvenile salmonids and steelhead of hatchery origin.  This Project assists in maintaining the satellite facilities.

4) project #198902401 – Evaluates Juvenile Salmonid Outmigration and Survival in the Lower Umatilla River Basin, evaluates the effectiveness of the hatchery and restoration programs in improving fish populations.  This project provides O & M for facilities operated and utilized by the Outmigration and Survival Project.

5) project.#199000501 – Umatilla Basin Natural Production M & E, evaluates the effectiveness of the passage facilities meeting the fish passage goals.


Primary Focal Species
Chinook (O. tshawytscha) - Mid-Columbia River Spring ESU
Coho (O. kisutch) - Unspecified Population
Steelhead (O. mykiss) - Middle Columbia River DPS (Threatened)

Secondary Focal Species
Lamprey, Pacific (Entosphenus tridentata)

Describe how you are taking into account potential biological and physical effects of factors such as non-native species, predation increases, climate change and toxics that may impact the project’s focal species and their habitat, potentially reducing the success of the project. For example: Does modeling exist that predicts regional climate change impacts to your particular geographic area? If so, please summarize the results of any predictive modeling for your area and describe how you take that into consideration.
Threats to program investments and project success: View instructions
This project provided O&M, where as biological effects are evaluted by other projects that provide oversight to this project on how to implement maintanance activities in the most beneficial manner for fish species.

Work Classes
Work Elements

Habitat:
Habitat work elements typically address the known limiting factors of each location defined for each deliverable. Details about each deliverable’s locations, limiting factors and work elements are found under the Deliverables sections.

186. Operate and Maintain Habitat/Passage/Structure

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Layers
Legend
Name (Identifier) Area Type Source for Limiting Factor Information
Type of Location Count
Umatilla (17070103) HUC 4 EDT (Ecosystem Diagnosis and Treatment) 275

Project Deliverable definition: A significant output of a project that often spans multiple years and therefore may be accomplished by multiple contracts and multiple work elements. Contract Deliverables on the other hand are smaller in scope and correspond with an individual work element. Title and describe each Project Deliverable including an estimated budget, start year and end year. Title: A synopsis of the deliverable. For example: Crooked River Barrier and Channel Modification. Deliverable Description: Describe the work required to produce this deliverable in 5000 characters or less. A habitat restoration deliverable will contain a suite of actions to address particular Limiting Factors over time for a specified Geographic area typically not to exceed a species population’s range. Briefly include the methods for implementation, in particular any novel methods you propose to use, including an assessment of factors that may limit success. Do not go into great detail on RM&E Metrics, Indicators, and Methods if you are collecting or analyzing data – later in this proposal you’ll be asked for these details.
Project Deliverables: View instructions
Maintain Passage at Umatilla River Diversion Sites (DELV-1)
Annual Maintenance - All Year
A. Maintain fencing
B. Remove gravel and silt from intakes and entrance and exit weirs. In-channel
work will have sediment containment measures in place and follow ODFW
instream work window.
C. Removal of gravel and debris from inside ladder

Daily and Weekly Maintenance - All Year
Daily tasks:
A. Clean trash racks
B. Make adjustments to flow gates as required to ensure ladder is operating
within criteria
C. General housekeeping of site
Weekly tasks:
A. Lubrication of gate stems

Major/Periodic Maintenance
A. Gravel removal from entrance and exit weirs and intakes.
B. Silt and gravel removal from inside of ladder and gate seals
C. Any in-channel gravel manipulations will have sediment containment
measures in place and follow ODFW instream work window.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Habitat
186. Operate and Maintain Habitat/Passage/Structure

Maintenance of Hatchery Acclimation Facilities (DELV-2)
Routine maintenance/repair - all year as needed, including but not limited to:
1. Intake screens and pumps
2. Air burst systems (compressors, valves and piping)
3. Flow control gates, valves, orifice plates and distribution piping to all facility
components, tilting standpipes and all other water control fittings (both raw and
potable)
4. Electrical wiring and components including water level sensor, generator,
water aeration columns, fish transfer tubes, sorting/spawning table, fish
guillotine, mechanical crowder, lights and electrical appliances, fish lift and
electroshock systems
5. Raw and potable water systems including well, and submersible pump,
pressure and hot water tanks, water booster system
6. Walk-in cooler, restroom facilities (plumbing/fixtures)
7. Heaters, vents and fans for all buildings
8. Window repair/replacement
9. Wash down systems, emergency eyewash, waste water collection and
storage systems, storm drain system

