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Proposal Summary

Proposal RESCAT-2012-008-00 - Montana Regional Coordination

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Archive Date Time Type From To By
11/22/2011 11:07 AM Status Draft <System>
Download 11/30/2011 3:05 PM Status Draft ISRP - Pending First Review <System>
2/16/2012 4:42 PM Status ISRP - Pending First Review ISRP - Pending Final Review <System>
4/17/2012 3:08 PM Status ISRP - Pending Final Review Pending Council Recommendation <System>
3/5/2014 1:57 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:
  RESCAT-2012-008-00
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: 2012-008-00
Primary Contact:
Joel Tohtz (Inactive)
Created:
11/22/2011 by (Not yet saved)
Proponent Organizations:
Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (MFWP)

Project Title:
Montana Regional Coordination
 
Proposal Short Description:
Montana will formally withdraw from the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority at the end of the contract period in April 2012. Coordination between Montana and regional states and tribes must continue during the remainder of this project planning period. This proposal describes how Montana plans to use regional coordination funding in future years to facilitate on-the-ground mitigation actions.
 
Proposal Executive Summary:
Montana previously settled wildlife losses attributable to inundation by Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS) dams, when Bonneville Power Administration and MFWP established Montana's wildlife trust fund. Montana has no anadromous fish species, and all fish mitigation actions are designed to offset resident fish and habitat losses attributable to the construction and operation of Hungry Horse and Libby Dams. Infrastructure is well established for coordinating remediation of fish and wildlife losses caused by inundation as the reservoirs filled. Annual losses of fish and wildlife resulting from dam operation transend regional boundaries and jurisdictions, so require continued coordination with Columbia Basin states, tribes and Canadian Provinces.

Montana proposes to shift the emphasis of regional coordination funding to supporting specific forums and efficient processes that facilitate implementation of tangible benefits to fish, wildlife and their habitat. Travel will be required intermittently to accomplish regional coordination, however travel costs can be reduced by using web meetings, teleconferences, and email. Savings can then be redirected to high priority actions on-the-ground.

Purpose:
Programmatic
Emphasis:
Regional Coordination
Species Benefit:
Anadromous: 0.0%   Resident: 75.0%   Wildlife: 25.0%
Supports 2009 NPCC Program:
Yes
Subbasin Plan:
Fish Accords:
None
Biological Opinions:
  • 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
Montana's regional coordination facilitates implementation of the Flathead and Kootenai Subbasin Plans. Travel funding allows MFWP personnel to participate in TMT (system hydro operations), Kootenai white sturgeon recovery team (BiOp operations at Libby Dam and habitat modifications needed to restore natural sturgeon reproduction), bull trout recovery (coordinate transboundary restoration actions), Columbia River Treaty review (Sovereign's Review Team and Technical Team will provide report to US State Department in preparation for extension, modification or termination of treaty with Canada), resident fish focus groups (share technical information to facilitate esident fish mitigation), and Columbia Basin Trust (transboundary collaboration with Canadians).
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

A large percentage of Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Program funding is consumed by process, and insufficient resources remain to implement on-the-ground mitigation actions that improve conditions for fish, wildlife and their habitat.  BPA's desire to direct 70% of project funding to on-the-ground actions, 25% to RM&E and 5% to project administration is a practical solution to this problem.  BPA's goal is currently not possible for many reasons, but demonstrates the need to streamline processes (e.g. proposals, review, contracting, administration), and to facilitate successful project implementation.  Montana's regional coordination project will strive increase the percentage of funding available for project implementation.


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
Facilitate implementation of on-the-ground actions that benefit fish, wildlife and their habitat. (OBJ-1)
Reduce the percentage of project funding that is spent on planning and process.

Coordinate resident fish mitigation actions (OBJ-2)
Resident fish functions formerly supported by CBFWA will be continued by regional stakeholders, agencies, states and tribes.

Coordinate wildlife mitigation for dam operation impacts (OBJ-3)
Wildlife impacts caused by dam operation will be coordinated with agences, states and tribes

Fund regional travel by MFWP personnel (OBJ-4)
Regional travel is sometimes needed to develop and maintain relationships and trust among stakeholders.

Support information and data sharing among regional stakeholders (OBJ-5)
Data compatibility, analysis of telemetry data, accruate maps, and information summaries are needed to coordinate actions by regional stakeholders.


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 $130,711 $61,529

Fish Accord - Montana $130,711 $61,529
FY2020 $130,711 $130,711 $150,501

Fish Accord - Montana $130,711 $150,501
FY2021 $130,711 $130,711 $59,774

Fish Accord - Montana $130,711 $59,774
FY2022 $130,711 $130,711 $119,827

Fish Accord - Montana $130,711 $119,827
FY2023 $130,711 $130,712 $126,130

Fish Accord - Montana $130,712 $126,130
FY2024 $133,979 $133,979 $129,695

Fish Accord - Montana $133,979 $129,695
FY2025 $137,328 $137,328 $64,366

Fish Accord - Montana $137,328 $64,366

* 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.
Previous Fiscal Years
Fiscal Year Total Contributions % of Budget
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012

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:52
On time:48
Avg Days Early:7

                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
56781 61840, 65610, 69683, 72905, 76686, 76916 REL 2, 76916 REL 8, 76916 REL 14, 76916 REL 17, 76916 REL 23, 84064 REL 1, 84064 REL 7, CR-376800 2012-008-00 EXP MONTANA REGIONAL COORDINATION Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (MFWP) 04/01/2012 06/30/2026 Approved 52 49 4 0 0 53 100.00% 0
Project Totals 52 49 4 0 0 53 100.00% 0

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.

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
None

  • 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

Although this is considered an existing project, historic accomplishments were completed through Montana's involvement in CBFWA.  Specifically, CBFWA's efforts by RFAC, MAG and Members. The list of regional accomplishments by CBFWA is best viewed in the proposals submitted by CBFWA. 

MFWP directy collaborates with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes (CSKT), Kootenai Tribe of Idaho (KTOI), Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG), federal agencies (ACOE, Reclamation, USGS, USFWS, NPS) and Canadian Ministries.  Montana and Tribes jointly created fisheries loss statements, mitigation and implementation plans, and will out allies, completed the Flathead and Kootenai Subbasin Plans.  



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: 2012-008-00-NPCC-20130807
Project: 2012-008-00 - Montana Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal: RESCAT-2012-008-00
Proposal State: Pending BPA Response
Approved Date: 3/5/2014
Recommendation: Other
Comments: See Regional Coordination Review and Recommendations - Part 4.

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 2012-008-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 2012-008-00 - Montana Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-2012-008-00
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 contains very little specific detail on what MFWP is trying to accomplish with the proposed coordination. It is missing an opportunity to take a more systematic approach to coordination: to think about what the sponsors are really trying to achieve, how they will go about it, how they will know if they are achieving their objectives, and how they will adapt to changing circumstances or proactively test new approaches and learn from the outcomes.

“Montana proposes to shift the emphasis of regional coordination funding to supporting specific forums and efficient processes that facilitate implementation of tangible benefits to fish, wildlife, and their habitat.” The Montana proposal raises an important issue about the value of coordination in relation to completion of projects. The cost reduction theme and the relation between coordination and project effectiveness would be very useful themes to put into a research plan.

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

Proposed work includes coordination of projects, programs, and funding sources within subbasins (75%); review of technical documents and processes (10%); facilitating and participating in workgroups (7%); information dissemination (3%); and project proposal reviews (5%).

Significance to regional programs: A summary statement describing the regional programs and fora that relate to fish and wildlife issues in Montana and in which regional coordination funds MFWP participation.

Problem statement: The statement emphasizes the current cost of the process in the Fish and Wildlife Program and BPA's goal to reduce the proportion of direct spending on process activities. A link is made to the cost reduction potential of Montana's coordination project.

Objectives: The project has five objectives, each with a brief description. The objectives are written as tasks and desired outcomes are not identified.

OBJ 1: "Reduce the percentage of project funding that is spent on planning and process." Good, written as a measurable hypothesis. But, this is not developed in the deliverables. The proposal calls attention to the tension between coordination funding and project funding. This implies that coordination activities need to be evaluated for their efficiency and effectiveness.

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

Major accomplishments: The statement refers back to accomplishments under the CBFWA coordination and the present entities who are Montana's major collaborators.

Adaptive management: The statement notes that regional coordination benefits from adaptive management, notable in efforts to reduce costs by streamlining processes to eliminate redundancies and sharing effective mitigation tools. Putting these questions into an adaptive management framework and designing a research plan would make this proposal much stronger and help achieve the objectives of the proposal sponsors.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

“Montana will formally withdraw from the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority at the end of the contract period in April 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.

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 provides a general list of regional entities with which the MFWP coordinates.

Geographic focus: The geographic interests are stated as, “Montana proposes to shift the emphasis of regional coordination funding to supporting specific forums and efficient processes that facilitate implementation of tangible benefits to fish, wildlife and their habitat. …Montana's regional coordination facilitates implementation of the Flathead and Kootenai Subbasin Plans.” This is a desirable goal, but does it reflect regional coordination? Is it affected by regional coordination?

Emerging limiting factors: The proposal states that the coordination project will not directly address limiting factors. However, it notes that for agencies, states and tribes to address limiting factors in a cost-effective way, coordination is required. Some examples of limiting factors requiring coordination are briefly described and could be developed as research questions.

Under adaptive management, the proposal emphasizes, “The most significant change planned for Montana's regional coordination funding is to streamline processes, so that a larger percentage of Fish and Wildlife Program funding is directed toward on-the-ground actions.” Thus, a deliverable might be a reduction in the ratio funds going to coordination and an increase in the ratio going to projects.

The emphasis on "trust" as a variable affected by personal contact is insightful and important. Building a research plan on the dimensions of this insight would be valuable.

The proposed plan of work is mainly about inputs. What outcomes and relationships might be observed that relate to coordination? Measures for the primary goal of shifting funding from coordination to projects would be a desirable indicator of achieving the proposal’s major concern.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables: The proposal lists a single deliverable - Montana Regional Coordination - that relates to each of the objectives. How does “Montana Regional Coordination” meet all the objectives? How does this deliver anything or meet any objective? The deliverable is a general task statement and should focus on outcomes; the objectives are more specific task statements.

Work elements: One work element is identified: 189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide. This work element has no metrics associated with it. Can output metrics and methods be identified to go with this work element? 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: These would be developed in a scientific regional coordination research plan.

Value-added: The hypothesis is offered that less funding should go to coordination and more to projects. This is an important issue. Can it be documented? One might offer the alternative hypothesis that without regional coordination project funds are wasted on duplicative and low priority projects. How is it that describing the value-added is not applicable?

Assessment of effectiveness: What are the measures that demonstrate this effectiveness? What are the expected outcomes from providing “records of attendance for all meetings and events, as well as any materials published for the purposes of coordination as well as document the outcomes of coordination?” Can more specifics on the deliverables be included? What are the appropriate outcome measures?

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

The protocols for the work element 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 3:08:14 PM.
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
This form was designed for RM&E and mitigation projects that inform management decisions or accomplish tangible biological responses on-the-ground. Yet regional coordination does benefit from adaptive management. The most significant change planned for Montana's regional coordination funding is to streamline processes, so that a larger percentage of Fish and Wildlife Program funding is directed toward on-the-ground actions. Reviewers might not be aware that Montana historically spent a comparatively small percentage of funding made available by BPA for regional coordination. We chose to support specific CBFWA functions (RFAC, MAG, Members and fish screen/passage forum) and minimal regional travel to attend other Columbia Basin forums including the Technical Management Team, Kootenai White sturgeon recovery team, System Operation Review, Columbia River Treaty review, System Modeling Team, legal proceedings and other state and tribal meetings. We chose to reduce travel costs after relationships were established with various groups by using web-based meetings, conference calls and email. This strategy reduced downtime during travel, and transportation, lodging, and per diem charges. Nonetheless, some travel is critical to establish relationships and trust with other regional stakeholders. Montana's priorities are to streamline processes, eliminate redundancies, and to share mitigation tools that have been shown to be effective.

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
P153838 Microelemental methods to address illegal fish introductions Presentation - 69683 1/31/2017 10:11:05 AM

Other Project Documents on the Web



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:

A. Mountain Columbia Ecological Province: Columbia River headwater subbasins in the US and Canada.  
B. Similar regional coordination is completed by regional partners including the state of Idaho, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, and Columbia Basin Trust in Canada.  Examples include coordination on transboundary fish and wildlife species including the endangered Kootenai white sturgeon, threatened bull trout, westslope cutthroat trout, redband trout, lynx, eagles, grizzly bear, wolves, and assorted migratory birds.  Associated regional forums are listed elsewhere in this proposal.


Primary Focal Species
Burbot (Lota lota)
Cutthroat Trout, Westslope (O. c. lewisi)
Sturgeon, White (A. transmontanus) - Kootenai River DPS (Endangered)
Trout, Bull (S. confluentus) (Threatened)
Trout, Interior Redband (O. mykiss gairdnerii)
Whitefish, Mountain (Prosopium williamsoni)
Wildlife

Secondary Focal Species
Freshwater Mussels
Kokanee (Oncorhynchus nerka)
Pike, Northern (Esox lucius) [OBSOLETE]
Pikeminnow, Northern (Ptychocheilus oregonensis) [OBSOLETE]
Trout, Brook (Salvelinus fontinalis)
Trout, Lake (S. namaycush) [OBSOLETE]
Trout, Rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

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
Montana's mitigation projects directly address limiting factors.  This regional coordination project will not directly mitigate limiting factors.  

Efforts by agencies, states and tribes must be coordinated to cost-effectively mitigate limiting factors.  Coordination is needed to respond to climate change impacts on water supply and hydropower operations, increased water temperatures, synergistic effects of increased temperatures on toxicity, metabolism, proliferation of nonnative species and associated impacts to native species.  The recent expansion of Didymosphenia geminata is causing significant trophic level shifts and scientist are collaborating on mechanisms causing these nuisance blooms and possible controls.  I could go on, but rational reviewers will recognise that project implementation is more effective when actions by project proponents are coordinated.

Work Classes
Work Elements

Planning and Coordination:
189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide
Please describe which opportunities have been explored to restore or reintroduce resident native fish and their habitats?
Details are provided in MFWP's proposals for the Hungry Horse Mitigation Program, Libby Mitigation Program and NPCC Mainstem Amendment Monitiring project.
Has a loss assessment been completed for your particular subbasin/or province?
Yes
Links to the assessments.
None listed.
NameURL
Kootenai Subbasin Plan
Flathead Subbasin Plan
Hungry Horse Mitigation Plan 1991
Hungry Horse Implentation Plan 1993
Libby Mitigation and Implementation Plan 1998
If you are using non-native fish species to achieve mitigation, have you completed an environmental risk assessment of potential negative impacts to native resident fish?
Yes
What are the findings of that assessment?
The correct answer to this quesstion would be "NA", because we are not using non-native species to achieve mitigation on this project. However, this form could not be completed unlessyes or no was selected, and neither was the correct answer. We did not complete a risk assessment as indicated above (but the form is now complete...such as it is).
Does your proposed work support or implement a production goal identified in a USFWS Bull Trout Recovery Plan?
No
Proposed Work
•Data management (storage, management, and reporting): "NA" this action is performed by MFWP's other projects. •Monitoring and evaluation (framework and approach): "NA" this action is performed by MFWP's other projects. •Developing and tracking biological objectives: "NA" this action is performed by MFWP's other projects. •Review of technical documents and processes: 10% - Participating in Kootenai white sturgeon recovery team, Columbia River Treaty review, Technical Management Team and other regional forums. •Project proposal review: 5% writing and tracking project review processes and related processes. •Coordination of projects, programs and funding sources within subbasins: 75% this is obviously the main thrust of Montana's regional corrdination project. •Facilitating and participating in focus workgroups on Program issues: 7% this is in addition to bullet 4 above. Coordination typically requires meeting with regional stakeholders on various topics. •Information dissemination (technical, policy, and outreach): 3% most materials that this project would disseminate are products of our mitigation and RM&E projects.
Past Accomplishments
a. Describe the Work
NA
b. Describe the value-added for the Program and region
NA
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.
NA

Loading ...
Layers
Legend
Name (Identifier) Area Type Source for Limiting Factor Information
Type of Location Count
Fisher (17010102) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 24
Yaak (17010103) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 17
Upper Clark Fork (17010201) HUC 4 None
Blackfoot (17010203) HUC 4 None
Middle Clark Fork (17010204) HUC 4 None
Bitterroot (17010205) HUC 4 None
North Fork Flathead (17010206) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 30
Middle Fork Flathead (17010207) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 33
Flathead Lake (17010208) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 24
South Fork Flathead (17010209) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 53
Stillwater (17010210) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 25
Swan (17010211) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 19
Lower Flathead (17010212) HUC 4 QHA (Qualitative Habitat Assessment) 42

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
Montana Regional Coordination (DELV-1)
Meet objectives 1-5
Types of Work:
Work Class Work Elements
Planning and Coordination
189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide


Objective: Facilitate implementation of on-the-ground actions that benefit fish, wildlife and their habitat. (OBJ-1)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*

Montana Regional Coordination (DELV-1) MFWP personnel will coordinate efforts with conservation partners to share techniques, duties and data.


Objective: Coordinate resident fish mitigation actions (OBJ-2)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*


Objective: Coordinate wildlife mitigation for dam operation impacts (OBJ-3)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*


Objective: Fund regional travel by MFWP personnel (OBJ-4)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*


Objective: Support information and data sharing among regional stakeholders (OBJ-5)

Project Deliverables How the project deliverables help meet this objective*


*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
Montana Regional Coordination (DELV-1) 2013 2017 $663,555
Total $663,555
Requested Budget by Fiscal Year

Fiscal Year Proposal Budget Limit Actual Request Explanation of amount above FY2012
2013 $132,711 Annual dollar figures represent Montana&#39;s share of the BPA regional coordination budget
2014 $132,711 with no annual increase
2015 $132,711
2016 $132,711
2017 $132,711
Total $0 $663,555
Item Notes FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017
Personnel $11,250 $11,250 $11,250 $11,250 $11,250
Travel $25,000 $25,000 $25,000 $25,000 $25,000
Prof. Meetings & Training $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000
Vehicles $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Facilities/Equipment (See explanation below) $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $1,000
Rent/Utilities $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Capital Equipment $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Overhead/Indirect $33,178 $33,178 $33,178 $33,178 $33,178
Other $60,283 $60,283 $60,283 $60,283 $60,283
PIT Tags $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total $132,711 $132,711 $132,711 $132,711 $132,711
Major Facilities and Equipment explanation:
Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks has modern office and lab space, networked computers (with web meeting capability), FAX, telephones, digital copiers, motorpool vehicles and associated infrastructure. Kalispell HQ is 11 miles from Glacier International airport.

Source / Organization Fiscal Year Proposed Amount Type Description
Salish and Kootenai Confederated Tribes 2013 $132,711 In-Kind The Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe (CSKT) and MFWP jointly mitigate impacts in the Flathead and Kootenai Subbasins. CSKT's regional coordination program will extend MFWP's program through 2017
Kootenai Tribe 2013 $132,711 In-Kind The Kootenai Tribe of Idaho (KTOI) and MFWP jointly mitigate impacts in the Kootenai Subbasin. KTOI's regional coordination program will extend MFWP's program through 2017

Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe (CSKT) and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (MFWP). 2004. Flathead Subbasin Plan. Available on CD from the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe, Pablo, and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Kalispell. http://www.nwcouncil.org/fw/subbasinplanning/flathead/plan/ Kootenai Tribe of Idaho (KTOI), Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe (CSKT), and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (MFWP). 2004. Kootenai Subbasin Plan. Available on CD from the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, Bonners Ferry, ID and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Kalispell. http://www.nwcouncil.org/fw/subbasinplanning/kootenai/plan/ Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. 1991. Fisheries mitigation plan for losses attributable to the construction and operation of Hungry Horse Dam. Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe, Kalispell and Pablo, Montana. 71 pp. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. 1993. Hungry Horse Dam fisheries mitigation implementation plan. Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks and the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe, Kalispell and Pablo, Montana. 43 pp. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, and Kootenai Tribe of Idaho. 1998. Fisheries mitigation and implementation plan for losses attributable to the construction and operation of Libby Dam. Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, Kalispell, MT., Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, Pablo, Montana, and Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, Bonners Ferry, Idaho.

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

Independent Scientific Review Panel Assessment

Assessment Number: 2012-008-00-ISRP-20120215
Project: 2012-008-00 - Montana Regional Coordination
Review: Resident Fish, Regional Coordination, and Data Management Category Review
Proposal Number: RESCAT-2012-008-00
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 contains very little specific detail on what MFWP is trying to accomplish with the proposed coordination. It is missing an opportunity to take a more systematic approach to coordination: to think about what the sponsors are really trying to achieve, how they will go about it, how they will know if they are achieving their objectives, and how they will adapt to changing circumstances or proactively test new approaches and learn from the outcomes.

“Montana proposes to shift the emphasis of regional coordination funding to supporting specific forums and efficient processes that facilitate implementation of tangible benefits to fish, wildlife, and their habitat.” The Montana proposal raises an important issue about the value of coordination in relation to completion of projects. The cost reduction theme and the relation between coordination and project effectiveness would be very useful themes to put into a research plan.

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

Proposed work includes coordination of projects, programs, and funding sources within subbasins (75%); review of technical documents and processes (10%); facilitating and participating in workgroups (7%); information dissemination (3%); and project proposal reviews (5%).

Significance to regional programs: A summary statement describing the regional programs and fora that relate to fish and wildlife issues in Montana and in which regional coordination funds MFWP participation.

Problem statement: The statement emphasizes the current cost of the process in the Fish and Wildlife Program and BPA's goal to reduce the proportion of direct spending on process activities. A link is made to the cost reduction potential of Montana's coordination project.

Objectives: The project has five objectives, each with a brief description. The objectives are written as tasks and desired outcomes are not identified.

OBJ 1: "Reduce the percentage of project funding that is spent on planning and process." Good, written as a measurable hypothesis. But, this is not developed in the deliverables. The proposal calls attention to the tension between coordination funding and project funding. This implies that coordination activities need to be evaluated for their efficiency and effectiveness.

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

Major accomplishments: The statement refers back to accomplishments under the CBFWA coordination and the present entities who are Montana's major collaborators.

Adaptive management: The statement notes that regional coordination benefits from adaptive management, notable in efforts to reduce costs by streamlining processes to eliminate redundancies and sharing effective mitigation tools. Putting these questions into an adaptive management framework and designing a research plan would make this proposal much stronger and help achieve the objectives of the proposal sponsors.

ISRP Retrospective Evaluation of Results

“Montana will formally withdraw from the Columbia Basin Fish and Wildlife Authority at the end of the contract period in April 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.

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 provides a general list of regional entities with which the MFWP coordinates.

Geographic focus: The geographic interests are stated as, “Montana proposes to shift the emphasis of regional coordination funding to supporting specific forums and efficient processes that facilitate implementation of tangible benefits to fish, wildlife and their habitat. …Montana's regional coordination facilitates implementation of the Flathead and Kootenai Subbasin Plans.” This is a desirable goal, but does it reflect regional coordination? Is it affected by regional coordination?

Emerging limiting factors: The proposal states that the coordination project will not directly address limiting factors. However, it notes that for agencies, states and tribes to address limiting factors in a cost-effective way, coordination is required. Some examples of limiting factors requiring coordination are briefly described and could be developed as research questions.

Under adaptive management, the proposal emphasizes, “The most significant change planned for Montana's regional coordination funding is to streamline processes, so that a larger percentage of Fish and Wildlife Program funding is directed toward on-the-ground actions.” Thus, a deliverable might be a reduction in the ratio funds going to coordination and an increase in the ratio going to projects.

The emphasis on "trust" as a variable affected by personal contact is insightful and important. Building a research plan on the dimensions of this insight would be valuable.

The proposed plan of work is mainly about inputs. What outcomes and relationships might be observed that relate to coordination? Measures for the primary goal of shifting funding from coordination to projects would be a desirable indicator of achieving the proposal’s major concern.

4. Deliverables, Work Elements, Metrics, and Methods

Deliverables: The proposal lists a single deliverable - Montana Regional Coordination - that relates to each of the objectives. How does “Montana Regional Coordination” meet all the objectives? How does this deliver anything or meet any objective? The deliverable is a general task statement and should focus on outcomes; the objectives are more specific task statements.

Work elements: One work element is identified: 189. Coordination-Columbia Basinwide. This work element has no metrics associated with it. Can output metrics and methods be identified to go with this work element? 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: These would be developed in a scientific regional coordination research plan.

Value-added: The hypothesis is offered that less funding should go to coordination and more to projects. This is an important issue. Can it be documented? One might offer the alternative hypothesis that without regional coordination project funds are wasted on duplicative and low priority projects. How is it that describing the value-added is not applicable?

Assessment of effectiveness: What are the measures that demonstrate this effectiveness? What are the expected outcomes from providing “records of attendance for all meetings and events, as well as any materials published for the purposes of coordination as well as document the outcomes of coordination?” Can more specifics on the deliverables be included? What are the appropriate outcome measures?

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

The protocols for the work element 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 3:08:14 PM.
Documentation Links:
Proponent Response: