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Proposal Summary

Proposal RESCAT-2012-004-00 - Idaho Regional Coordination

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Archive Date Time Type From To By
10/26/2011 2:06 PM Status Draft
Download 11/30/2011 1:04 PM Status Draft ISRP - Pending First Review
2/16/2012 4:23 PM Status ISRP - Pending First Review ISRP - Pending Final Review
4/17/2012 3:05 PM Status ISRP - Pending Final Review Pending Council Recommendation
3/5/2014 2:00 PM Status Pending Council Recommendation Pending BPA Response

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:
  RESCAT-2012-004-00
Proposal Status:
Pending BPA Response
Proposal Version:
Proposal Version 1
Review:
Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Portfolio:
Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Categorical Review
Type:
Existing Project: 2012-004-00
Primary Contact:
Lance Hebdon
Created:
10/26/2011 by (Not yet saved)
Proponent Organizations:
Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG)

Project Title:
Idaho Regional Coordination
 
Proposal Short Description:
This contract provides partial funding for Idaho Fish and Game Department staff to participate in coordination and consultation efforts related to the implementation of (but not limited to) the Northwest Power and Conservation Council's Fish and Wildlife Program, the FCRPS BioP, the Upper Snake River BiOP and other activities in the Basin.
 
Proposal Executive Summary:
The project provides partial funding support for Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) staff participation in processes related to the Council’s Fish and Wildlife Program, Bonneville Power Administration, and the development and operation of the Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS).

Our goal is to participate, collaborate and communicate effectively and efficiently with Bonneville, with the Council, and with other co-managers and provide input to the Council's Fish and Wildlife Program as called for in the Northwest Power Act of 1980 (Public Law 96-501, S 885). This assures decisions on appropriate actions to recover fish and wildlife populations and mitigate for lost productivity due to construction and operation of the Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS) are informed by Idaho’s perspective and benefit from Idaho’s expertise.

The work will assure that IDFG has an opportunity to learn of, contribute to planning and development, and make recommendations for actions to assess and restore fish and wildlife resources affected by the development and operation FCRPS. This work includes contribution to a variety of regional reviews and workshops forums.

Work is conducted by IDFG staff throughout the year. Regional meetings and workshops are held in various locations throughout the Pacific Northwest. Preparations and contributions are conducted primarily in office environments.
Our work is monitored largely through contract management to document participation and contribution to regional meetings, review, forums, workshops and oversight groups..

Purpose:
Programmatic
Emphasis:
Regional Coordination
Species Benefit:
Anadromous: 33.4%   Resident: 33.3%   Wildlife: 33.3%
Supports 2009 NPCC Program:
Yes
Subbasin Plan:
Fish Accords:
None
Biological Opinions:
  • FCRPS 2008 (RPA 71, RPA 72)
  • Upper Snake River 2007
  • Libby Sturgeon 2006
  • Bull Trout

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
This project partially funds IDFG staff time and travel to participate and provide technical review, guidance, and recommendations for activities related to conservation and restoration of anadromous fish, resident fish and wildlife in the Columbia Basin. In the coming three-year period we anticipate significant participation in a number of management forums directly related to the NPCC Fish and Wildlife Program: Coordinated Assessments Project – Develop and implement the Collaborative Basin-wide Data Sharing Strategy especially the development of work plans consistent with the needs of co-managers and IDFG data management strategy. The outcome of this effort will be electronic data sharing of specific Viable Salmonid Population metrics related to natural spawner abundance, spawner to recruit ratios and smolt to adult return rates. The Draft Columbia River Basin Collaborative Data Sharing Strategy is available at http://www.pnamp.org/sites/default/files/ca_basinwide_data_sharing_strategy_final_draft_nov_10.pdf The phase III workplan is available at http://www.pnamp.org/sites/default/files/ca-phaseiii-workplandraft_111011.pdf NPCC Tagging Forum – Review marking methods and technologies needed to optimally assess the response of anadromous fish populations and inform decisions regarding recovery and mitigation efforts for anadromous salmonid populations. Provide a link to Council documents – The Charter. Recent Council Agenda items. Describe the product. Council's Draft Monitoring Evaluation and Research and Reporting Plan- As Council staff begin working on adopting strategies for resdient fish and wildlife monitoring Department staff will participated in development and review of those strategies. Subbasin Plan Objectives- The Department continues to work with Co-managers to propose and implement on the ground projects as identified in the Subbasin Plans. Should the Council decide to revise the Subbasin Plans, Department staff will participate in development and review of the updates. Council’s 2006 Research Plan- The Idaho Coordination contract share's many of the objectives of the Councils research plan including, improving monitoring, evaluation, and application of results, improving input from independent scientiests, fish and wildlife agencies and tribes, and other interested parties, improved coordination among mainstem research programs and improving access to information generated by the resarch and restoration projects of the program.
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

The size and scope of the Council's Fish and Wildlife Program requires that coordination actions be conducted to ensure that the State and Tribal Fish and Wildlife Managers who are implementing the Fish and Wildlife Programcan provide technical and historical knowledge which insures the program is informed by the best available information.  Many Fish and Wildlife conservation and management activities are funded outside the Fish and Wildlife Program and Basinwide Coordination helps to integrate actions funded through the Council's programs with actions funded by the State and Tribal Fish and Wildlife Managers.  


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
Basinwide Regional Coordination (OBJ-1)
The Project Objectives for the Idaho Coordination contract are not consistent with the definition provided here (a biological and/or physical habitat benchmark). Our objective is to participate, collaborate and communicate effectively and efficiently with Bonneville, with the Council, and with co-managers assuring that decisions on actions to recover fish and wildlife populations and mitigate for lost productivity due to construction and operation of the Federal Columbia River Power Supply are informed by Idaho's perspective and benefit from Idaho's expertise. Achieving the objective requires communication, participation, and attendance at regional forums. The outcomes we seek are commonly recognized guidance materials that are considered, used and followed by the Fish and Wildlife Program and other areas as appropriate. The Program Amendment Recommendations of the fish and wildlife managers represent a suite of actions to address limiting factors identified through a consensus proces

Technical Review (OBJ-2)
Provide Policy and technical reviews of F&W Program projects and issues. Review projects for technical merit, provide review and comment on technical issues in the Fish and Wildlife program.


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 $152,711 $144,055

General $152,711 $144,055
FY2020 $152,711 $152,711 $116,934

General $152,711 $116,934
FY2021 $152,711 $152,711 $97,951

General $152,711 $97,951
FY2022 $152,711 $152,711 $117,428

General $152,711 $117,428
FY2023 $152,711 $152,711 $145,371

General $152,711 $145,371
FY2024 $159,430 $159,430 $139,417

General $159,430 $139,417
FY2025 $159,430 $159,430 $56,225

General $159,430 $56,225

* Expenditures data includes accruals and are based on data through 28-Feb-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
Cost Share Partner Total Proposed Contribution Total Confirmed Contribution
There are no project cost share contributions to show.
Previous Fiscal Years
Fiscal Year Total Contributions % of Budget
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017

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
None
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
None

Annual Progress Reports
Expected (since FY2004):12
Completed:12
On time:12
Status Reports
Completed:51
On time:31
Avg Days Late:1

Historical from: 1989-062-01
                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
306 REL 1 5864, 20620 REL 2, 20620 REL 8, 20620 REL 12, 20620 REL 15, 20620 REL 23, 20620 REL 26, 20620 REL 29 1989-062-01 EXP CBFWA ANNUAL WORK PLAN 2012 Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation 02/01/2000 08/31/2014 History 43 76 13 0 0 89 100.00% 4
19573 PROJECT 1989-062-01, HABITAT EVALUATION PROJECT (HEP) Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation 10/01/2004 09/30/2005 History 1 5 0 0 0 5 100.00% 0
20620 REL 3 20620 REL 6 198906201 EXP FY06 NED WORKPLAN Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation 04/01/2005 03/31/2007 History 6 18 4 2 1 25 88.00% 0
20620 REL 4 1989-062-01 NED WORKSHOP Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation 04/28/2005 06/30/2005 History 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
20620 REL 11 20620 REL 17 1989-062-01 EXP F&W PROGRAM WEB / DATA SERVICES Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation 04/01/2007 03/31/2010 History 13 18 0 0 0 18 100.00% 0
47646 52934, 56776, 60848, 65346, 68789, 72189, 75547, 74313 REL 24, 74313 REL 53, 74313 REL 76, 74313 REL 98, 84041 REL 2, 84041 REL 21, 84041 REL 36, 84041 REL 50 2012-002-00 EXP OREGON REGIONAL COORDINATION Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife 04/01/2010 03/31/2026 Issued 59 60 4 0 1 65 98.46% 0
47428 51832, 56522, 60567, 64995, 68638, 72146, 75609, 78849, 81754, 84823, 86424, 89766, 84045 REL 8, 84045 REL 24, 84045 REL 38 2012-004-00 EXP IDAHO REGIONAL COORDINATION Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) 04/01/2010 03/31/2026 Pending 59 62 4 0 0 66 100.00% 0
52771 56772, 60884, 65338, 68785, 72257, 76054, 74314 REL 28, 74314 REL 64, 74314 REL 90, 74314 REL 126, 74314 REL 160, 84042 REL 33, 84042 REL 66, 84042 REL 98 2012-003-00 EXP WASHINGTON REGIONAL COORDINATION Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) 04/01/2011 03/31/2026 Issued 55 54 4 0 0 58 100.00% 0
Project Totals 236 293 29 2 2 326 98.77% 4

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.

Projects that are the product of merges and/or splits from other projects may not have the complete list of historical deliverables included below. If you wish to highlight deliverables that are not listed, please refer to Pisces to determine the complete list and describe the missing deliverables in the Major Accomplishments section.

None

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
Department staff participated in information exchange and review of products through the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority Committees and other forums. For the contract year April 1 through March 31, 2011 department staff participated in the following committee meetings (number of meetings in parenthesis) including; Anadromous Fish (6), Coordinated Assessments (6), Fish Screening Oversight Committee (4), CBFWA Members (8), CBFWA Members Advisory Group (4), Resident Fish (1), White Sturgeon (3), Wildlife (2), Fish Passage Oversight Committee. Department staff also participated in and attended Northwest Power and Conservation Council Meetings (11) to provide technical information. Department staff were actively engaged in coordination activities related to review, information development and negotiation related to wildlife impacts including: participation in the Council’s Wildlife Crediting Forum, Wildlife Mitigation Settlement Discussions directly with Bonneville Power Administration, assessment and settlement of operational impacts and development of agreements between wildlife mitigation partners.

  • 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

Department staff developed and presented to the Council an Overview of Hatchery Scientfic Review Group Implementation http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2011/11/f2.pdf and, a review of Anadromous Fisheries,  Forecasts, and Management Concerns

http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2011/03/4.pdf

http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2010/03/1schriever.pdf

Department staff participated in workshops for development and review of the Anadromous Salmonid Monitoring Strategy (ASMS) http://www.cbfwa.org/ams/FinalDocs.cfm  and,  the Columbia River Basinwide Data Sharing Strategy (CRBDS) http://www.pnamp.org/sites/default/files/ca_basinwide_data_sharing_strategy_final_draft_nov_10.pdf

The ASMS was used to identify projects needed to fill gaps in anadromous fish population monitoring in the Snake River Basin, many of which were implemented through the Fast Track process.  The Department is currently using the CRBDS document to help re-align IDFG's streamnet contract and data sharing infrastructure and procedures to address data sharing priorities related to the Viable Salmonid Population parameters.

 Participate in review, development, and implementation in the 2008 Columbia Basin Fish Accords Memorandum of Agreement Between the State of Idaho and the FCRPS Action Agencies http://www.salmonrecovery.gov/Files/BiologicalOpinions/ID_MOA_Final.pdf

Facilitated the Council's August 2011 Congressional Staff Tour

Conducted a tour for the Pacific Fisheries Legislative Task Force in August 2011

Rather than an exhaustive list of meetings, a representative list is provided here for contract year April 1, 2010 through March 31, 2011 department staff participated in the following meetings (number of meetings in parenthesis) including; the CBFWA Anadromous Fish Committee(6), Coordinated Assessments (6), Fish Screening Oversight  Committee (4), CBFWA Members (8), CBFWA Members Advisory Group (4), CBFWA Resident Fish Committee (1), CBFWA White Sturgeon Commitee (3), CBFWA Wildlife Advisory Committee (2), Fish Passage Oversight Committee.  Department staff also participated in and attended Northwest Power and Conservation Council Meetings (11) to provide technical information. Department staff were actively engaged in coordination activities related to review, information development and negotiation related to wildlife impacts including: participation in the Council’s Wildlife Crediting Forum (3) , Wildlife Mitigation Settlement Discussions directly with Bonneville Power Administration, assessment and settlement of operational impacts and development of agreements between wildlife mitigation partners.

 



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: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 2012-004-00-NPCC-20130807
Project: 2012-004-00 - Idaho Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal: RESCAT-2012-004-00
Proposal State: Pending BPA Response
Approved Date: 3/5/2014
Recommendation: Other
Comments: See Regional Coordination Review and Recommendations - Part 4.
Assessment Number: 1989-062-01-NPCC-20120130
Project: 1989-062-01 - Annual Work Plan for Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority (CBFWA)
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal: RESCAT-1989-062-01
Proposal State: Pending BPA Response
Approved Date: 2/26/2014
Recommendation: Implement with Conditions
Comments: An existing task of the project consisting of manager and Council input, focuses on developing fish and wildlife indicators (FWI) and aggregating related data to support the Council’s Program HLIs. Another task of the Foundation project, presents the FWI data in a highly summarized manner that is easily accessible to the public through the Status of the Resources (SOTR). The information gathered by tasks also may serve to inform Program implementation and evaluation needs including assessments at the subbasin and provincial level. The products related to these two tasks are important for addressing to the program’s evaluation reporting needs, and are critical to the Council’s HLIs report. For brevity, these two tasks are referred to as “reporting tasks” from this point forward. This work is currently under contract through FY 2012 (in this case, through March 31, 2013). PERC should determine and detail the future implementation of the SOTR and the development of the FWIs.

Council recommendation:
a. PERC should determine and detail the future implementation of the two reporting tasks described above – SOTR and the development of the FWIs.

b. The project also provides important historical project information through their website that is valuable to the Program and should receive input from Council and managers regarding maintenance and content of this web resource. The content of the website, including past project proposals, should be maintained as this is critical information for the Program and its coordination. Bonneville should provide a long-term storage and accessibility plan for the past project proposals.

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 2012-004-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 2012-004-00 - Idaho Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-2012-004-00
Completed Date: 4/17/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
Final Round ISRP Comment:
Qualification #1 - Qualification #1
See programmatic comments on coordination projects. A sound scientific proposal should respond to the six questions and related material at the beginning of the regional coordination section.
First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
First Round ISRP Comment:

?The proposal is missing an opportunity to take a more systematic approach to coordination: to think about what the sponsors are really trying to achieve and how they will know if they are achieving it.

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

The proposed work includes data management (10%), review of technical documents and processes (40%), and facilitating and participating in focus workgroups on Program issues (40%). Several documents are identified as being developed. How did participation in workgroups or other coordination activities affect these documents? What coordination process improved their quality?

Significance to regional programs: A list with brief descriptions of the various regional programs and fora for which the coordination project will fund IDFG participation. Idaho is an active participant in the process of conserving and restoring Columbia Basin fish and wildlife that are affected by the building and operation of the hydrosystem. The Idaho Fish and Game Department participates in coordination and consultation efforts related Fish and Wildlife Program, the FCRPS BiOp, the Upper Snake River BiOp and other activities in the Columbia Basin.

Problem statement: The brief statement of the need for coordination and integration of actions should include a research question.

Objectives: The proposal should include a better statement of objectives (separate them from tasks - word as outcomes) and a description of how activities will be evaluated for effectiveness. The project has two objectives.

OBJ 1: emphasizes, “participate, collaborate and communicate effectively and efficiently.” These would be useful variables to measure. What are effective and efficient participation, collaboration, and communication? A deliverable could be testing hypotheses about these relationships and monitoring them in coordination activities.

Mention is made, “Department staff were actively engaged in coordination activities related to review, information development and negotiation related to wildlife impacts …” Could some of these activities be reviewed for their effectiveness and efficiency?

The proposal states, “decisions on actions to recover fish and wildlife populations and mitigate for lost productivity due to construction and operation of the Federal Columbia River Power Supply are informed by Idaho's perspective and benefit from Idaho's expertise. Achieving the objective requires communication, participation, and attendance at regional forums. The outcomes we seek are commonly recognized guidance materials that are considered, used, and followed by the Fish and Wildlife Program and other areas as appropriate.” Could the outcomes mentioned be used to rewrite the objectives in measurable "desired outcome" form?

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

The project began as a stand-alone in 2011. No description of financial performance or history is provided, or expected.

A summary and enumeration of the meetings attended by IDFG staff is provided. Presentations to the NPCC, workshop participation, technical review, tour conduct, and meeting attendance are also listed. What outcomes were achieved in these coordination activities?

Regarding adaptive management, a summary statement identifies research gaps and planned changes in data infrastructure that have resulted from participation in regional coordination contracts. Could the capture of lessons learned and their feedback into coordination activities be more explicitly developed?

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

“The Idaho Department of Fish and Game intends to formally withdraw from CBFWA April 1, 2012.” This project has no financial history or review of progress. Previous work was completed under the management of the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation. “Additional Relationships Explanation” gives background regarding withdrawal from the CBFWA. This is a useful and insightful analysis.

This is a new project, so technically there are no results to evaluate. Historical data on performance is available with the project, “Proposal RESCAT-1989-062-01 - Program Coordination and Facilitation Services provided through the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation.” See the section, “Reporting & Contracted Deliverables Performance.”

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions for Type of Work (hatchery, RME, tagging)

Project relationships: The proposal lists a number of regional coordination projects with which it is related, without explanation of specific relationships.

Geographic focus: The geographic interests are stated as basinwide. Examples given reflect primarily on the portion of the Snake River Basin and most examples include the Upper Snake Salmon Recovery area.

Emerging limiting factors: A brief summary of IDFG's participation in various regional fora addressing climate change, non-native species, predation increases and toxics notes the benefit to Idaho from expertise gained through this participation. Are there emerging issues related to regional coordination? Could elements of effective coordination be identified based on these experiences? Could coordination be phrased in an adaptive management framework?

The proposed plan of work identifies many meetings, workshops, technical reviews, forums, tours, discussions, along with other forms of participation. Could the representative list of meetings be used to draft hypotheses and identify variables be used a data points to evaluate effective and efficient coordination during the proposal period? Could these activities be used to develop some hypotheses, lessons learned, and actions to make change to better achieve goals? Did any priorities change? Were insights gained from others? Focus more on results and less on the inputs to get results. What outcomes and relationships might be observed that relate to coordination? What is the value-added as a result of coordination?

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables: The project has two deliverables: 1: Staff participation in Regional Forums and meetings; 2: Provide Technical and Policy Review. Because the objectives are written as tasks, the deliverables are close to identical to the objectives.

Work elements: Two work elements are identified – 122. Provide Technical Review, and 189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide. These work elements do not have associated metrics. Can output metrics and methods be identified to go with these work elements? Ideally, the hypothesis(es) developed in the proposal would be measured during the course of the coordination activities and results presented in the report on this project. There are many ideas discussed in the proposal that are amenable to this approach. Selecting a few of the most important questions, concerns, or hypotheses and monitoring them is recommended.

Methods and metrics: Methods of performing the work are described as workshop participation, presentations to the NPCC, participation in the development of various documents and reports, and participation in meetings. A representative list of meeting participation is provided. No metrics are provided to assess effectiveness.

Value-added: a summary description of actions taken that would not have been possible without the support of coordination funds. Can the outcome of these actions be assessed in some systematic way?

4a. Specific comments on protocols and methods described in MonitoringMethods.org

The protocols for the two work elements are published but do not provide adequate guidance on the methods and metrics. Guidance is available from ISRP (2007-14:2). Project sponsors can strengthen the science in proposals by developing methods and metrics for the most important project objectives.

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/17/2012 3:05:54 PM.
Documentation Links:
Assessment Number: 1989-062-01-ISRP-20120215
Project: 1989-062-01 - Annual Work Plan for Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority (CBFWA)
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-1989-062-01
Completed Date: 4/13/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
Final Round ISRP Comment:
Qualification #1 - Qualification #1 - See programmatic comments on coordination projects
A sound scientific proposal should respond to the six questions and related material at the beginning of the regional coordination section.
First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
First Round ISRP Comment:

The proposal contains so much detail that it is difficult to review. Future proposals would be improved through more summary and synthesis of relevant information.

The proposal provides extensive insight into a scientific perspective on program coordination. A number of hypotheses are presented about the coordination process and its outcomes. The approach provides narrative findings for the experience gained by CBFWA. The insights provide compelling analysis for developing a sound scientific perspective on program coordination early in the evaluation process.

Proposal strengths:

  • The proposal is fully documented; methods and accomplishments are exhaustively described.
  • The limiting factors statement addresses large-scale issues that have the potential to limit the effectiveness of the project. This is rare among proposals.
  • The proposal provides extensive insight into a scientific perspective on program coordination.
  • Performance metrics have been identified and used to evaluate project effectiveness.

Weaknesses:

  • So much detail is presented that it's difficult for the reviewer to track proposal content. The project is not only complex in itself it is also undergoing significant structural change.
  • It is unclear where sturgeon or anadromous fish fit into CBFWA activities.
  • It is sometimes difficult for external reviewers to assess the effectiveness of the project.

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

The CBFWA proposal offers a detailed narrative review of the coordination history from 1989 to the present. It analyzes changes in coordination that have occurred and reasons for them. The proposal also raises a number of policy issues to be addressed by Bonneville and the Council.

Problem statement: The problem statement is overly long, but at its end a summary conclusion adequately states the problem the proposal is designed to address.

Objectives: The proposal is focused around seven objectives, but the implicit overarching objective of this proposal is to coordinate disparate regional coordination projects around subject-matter themes.

Each objective has several deliverables that include development and maintenance; communications; coordinating, implementing, and facilitating; collate and summarize; attend and participate.

Emerging limiting factors: The proposal identifies three limiting factors for effective regional coordination: 1) perception of fairness, 2) participation and buy-in, and 3) adequate funding for both facilitation and participation. The proposal aims to address recent changes in these limiting factors.

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

Financial performance and history: This section provides an adequate description of a financial history complicated by inconsistencies in reporting and budgeting dates and by a changing project structure.

Performance: An adequate short description is provided.

Major accomplishments: A detailed description of the project's major accomplishments in its former version – the Annual Work Plan. Because it has been coordinating activities since 1989, CBFWA has extensive coordination experience and the proposal lists many insights. Further, the proposal provides detailed discussion on why some members have left CBFWA coordination and facilitation services. The new project configuration will begin with this funding cycle. Metrics of performance are numbers of meeting attendees and qualitative evaluation of outcomes made possible by actions of the CBFWA in various fora. A stakeholder survey was also conducted.

Response to ISRP comments: A complete description of ISRP comments and CBFWA response in terms of developing tools to monitor impact is provided.

Adaptive management: A good description of changes in CBFWA focus and configuration in response to changing circumstances in the region.

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions for Type of Work (hatchery, RME, tagging)

The geographic interests of CBFWA encompass the entire Columbia Basin for both fish and wildlife. CBFWA's goal has been to include all sovereigns and action agencies in the coordination process. In addition, CBFWA encompass the Willamette/Lower Columbia, Middle Columbia, Upper Columbia, and Snake River Recovery areas.

Project relationships: The statement provides a history of the changing configuration of CBFWA and a long list of coordination, monitoring and other programs throughout the region with which it is coordinated.

Tailored questions, data: The proposal provides a long description of the Status of the Resource website and its function. Information provided in the presentation indicates that the project has added tribal data coordinators to the already participating agency representatives. The narrative analysis of the regional coordination problem is excellent and provides useful insights; more attention to identification of a scientific component to the proposal would help to plan for future success.

More findings like this one would be valuable, "These factors illustrate in high relief the Fish and Wildlife Program’s recognition that coordination efforts and funding should be focused through a set of functional activities that need coordination, and not necessarily on the basis of entities desiring coordination funding." This seems to represent a critical principle for organizing coordination activities. Another important set of coordination hypotheses, "solutions intended to increase coordinated efficiencies and effectiveness. This includes developing coordinated synthesis reports, sharing data and information through scientific papers and science/policy forums, holding regular workshops focused on specific species, methods, or geographic areas, and on several topics, the drafting of basin-wide management plans." In this same section, "CBFWA Members recognized the role the organization can play in delivering useful technical, science-based products associated with protection, mitigation and enhancement of the Columbia Basin’s anadromous and resident fish, and wildlife."

The proposal suggests that “the adaptive management framework for which coordination” be used. “Adaptive management” is mention in 4 of the 7 project objectives, in many of the deliverables, and development of an “adaptive management framework” is frequently mentioned. Can this framework be more explicitly and specifically identified? How have the many lessons learned been built into each adaptive management cycle? What is the typical length of an adaptive management cycle? In the adaptive management section a very interesting process is described that suggests that funding arrangements changed the need and approaches to collaboration. This is a very interesting insight. It does not illuminate the adaptive management framework often discussed, but it does indicate that funding is an important driver as to participation in coordination activities. The identification of factors that may limit the effectiveness regional coordination including perception of fairness, participation and buy-in, and adequate funding for both facilitation and participation, is an insightful and useful hypothesis. Did the conduct of a consumer satisfaction survey in 2010 help in assessing these variables?

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables: The project has 24 deliverables related directly to the seven objectives. Each is described in detail.

Project components: The project has eight components, each described in some detail: Data Management (5%); Monitoring and evaluation (10%); Developing and tracking biological objectives (5%); Review of technical documents and processes (10%); Project proposal review (5%); Coordination of projects, programs, and funding sources within subbasins 20%); Facilitating and participating in focus workgroups on Program Issue (25%); and Information dissemination (20%).

Work elements: CBFWA lists many work elements (11).

Methods and metrics: Methods are described in detail in several different sections. Metrics are also described. Measurement of performance is through numbers at meetings, outcomes of coordination, and a survey of stakeholder satisfaction.

One form of assessing effectiveness is the output of meeting results, documents, and other evidence of outcomes of coordination and facilitation actions. Another way to assess effectiveness is input from the state, federal, and tribal agencies involved in the process, who are well-positioned to assess this effectiveness. Other entities interacting with the program but not formally part of the CBFWA functions are also able to provide input. Some possible approaches to at least showing the degree of success would be, as a minimum, letters from each agency/tribe responding specifically to a series of questions as to how well the CBFWF program is meeting their needs in key areas and how the program might be improved. This request could also be addressed to some outside entities that participate with the workgroups. Some questions should address not only how well the CBFWA is meeting agency and tribal needs, but benefiting the salmon and other basin resources in specific ways that otherwise would not occur. It would also be of interest to know how the program involves entities such as the Oregon and Washington state agencies and the Corps of Engineers, and if more coordination among them and CBFWA entities is possible or can be expected.

4a. Specific comments on protocols and methods described in MonitoringMethods.org

The protocols for the 11 work elements are published but do not provide adequate guidance on the methods and metrics. The project sponsors can strengthen the science in proposals by developing methods and metrics for the most important project objectives. The relative value of “electronic meetings” vs. “face-to-face sessions” would be useful to study. Another worthy topic for review is dimensions of “facilitation.”

What part of “the ISRP for reporting metrics for regional coordination (ISRP 2007-14)” will be implemented? The document suggests (ISRP 2007-14:4), “Metrics of Impact: (e.g., how effective is the project: what is its added value of the coordination project) changes in behavior, value to the members, user evaluation of product utility, lack of redundancy, member assessment of effectiveness and impact, benefits to fish and wildlife of enhanced coordination activities, specific projects or resources benefited by the project, specific effect of coordination on conservation and management.” Where in the proposal are these suggested metrics of impact operationalized? A hypothesis worth testing is whether change in funding has led to decreased regional coordination.

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/13/2012 12:24:40 PM.
Documentation Links:
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review

Council Recommendation

Assessment Number: 1989-062-01-NPCC-20090924
Project: 1989-062-01 - Annual Work Plan for Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority (CBFWA)
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Approved Date: 10/23/2006
Recommendation: Under Review
Comments: Funding recommendation for FY08 and 09 dependent on further review and decision by the Council. See 'regional coordination placeholder' below and see discussion of regional coordination funding in the programmatic recommendations.

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 1989-062-01-ISRP-20060831
Project: 1989-062-01 - Annual Work Plan for Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority (CBFWA)
Review: FY07-09 Solicitation Review
Completed Date: 8/31/2006
Final Round ISRP Date: None
Final Round ISRP Rating: Meets Scientific Review Criteria (Qualified)
Final Round ISRP Comment:
The response includes a detailed description of the types of coordination and facilitation services that CBFWA is or could be providing. It adds information that was missing from the proposal regarding the operational meaning of general coordination terms. The response states that without CBFWA, the BPA, NPCC and the ISRP would find it difficult to staff activities such as holding meetings and providing website services. In addition, the response states that the "Columbia River Basin is dependent on the coordination, administration, and technical services that the CBFWA provides" for two monitoring and evaluation coordination partnerships (PNAMP and CSMEP). CBFWA activities in this regard include subcontracting services, participation in meetings, and website services. In 2005 CBFWA began to further expand its role to data inventory and reporting services. The response further states that the CBFWA role extends beyond coordination of its members to services for non-member entities.



Overall, a better demonstration is needed that CBFWA's services are provided in the most cost-effective manner. The response provides a better description of the association of the $900k budget line to the "annual report", including good detail on the range of products associated with the report. However, questions remain as to whether the costs are reasonable, especially given that a template of the website is already up and running.



The response also provides a description of the withdrawal of the Kalispel and Spokane tribes from membership. It appears that the interests of these two entities were not being addressed at the policy level; however, little explanation is provided as to why this situation exists. Does CBFWA have mechanisms to cope with "under-represented" groups?



The description of performance metrics is useful. As the sponsors indicate, existing performance metrics measure output (e.g. number of meetings, number of participants) but not impact (changes in behavior, value to the members). The table of number of meetings is interesting, particularly the very low number of PNAMP meetings (n=1) relative to other kinds of meeting such as "member meetings." However, evaluating performance on the basis of the number of meetings held, average number of participants, and reports produced is not, as the sponsors acknowledge, sufficient to assess impacts.



As recommended by ISRP, the sponsors conducted a literature review of metrics to assess coordination effectiveness. Review results were not provided but apparently were not considered applicable: "Results from coordination-oriented literature searches provide a broad set of techniques and metrics that are not consistent for coordination efforts, a situation that is comparable to differences that exist among monitoring and evaluation efforts for physical and biological projects."



Regardless of the range of approaches, the ISRP maintains that coordination efforts such as these can be evaluated. The response provides a vigorous defense of the need for the CBFWA, asserting that more coordination will result in better survival and recovery of fish and wildlife populations. However, no quantitative measures are developed for determining the degree to which this is the case. The Status of the Resource Project should provide useful information on key variables such as escapements, but the response does not give much information on project status or data QA/QC. Will Columbia River Basin fish and wildlife agencies rely on the Project for data or will the project duplicate agency data?



The recommended qualification to funding is that the project should develop an approach to monitor its impact in terms of changes in behavior and value to the members. In addition to the PISCES metrics, it would be useful to have CBFWA develop member-feedback instruments to evaluate member assessment of effectiveness and impact. In addition, the new cluster of products included under the Status of the Resource report provides an opportunity for user evaluation of product utility.
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
None


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
The Idaho Coordination Project (through participation in regional forums) has lead to the identification of projects needed to fill gaps in anadromous fish population monitoring in the Snake River Basin, many of which were implemented through the Fast Track process. The Department is currently using the CRBDS document to help re-align IDFG's streamnet contract and data sharing infrastructure and procedures to address priorities related to the Viable Salmonid Population parameters.

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

None listed.

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: This project Split From 1989-062-01 effective on 7/7/2011
Relationship Description: Starting with the FY12 SOY & contract (April, 2012); Oregon, Idaho and Washington will all have separate projects and contracts. Previously they had a separate contract under project 1989-062-01. This separation will keep those entities that retain their share of coordination separate from CBFWA.


Additional Relationships Explanation:

The Idaho Coordination Project is a Basinwide project.  The Department previously participated in Basinwide coordination through CBFWA.  The Idaho Department of Fish and Game intends to formally withdraw from CBFWA April 1, 2012. The withdrawal does not diminish our commitment to regional collaboration. The reasons for the withdraw include the following:
1) The fish and wildlife management "landscape" in the Columbia Basin has changed significantly in recent years. Some of the changes have diminished the need for regionally-based coordination among the Basin's fish and wildlife managers. Other changes have created opportunities for the fish and wildlife managers to work together in regional and sub-regional forums that focus attention and efforts on specific topics of common interest.
Some examples of the changes include:
a. The reliance by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council (Council) and Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) on the Independent Scientific Review Panel for assessments of the technical merits of projects has eliminated a role the fish and wildlife managers once played; a role that required regionally-coordinated participation through CBFWA.
b. The Biological Opinion on operations of the Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS) and the resultant Memorandum of Agreements between BPA and many of the fish and wildlife managers have significantly reduced the “discretionary” budget for projects and the need for regionally-coordinated project planning.
c. The Action Agencies have established regionally-based policy and technical forums that provide opportunities for fish and wildlife managers to work together and with others to implement measures in FCRPS Biological Opinion. The expanded scope of measures in the Biological Opinion to include habitat, hatchery and harvest require participation by the fish and wildlife managers in these forums.
d. NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service have established a number of sub-regionally based policy and technical forums that provide opportunities for fish and wildlife managers to work together and with others to plan and implement measures to protect and recover fish species listed under the federal Endangered Species Act.
e. Parties to U.S. v. Oregon reaffirmed their commitment to policy and technical forums used to cooperatively manage fisheries and fish production programs as part of a their recently adopted management plan for fish in the mainstem Columbia River. Integration of key parts of that plan into recovery plans and the FCRPS Biological Opinion provide opportunities for the fish and wildlife managers to work together on many cross-cutting issues.
f. The Council and NOAA Fisheries recently lead a regional effort to develop priorities for monitoring and evaluation for salmon and steelhead in the Columbia Basin. Council-led “needs-based summits” on other critical issues would provide opportunities for the fish and wildlife managers to work together and with others to plan and implement the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program.
2) The changing landscape and demands on fish and wildlife agencies staff to effectively participate in and contribute to regional efforts to plan, implement and evaluate activities that affect fish and wildlife in the Columbia Basin have increased dramatically. This requires us to set priorities for how we staff those forums that deal with issues of significant interest to Idaho. Given our current staffing levels, the demand for our participation forces us to make difficult choices.
3) Although we share common interests with other fish and wildlife managers in the Columbia Basin, and remain committed to working closely with others on those interests, we believe we will be more effective by investing available coordination dollars in our staff, rather than in a shared centralized staff and its associated infra-structure.
We will continue to work with our co-managers on issues of common interest to collectively manage, protect and restore Columbia Basin fish and wildlife resources.

The list below contains other regional coordination projects that are conducting similar work related to the Idaho Coordination Project.
1) 1988-108-04 StreamNet (PSMFC)
2) 1989-062-01 Annual Work Plan for Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority
3) 1990-080-00 Columbia Basin PIT-Tag Information
4) 1994-033-00 Fish Passage Center (PSMFC)
5) 1998-031-00 Implement Wy-Kan-Ush-Mi Wa-Kish-Wit (CRITFC)
6) 2006-006-00 Habitat Evaluation Project (CBFWA)
7) 2007-004-00 Upper Snake River Tribe (USRT) Coordination (USRT Foundation)
8) 2007-106-00 Spokane Tribe Coordination (Spokane Tribe)
9) 2007-108-00 Upper Columbia United Tribes (UCUT) Coordination (UCUT)
10) 2007-162-00 Kalispel Tribe Coordination (Kalispel Tribe)
11) 2008-507-00 Tribal Data Network (CRITFC)
12) 2010-044-00 Colville Regional Coordination (Colville Tribe)
13) 2010-082-00 PNAMP Integrated Status and Trends Monitoring (ISTM) Demonstration Project
14) 2011-012-00 Cowlitz Tribe Coordination (Cowlitz Tribe)
15) 2012-002-00 Oregon Regional Coordination (ODFW)
16) 2012-003-00 Washington Region Coordination (WDFW)
17) 2012-005-00 Nez Perce Tribe Coordination (NPT)
18) 2012-006-00 Siletz Tribe Coordination (Siletz Tribe)


Primary Focal Species
None

Secondary Focal Species
None

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
The Department is engaged in numerous on the ground actions funded outside the Council's Fish and Wildlife Program that address emerging limiting factors including but not limited to climate change, non-native species, predation increases and toxics.  Some of these forums and actions include the Western Governors Association development of Decision Support Systems, the US Fish and Wildlife Service's Landscape Conservation Cooperatives, and Idaho's Invasive Species Program to name a few.  The Idaho Coordination contract allows the Council's Program to benefit from the expertise gained from involvement in these programs.

Work Classes
Proposed Work
10%- Data Management continue to implement the recomendations in the Draft Columbia River Collaborative Data Management Strategy, participate in the Phase III work of the Coordinated assessments project and work to re-align Department Streamnet funding to implement electronic sharing of Viable Salmonid Population metrics. 40% Review of Technical documents and processes 40% Facilitating and participating in focus workgroups on Program issues including the Fish Tagging Forum, the 2012 amendments to the Council's Fish and Wildlife Program
Past Accomplishments
a. Describe the Work
Department staff developed and presented to the Council an Overview of Hatchery Scientfic Review Group Implementation http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2011/11/f2.pdf and, a review of Anadromous Fisheries, Forecasts, and Management Concerns http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2011/03/4.pdf http://www.nwcouncil.org/news/2010/03/1schriever.pdf Department staff participated in workshops for development and review of the Anadromous Salmonid Monitoring Strategy (ASMS) http://www.cbfwa.org/ams/FinalDocs.cfm and, the Columbia River Basinwide Data Sharing Strategy (CRBDS) http://www.pnamp.org/sites/default/files/ca_basinwide_data_sharing_strategy_final_draft_nov_10.pdf The ASMS was used to identify projects needed to fill gaps in anadromous fish population monitoring in the Snake River Basin, many of which were implemented through the Fast Track process. The Department is currently using the CRBDS document to help re-align IDFG's streamnet contract and data sharing infrastructure and procedures to address data sharing priorities related to the Viable Salmonid Population parameters. Participate in review, development, and implementation in the 2008 Columbia Basin Fish Accords Memorandum of Agreement Between the State of Idaho and the FCRPS Action Agencies http://www.salmonrecovery.gov/Files/BiologicalOpinions/ID_MOA_Final.pdf Facilitated the Council's August 2011 Congressional Staff Tour Presentation in July 2010 on the NPCC Fish and Wildlife Program to the Pacific Fisheries Legislative Task Force Participated in the Council's Wildlife Crediting Forum final report available at http://www.nwcouncil.org/fw/wcf/2011_09Report.pdf Rather than an exhaustive list of meetings, a representative list is provided here for contract year April 1, 2010 through March 31, 2011 department staff participated in the following meetings (number of meetings in parenthesis) including; the CBFWA Anadromous Fish Committee(6), Coordinated Assessments (6), Fish Screening Oversight Committee (4), CBFWA Members (8), CBFWA Members Advisory Group (4), CBFWA Resident Fish Committee (1), CBFWA White Sturgeon Commitee (3), CBFWA Wildlife Advisory Committee (2), Fish Passage Oversight Committee. Department staff also participated in and attended Northwest Power and Conservation Council Meetings (11) to provide technical information. Department staff were actively engaged in coordination activities related to review, information development and negotiation related to wildlife impacts including: participation in the Council’s Wildlife Crediting Forum (3) , Wildlife Mitigation Settlement Discussions directly with Bonneville Power Administration, assessment and settlement of operational impacts and development of agreements between wildlife mitigation partners.
b. Describe the value-added for the Program and region
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game acting, acting under the supervision of the Idaho Fish and Game Commission, is the state agency charged with carrying out the statutory authority to preserve, protect, perpetuate, and manage all fish and wildlife in Idaho (Idaho Code 36-103(a)). The Idaho Coordination contract ensures that Department of Fish and Game employee participation in the groups, committees and organizations implementing the Council’s Program on an ongoing basis. The work funded by the contract provides the Department the opportunity to engage in programmatic issues related to data management, monitoring and evaluation, information dissemination, project proposal reviews, review of technical documents, and development of biological objectives. Participation in the basinwide coordination resulted in identifying and implementation of projects which filled gaps in the monitoring of listed Snake River Basin spring/summer chinook salmon and steelhead populations. Projects were proposed and implemented by the Department and tribal co-managers (Nez Perce Tribe, Shoshone-Bannock Tribes). The Draft Columbia River Basin Collaborative Data Sharing strategy had value to the users who agreed to the efforts needed to improve data management infrastructure and methods and have re-prioritized some existing funding to begin implementing the recomendations. This effort would not have been possible without a regionally coordinated efffort.
Has there been user/member assessment of effectiveness and impact of the work accomplished? If so, describe the outcome and how the results have modified previous and proposed activities over time to increase value of this work.
No.

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Layers
Legend
Name (Identifier) Area Type Source for Limiting Factor Information
Type of Location Count
Columbia River Basin None

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
Staff participation in Regional Forums and meetings (DELV-1)
IDFG staff will monitor, participate in and attend, relevent forums within the Columbia River Basin that may affect State and Agency interests. These include but are not limited to the budget oversight group (BOG), the Wildlife Crediting Forum, Council Science Reviews, Council meetings, Council Organized forums (e.g. the Fish Tagging Forum) Coordinated Assessments, ad-hoc planning teams for categorical reviews, multi-year action plans, monitoring implementation strategies, and CHREET.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Planning and Coordination
189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide

Provide Technical and Policy Review (DELV-2)
IDFG staff participation in CBFWA, PNAMP, RIOG, StreamNet, LTWG, CSMEP, RCG, BOG, NPCC, PCSRF, and BPA work groups including technical reviews and analysis of fish and wildlife data/reports as well as policy-orientated recommendations. Reviews concluded in final reports transmitted to the appropriate parties via written and or oral correspondence. If warranted, provide oral presentations.
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Planning and Coordination
122. Provide Technical Review and Recommendation


Objective: Basinwide Regional Coordination (OBJ-1)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Staff participation in Regional Forums and meetings (DELV-1) Staff participation in information exchanges and regional forums is the primary method through which regional coordination is accomplished.


Objective: Technical Review (OBJ-2)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Provide Technical and Policy Review (DELV-2) Department participation in development, review and feedback is the primary method for completing the technical review deliverable.


*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
Staff participation in Regional Forums and meetings (DELV-1) 2013 2017 $348,783
Provide Technical and Policy Review (DELV-2) 2013 2017 $348,783
Total $697,566
Requested Budget by Fiscal Year

Fiscal Year Proposal Budget Limit Actual Request Explanation of amount above FY2012
2013 $132,710 changes between fiscal years reflects 2.5% Cost of living increase
2014 $136,028
2015 $139,428
2016 $142,913
2017 $146,487
Total $0 $697,566
Item Notes FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017
Personnel $76,175 $78,079 $80,031 $82,032 $84,083
Travel $28,137 $28,840 $29,561 $30,300 $31,058
Prof. Meetings & Training $410 $421 $431 $442 $453
Vehicles $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Facilities/Equipment (See explanation below) $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Rent/Utilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Capital Equipment $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Overhead/Indirect negotiated annually, used 18% here for budgeting purposes $23,888 $24,485 $25,097 $25,725 $26,368
Other Facilitation Services and participation in regional groups, CBFWA, PNAMP etc. $4,100 $4,203 $4,308 $4,414 $4,525
PIT Tags $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total $132,710 $136,028 $139,428 $142,913 $146,487
Major Facilities and Equipment explanation:
The project uses existing IDFG staff which includes adequate office space and equipment for anticipated needs.

Source / Organization Fiscal Year Proposed Amount Type Description
Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) 2013 $72,000 In-Kind Cost share includes personnel and travel costs associated wtih participation in regional forums not covered by funding from BPA through the Council's Fish and Wildlife Program.

Columbia Basin Coordinated Anadromous Monitoring Workshop 2010 (version 30062010). Anadromous Salmonid Monitoring Strategy Viable Salmonid Population Criteria and Subset of Tributary Habitat and Hatchery Effectiveness. http://www.cbfwa.org/ams/FinalDocs.cfm accessed November 18, 2011. Coordinated Assessments Workgroup. 2011. Columbia River Basin Collaborative Data Sharing Strategy (CRBDS):Salmon and Steelhead Population Abundance and Productivity Indicators. http://www.pnamp.org/sites/default/files/ca_basinwide_data_sharing_strategy_final_draft_nov_10.pdf accessed November 18, 2011.

Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 2012-004-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 2012-004-00 - Idaho Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-2012-004-00
Completed Date: 4/17/2012
Final Round ISRP Date: 4/3/2012
Final Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
Final Round ISRP Comment:
Qualification #1 - Qualification #1
See programmatic comments on coordination projects. A sound scientific proposal should respond to the six questions and related material at the beginning of the regional coordination section.
First Round ISRP Date: 2/8/2012
First Round ISRP Rating: Qualified
First Round ISRP Comment:

?The proposal is missing an opportunity to take a more systematic approach to coordination: to think about what the sponsors are really trying to achieve and how they will know if they are achieving it.

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

The proposed work includes data management (10%), review of technical documents and processes (40%), and facilitating and participating in focus workgroups on Program issues (40%). Several documents are identified as being developed. How did participation in workgroups or other coordination activities affect these documents? What coordination process improved their quality?

Significance to regional programs: A list with brief descriptions of the various regional programs and fora for which the coordination project will fund IDFG participation. Idaho is an active participant in the process of conserving and restoring Columbia Basin fish and wildlife that are affected by the building and operation of the hydrosystem. The Idaho Fish and Game Department participates in coordination and consultation efforts related Fish and Wildlife Program, the FCRPS BiOp, the Upper Snake River BiOp and other activities in the Columbia Basin.

Problem statement: The brief statement of the need for coordination and integration of actions should include a research question.

Objectives: The proposal should include a better statement of objectives (separate them from tasks - word as outcomes) and a description of how activities will be evaluated for effectiveness. The project has two objectives.

OBJ 1: emphasizes, “participate, collaborate and communicate effectively and efficiently.” These would be useful variables to measure. What are effective and efficient participation, collaboration, and communication? A deliverable could be testing hypotheses about these relationships and monitoring them in coordination activities.

Mention is made, “Department staff were actively engaged in coordination activities related to review, information development and negotiation related to wildlife impacts …” Could some of these activities be reviewed for their effectiveness and efficiency?

The proposal states, “decisions on actions to recover fish and wildlife populations and mitigate for lost productivity due to construction and operation of the Federal Columbia River Power Supply are informed by Idaho's perspective and benefit from Idaho's expertise. Achieving the objective requires communication, participation, and attendance at regional forums. The outcomes we seek are commonly recognized guidance materials that are considered, used, and followed by the Fish and Wildlife Program and other areas as appropriate.” Could the outcomes mentioned be used to rewrite the objectives in measurable "desired outcome" form?

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

The project began as a stand-alone in 2011. No description of financial performance or history is provided, or expected.

A summary and enumeration of the meetings attended by IDFG staff is provided. Presentations to the NPCC, workshop participation, technical review, tour conduct, and meeting attendance are also listed. What outcomes were achieved in these coordination activities?

Regarding adaptive management, a summary statement identifies research gaps and planned changes in data infrastructure that have resulted from participation in regional coordination contracts. Could the capture of lessons learned and their feedback into coordination activities be more explicitly developed?

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

“The Idaho Department of Fish and Game intends to formally withdraw from CBFWA April 1, 2012.” This project has no financial history or review of progress. Previous work was completed under the management of the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation. “Additional Relationships Explanation” gives background regarding withdrawal from the CBFWA. This is a useful and insightful analysis.

This is a new project, so technically there are no results to evaluate. Historical data on performance is available with the project, “Proposal RESCAT-1989-062-01 - Program Coordination and Facilitation Services provided through the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Foundation.” See the section, “Reporting & Contracted Deliverables Performance.”

3. Project Relationships, Emerging Limiting Factors, and Tailored Questions for Type of Work (hatchery, RME, tagging)

Project relationships: The proposal lists a number of regional coordination projects with which it is related, without explanation of specific relationships.

Geographic focus: The geographic interests are stated as basinwide. Examples given reflect primarily on the portion of the Snake River Basin and most examples include the Upper Snake Salmon Recovery area.

Emerging limiting factors: A brief summary of IDFG's participation in various regional fora addressing climate change, non-native species, predation increases and toxics notes the benefit to Idaho from expertise gained through this participation. Are there emerging issues related to regional coordination? Could elements of effective coordination be identified based on these experiences? Could coordination be phrased in an adaptive management framework?

The proposed plan of work identifies many meetings, workshops, technical reviews, forums, tours, discussions, along with other forms of participation. Could the representative list of meetings be used to draft hypotheses and identify variables be used a data points to evaluate effective and efficient coordination during the proposal period? Could these activities be used to develop some hypotheses, lessons learned, and actions to make change to better achieve goals? Did any priorities change? Were insights gained from others? Focus more on results and less on the inputs to get results. What outcomes and relationships might be observed that relate to coordination? What is the value-added as a result of coordination?

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables: The project has two deliverables: 1: Staff participation in Regional Forums and meetings; 2: Provide Technical and Policy Review. Because the objectives are written as tasks, the deliverables are close to identical to the objectives.

Work elements: Two work elements are identified – 122. Provide Technical Review, and 189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide. These work elements do not have associated metrics. Can output metrics and methods be identified to go with these work elements? Ideally, the hypothesis(es) developed in the proposal would be measured during the course of the coordination activities and results presented in the report on this project. There are many ideas discussed in the proposal that are amenable to this approach. Selecting a few of the most important questions, concerns, or hypotheses and monitoring them is recommended.

Methods and metrics: Methods of performing the work are described as workshop participation, presentations to the NPCC, participation in the development of various documents and reports, and participation in meetings. A representative list of meeting participation is provided. No metrics are provided to assess effectiveness.

Value-added: a summary description of actions taken that would not have been possible without the support of coordination funds. Can the outcome of these actions be assessed in some systematic way?

4a. Specific comments on protocols and methods described in MonitoringMethods.org

The protocols for the two work elements are published but do not provide adequate guidance on the methods and metrics. Guidance is available from ISRP (2007-14:2). Project sponsors can strengthen the science in proposals by developing methods and metrics for the most important project objectives.

Modified by Dal Marsters on 4/17/2012 3:05:54 PM.
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