Annual/Periodic Maintenance - As Needed
A. Cold weather maintenance
B. Silt and debris removal at intake
C. Silt removal in ponds and crowding channel
D. Vegetation control
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Habitat
186. Operate and Maintain Habitat/Passage/Structure


Objective: Maintain Passage at existing Irrigation Dams and Hatchery Facilities on the Umatilla River (OBJ-1)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Maintain Passage at Umatilla River Diversion Sites (DELV-1) The Umatilla Fish Passage O&M project performs maintanence activites at 5 mainstem Umatilla River diversion facilities. Maintaining the facilities assures that passage conditions exist to allow fish access to upstream habitat.

Maintenance of Hatchery Acclimation Facilities (DELV-2) To restore extirpated salmonids and critically imperiled steelhead to the Umatilla basin has taken a comprehesive effort of habitat restoration, flow mitigation, and a robust hatchery program. The Umatilla Fish Passage O&M project performs maintanance activities in concert with the CTUIR at CTUIR managed satellite acclimation facilities. Maintaining these facilities assure access from the facilities for acclimated fish and that screens and infrastructure are in good working order to maximize fish survival at the facilities.


*This section was not available on proposals submitted prior to 9/1/2011

There are no RM&E protocols identified for this proposal.

Project Deliverable Start End Budget
Maintain Passage at Umatilla River Diversion Sites (DELV-1) 2014 2018 $2,500,000
Maintenance of Hatchery Acclimation Facilities (DELV-2) 2014 2018 $120,000
Total $2,620,000
Requested Budget by Fiscal Year

Fiscal Year Proposal Budget Limit Actual Request Explanation of amount above FY2013
2014 $524,000
2015 $524,000
2016 $524,000
2017 $524,000
2018 $524,000
Total $0 $2,620,000
Item Notes FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017 FY 2018
Personnel $180,000 $180,000 $180,000 $180,000 $180,000
Travel $500 $500 $500 $500 $500
Prof. Meetings & Training $3,000 $3,000 $3,000 $3,000 $3,000
Vehicles Currently leasing three GSA vehicles. $49,000 $49,000 $49,000 $49,000 $49,000
Facilities/Equipment (See explanation below) $66,000 $66,000 $66,000 $66,000 $66,000
Rent/Utilities $6,000 $6,000 $6,000 $6,000 $6,000
Capital Equipment Periodic capital equipment replacement required at facility sites. $15,000 $15,000 $15,000 $15,000 $15,000
Overhead/Indirect $144,500 $144,500 $144,500 $144,500 $144,500
Other Annual fish screen rehab work. $60,000 $60,000 $60,000 $60,000 $60,000
PIT Tags $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total $524,000 $524,000 $524,000 $524,000 $524,000
Major Facilities and Equipment explanation:
O & M Project facilities are generally adequate but showing age, re pumps, control actuators, hydraulics, belt screens, motors, gearheads, gates, generators from the 1980's; associated materials purchased to operate and maintain facilities and structures is ongoing. Equipment for this project is often sourced from rental suppliers for project work, re boom trucks, excavators, manlifts, dump trucks, tractors, etc. Due to the nature of this project in dealing with mechanical and electrical facilities which may fail unexpectedly and the unpredictability of high river flows sending large quantities of debris into facility intakes and structures, the annual operating budget may need periodic supplemental funding.

Umatilla Initiative Review Fiscal Years 2007-09 Projects, ISRP 2007-15 Independent Scientific Review Panel, October 12, 2007. http://www.nwcouncil.org/media/32843/isrp2007_15.pdf UMATILLA PROJECTS REVIEW, A presentation of the multiple-component Umatilla Basin Fisheries Restoration Program, Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, May 1, 2007. http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2007/05/3.pdf

Review: 2013 Geographic Category Review

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1983-436-00-ISRP-20130610
Project: 1983-436-00 - Umatilla Passage Operations and Maintenance (O&M)
Review: 2013 Geographic Category Review
Proposal Number: GEOREV-1983-436-00
Completed Date: 6/11/2013
Final Round ISRP Date: 6/10/2013
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

Although this project does not engage in habitat restoration per se, it serves as part of a suite of projects that aim to improve habitat and fish access to the Umatilla River and its tributaries. As the project title implies, the objectives are to maintain fish passage facilities, primarily in the lower river (irrigation diversions), but the project also maintains hatchery salmon acclimation ponds in the Umatilla River subbasin. The maintenance of fish passage facilities is carried out by the Westland Irrigation District, while project oversight is provided by the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project. The technical background and significance to regional programs were adequately explained. River conditions, for example discharge, debris load, and bedload transport, can affect fish passage and screening efficiencies. Maintaining and operating passage facilities according to established criteria are important regional functions.

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management (Evaluation of Results)

Inadequate up- and downstream passage was identified as the primary cause for the extirpation of Chinook and coho salmon and decline of summer steelhead in the Umatilla subbasin. In the 1980s, ODFW and CTUIR began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An important part of this plan was to construct fish passage facilities on BOR and irrigation dams. Once built, these structures needed to be maintained. Project personnel remove rocks and debris from fish ladders, screens, by-pass outlets, and forebays. They ensure that gates and screens meet passage criteria, repair screens, and maintain trash racks. Additionally, the project assists the Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M project maintain juvenile acclimation sites. Project personnel do not initiate changes to maintenance activities; all such changes originate from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operations project.

The history and accomplishments of the project were adequately explained. Results were described in general terms as maintenance and repairs on fishways and pipes. Although the proposal states that improvements in Chinook and steelhead passage and survival have occurred as a result of these maintenance actions, no biological data were presented. Likewise, the proposal states that adjustments to maintenance activities have occurred following feedback from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operation project, but no specific examples were given. An example or two would have helped illustrate project results and adaptive management.

Because this is an operation and maintenance project that performs no RM&E, there was no evaluation of results. However, the ISRP believes that O&M projects such as this one can assist RM&E projects by providing infrastructure for tag detection and other monitoring activities.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions

The project is closely linked to the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations, Umatilla Basin Power Repay, Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M, Umatilla Basin Natural Production M&E, and Juvenile Salmonid Outmigration and Survival in the Lower Umatilla River Basin projects. Project personnel work closely with CTUIR and ODFW. Biological oversight is provided by staff from the Umatilla/Walla Walla Fish Operations project. No emerging limiting factors where listed.

The relationship of the fish passage O&M work to other habitat-related projects in the Umatilla subbasin was adequately described. No emerging limiting factors were identified, and the project does not involve tagging fish to estimate passage survival at the irrigation diversions, although this function could be added at some point in the future.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables and work elements were clearly explained. However, the proposal gave somewhat more detail about the fish passage O&M methods than the acclimation pond maintenance methods, for example, how are the ponds cleaned when not in use?

Two deliverables were identified. One was to preserve passage at Umatilla water diversion sites by maintaining fencing, removing debris, cleaning trash racks, adjusting flow gates, and performing annual repairs as needed. The other deliverable was to help maintain hatchery acclimation sites by performing repairs as needed to intake structures, screens, spawning areas, and other hatchery infrastructure. No scientific data are collected, although there are anecdotal records of fishes recovered during the cleaning operations.

General Comment

The project sponsors are providing support for other projects in an effective manner. Collaboration with sponsors of other projects appears to be excellent.


===========QUALIFICATIONS FOLLOW================

Qualification #1 - Qualification #1
This is a straightforward project to maintain and repair fish passage facilities at five irrigation diversions and to maintain five acclimation ponds. As part of a larger suite of habitat restoration projects in the Umatilla subbasin it meets scientific criteria. The qualification is that project staff should work with other Umatilla habitat projects to develop ways of monitoring migrant mortality at the passage facilities to verify that the maintenance actions are meeting objectives. In addition, opportunities to use the screening facilities for monitoring downstream migrants (through tag recoveries) should be considered if the ability to detect marked individuals is in place.
First Round ISRP Date: 6/10/2013
First Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
First Round ISRP Comment:

1. Purpose: Significance to Regional Programs, Technical Background, and Objectives

Although this project does not engage in habitat restoration per se, it serves as part of a suite of projects that aim to improve habitat and fish access to the Umatilla River and its tributaries. As the project title implies, the objectives are to maintain fish passage facilities, primarily in the lower river (irrigation diversions), but the project also maintains hatchery salmon acclimation ponds in the Umatilla River subbasin. The maintenance of fish passage facilities is carried out by the Westland Irrigation District, while project oversight is provided by the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations project. The technical background and significance to regional programs were adequately explained. River conditions, for example discharge, debris load, and bedload transport, can affect fish passage and screening efficiencies. Maintaining and operating passage facilities according to established criteria are important regional functions.

2. History: Accomplishments, Results, and Adaptive Management (Evaluation of Results)

Inadequate up- and downstream passage was identified as the primary cause for the extirpation of Chinook and coho salmon and decline of summer steelhead in the Umatilla subbasin. In the 1980s, ODFW and CTUIR began implementing the Umatilla Fisheries Restoration Plan. An important part of this plan was to construct fish passage facilities on BOR and irrigation dams. Once built, these structures needed to be maintained. Project personnel remove rocks and debris from fish ladders, screens, by-pass outlets, and forebays. They ensure that gates and screens meet passage criteria, repair screens, and maintain trash racks. Additionally, the project assists the Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M project maintain juvenile acclimation sites. Project personnel do not initiate changes to maintenance activities; all such changes originate from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operations project.

The history and accomplishments of the project were adequately explained. Results were described in general terms as maintenance and repairs on fishways and pipes. Although the proposal states that improvements in Chinook and steelhead passage and survival have occurred as a result of these maintenance actions, no biological data were presented. Likewise, the proposal states that adjustments to maintenance activities have occurred following feedback from the biological staff of the Fish Passage Operation project, but no specific examples were given. An example or two would have helped illustrate project results and adaptive management.

Because this is an operation and maintenance project that performs no RM&E, there was no evaluation of results. However, the ISRP believes that O&M projects such as this one can assist RM&E projects by providing infrastructure for tag detection and other monitoring activities.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions

The project is closely linked to the Umatilla Fish Passage Operations, Umatilla Basin Power Repay, Umatilla Hatchery Satellite Facilities O&M, Umatilla Basin Natural Production M&E, and Juvenile Salmonid Outmigration and Survival in the Lower Umatilla River Basin projects. Project personnel work closely with CTUIR and ODFW. Biological oversight is provided by staff from the Umatilla/Walla Walla Fish Operations project. No emerging limiting factors where listed.

The relationship of the fish passage O&M work to other habitat-related projects in the Umatilla subbasin was adequately described. No emerging limiting factors were identified, and the project does not involve tagging fish to estimate passage survival at the irrigation diversions, although this function could be added at some point in the future.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables and work elements were clearly explained. However, the proposal gave somewhat more detail about the fish passage O&M methods than the acclimation pond maintenance methods, for example, how are the ponds cleaned when not in use?

Two deliverables were identified. One was to preserve passage at Umatilla water diversion sites by maintaining fencing, removing debris, cleaning trash racks, adjusting flow gates, and performing annual repairs as needed. The other deliverable was to help maintain hatchery acclimation sites by performing repairs as needed to intake structures, screens, spawning areas, and other hatchery infrastructure. No scientific data are collected, although there are anecdotal records of fishes recovered during the cleaning operations.

General Comment

The project sponsors are providing support for other projects in an effective manner. Collaboration with sponsors of other projects appears to be excellent.


===========QUALIFICATIONS FOLLOW================

Modified by Dal Marsters on 6/11/2013 1:17:09 PM.
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Proponent Response: