Common use of Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations Clause in Contracts

Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. During the month of September, a total 4,923 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (62%) of these fish were early run coho (n = 3,059) and (34%) hatchery summer steelhead (n = 1,670). Of the 1,670 steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back downstream as part of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were captured and returned to the lower river. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight spring Chinook were collected during the month of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-September. The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28th. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the addition of the Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfs. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 cfs during September. No spill events occurred. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. To date, a total 1,033 (452 m: 581 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length have been transported and released into the headwaters of Swift Reservoir for 2014.

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. During the month of SeptemberOctober, a total 4,923 1,953 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (6229%) of these fish were early run coho (n = 3,059n=574) and followed by fall Chinook (34%) n=527). All hatchery summer steelhead (n = 1,670). Of the 1,670 steelhead collectedsteelhead, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, markedhatchery fall Chinook, and released back downstream as part of hatchery coho jacks were given to Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two WDFW also retrieved 338 of 521 hatchery adult coho and 6 of 53 adult wild fall Chinook were captured and returned to the lower rivercoho for brood stock. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early run coho, hatchery Eight wild summer steelhead, 191 wild fall Chinook, two wild sockeye, two cutthroat trout less than thirteen inches, and adipose clipped fall Chinook 19 rainbow trout less than twenty inches were captured at Xxxxxx trap and returned downstream. One hundred eighty- five hatchery coho (adults: 183, jacks: 2), fifty-nine wild coho (adults: 46, jacks: 13), and eight cutthroat trout greater than thirteen inches were captured at Xxxxxx trap and transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFWupstream of Swift dam. Eight spring Chinook hatchery coho were collected during radio tagged and returned downstream as part of the Xxxxxx Trap Efficiency Study. The Xxxxxx Trap ran continuously throughout the month of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-September. The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28thOctober. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the in addition of to the Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfsthroughout the month of October. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 ranged between approximately 857 cfs to 2070 cfs during September. No spill events occurredOctober. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. To date, a total 1,033 1,218 (452 741 m: 581 477 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length steelhead have been transported and released into the headwaters upstream of Swift Reservoir for 2014(27 of which were captured via tangle net in the lower river as part of the Hatchery and Supplementation Plan Monitoring). In addition, 530 (327 m: 181 f: 22 j) coho (238 of which were captured at Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery) and 19 coastal cutthroat trout exceeding thirteen inches have been transported upstream of Swift Reservoir this year.

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. (Attachment A) During the month of SeptemberDecember, a total 4,923 of 907 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (6255%) of these fish were early late run coho (n = 3,059n=501) followed by hatchery winter steelhead (n=353), and (34%) hatchery summer steelhead (n = 1,670n=12). Of the 1,670 One wild winter steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back downstream as part of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were was captured and returned to the lower river. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early hatchery fish and late run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook wild coho were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight spring Chinook were collected during the month of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September December included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,06232) and fall Chinook cutthroat trout (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-September. The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28thn=8). The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the addition of the daily. The Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfswas operated daily throughout the month of December. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 ranged between approximately 3,260 cfs to 11,500 cfs during SeptemberDecember. No spill events occurredPacifiCorp experienced operational issues at Xxxxxx Trap due to freezing conditions the first of January 2015. Operation of the trap’s lower xxxxxxx and conveyance system was suspended on January 4th due to icing. It was returned to service on January 5th. The trap is currently operating and no outages are expected anytime soon. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two (Attachment A) Eight cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in SeptemberDecember. To date, a total 1,033 (452 m: 581 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 9,179 early run coho Coho (4,273 4,788 m: 3,697 4,217 f: 159 174 Jack), and 18 42 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length have been transported and released into the headwaters of Swift Reservoir for 2014. Swift Floating Surface Collector (Attachment A) A total of 686 fish were collected during the month of December. The majority (62 percent) of these fish were juvenile coho (n=424), followed by spring Chinook smolts (n=179), cutthroat trout (n=73), steelhead smolts (n=7), and hatchery rainbow trout (n=3). All hatchery rainbow trout were returned to Swift Reservoir. The FSC was turned off December 24th due to a malfunctioning water supply valve; the FSC was returned to service December 31, 2014 once the valve was repaired and has been running ever since. Acclimation Ponds Crab Creek: This project is slated for work to begin summer 2015. Muddy River and Clear Creek: In mid February 2015 PacifiCorp plans to water up the ponds and confirm water quality; there will be a full complement of 100,000 fish and 10% of the fish will be PIT tagged. 2014/2015 Year-end Financial Reporting XxXxxx provided the following Xxxxx River Aquatic Fund year-end reporting, dated 12/31/2014 (Attachment B). She also noted that the $40,000 award to LCFEG for the 2014 Haapa Habitat Enhancement Group has yet to be funded and is not reflected in the 2014 financial reporting but will be included in the 2015 reporting. In response to Xxx Xxxxxxx’x (LCFRB) question there will be no further contributions to the Bull Trout fund, according to the Xxxxx River Settlement Agreement, Section 7.5. However, the existing balance will carry forward each year until exhausted but no further interest will accrue.

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. (Attachment A) During the month of SeptemberJanuary, a total 4,923 of 898 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (6295%) of these fish were early run coho (n = 3,059) and (34%) hatchery summer winter steelhead (n = 1,670n=850) followed by blank wire tag (BWT) supplementation winter steelhead (n=27). Of the 1,670 Five natural origin winter steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back downstream as part of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were captured and returned to the lower river. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early hatchery fish and late run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook natural origin coho were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight spring Chinook were collected during the month of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September January included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), seven resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-Septembertrout. The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation trap did not operate on January 4th and January 18th-19th due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, scheduled outages and September 26th-28thmaintenance activities. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the addition of the daily. The Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfswas operated daily throughout the month of January. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 ranged between approximately 3,350 cfs to 11,600 cfs during SeptemberJanuary. No spill events occurredKarchesky (PacifiCorp) informed the ACC attendees that a 2-day outage is scheduled for February 19th and 20th to install radio telemetry equipment in the ladder portion of Xxxxxx Trap as part of the Adult Trap Efficiency Study. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. (Attachment A) To date, a total 1,033 27 (452 17 m: 581 10 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length steelhead have been transported and released into the headwaters upstream of Swift Reservoir Reservoir. Swift Floating Surface Collector (Attachment A) The ACC were informed that recently debris loading at the FSC has been high. Consequently, it has been necessary to turn the FSC off to clean out the fish holding tanks. To date, these outages have only been for 2 to 3 hours; PacifiCorp will information the ACC if the duration of these outage increases. A total of 1,390 juvenile fish were collected during the month of January. The majority (57 percent) of these fish were coho (n=796), followed by spring Chinook (n=501), cutthroat trout (n=45), hatchery rainbow trout (n=35), bull trout (n=7), and steelhead (n=6). All hatchery rainbow trout, bull trout, and salmonid fry (<60mm) were returned back to Swift Reservoir. The FSC continuously ran throughout the month of January – it was returned to service January 1, 2015 once the smolt water supply valve (damaged in late December 2014.) was repaired. No fish were sampled on January 3, 2015. Swift Collection Operation Discussion (Summer Operation Protocols) In accordance with the ACC request, Karchesky (PacifiCorp) provided a memorandum titled, Operational Guidelines in Consideration of Suspending Summer Operations at the Swift Floating Surface Collector (FSC) – January 2015 (Attachment B) distributed to the ACC via email on January 21, 2015. The memorandum outlined certain criteria and assumptions to be considered as a new operational protocol for when to turn the FSC off each year. Discussion took place about adaptive management, fish health/mortality, changes of conditions, benchmark for criteria and notification to the ACC prior to maintenance. The ACC recommended the following protocol to proceed: PacifiCorp will proceed with shutting down as appropriate with fish health as a priority and report to the ACC if it sees mortality rates rising. Before a final decision is made Xxxx Xxxxx (WDFW) and Xxxxxxxx Xxx (NMFS) would like further time to review and opportunity to comment. They will discuss and submit comment to the ACC on or before close of business Friday, February 20, 2015. Break 10:25am Reconvene: 10:35am 2014/2015 Aquatic Fund Full Proposal Project Presentation

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. During the month of SeptemberApril, a total 4,923 856 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (6276%) of these fish were early run coho blank wire tag (n = 3,059BWT) and (34%) hatchery summer winter steelhead (n = 1,670n=654) followed by hatchery spring Chinook (n=119). Of the 1,670 All hatchery steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back downstream as part of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were captured and returned to the lower river. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight A total 72 of 654 BWT winter steelhead captured were radio tagged and returned downstream as part of the required Adult Trap Efficiency (ATE) study. The remainder of BWT winter steelhead were transported upstream in addition to one cutthroat trout and fifty-four recaptured radio tagged steelhead. Twenty-two wild winter steelhead, five wild spring Chinook, and one hundred-nineteen hatchery spring Chinook were collected during the month captured and held for brood stock collection at Xxxxxx and Speelyai Fish Hatcheries. Daily operation of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Xxxx Collection Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) were suspended on Friday, April 17 through and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-September. Sunday, April 19 due to a faulty limit switch that caused some minor mechanical damage to the fish xxxxxxx and lift system.The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility Trap was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation due returned to mechanical interruptions which occurred service on September 4thMonday, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28thApril 20. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the addition of the daily. The Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfswas operated daily throughout the month of April. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 ranged between approximately 2,370 cfs to 6,460 cfs during September. No spill events occurredApril. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. To date, a total 1,033 1,064 (452 642 m: 581 422 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length steelhead have been transported and released into the headwaters upstream of Swift Reservoir for 2014(27 of which were captured via tangle net in the lower river as part of the Hatchery and Supplementation Plan Monitoring). In addition, seven cutthroat trout exceeding thirteen inches have been transported upstream of Swift Reservoir.

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. (Attachment C) During the month of SeptemberJune, a total 4,923 861 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (6272%) of these fish were early run coho (n = 3,059) and (34%) hatchery summer steelhead (n = 1,670n=619) followed by hatchery spring Chinook (n=217). Of the 1,670 All hatchery steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back either transported downstream as part of by Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish Wildlife as part of the angler recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were captured and returned program or taken to the lower riverXxxxxx Hatchery for brood stock. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight spring Chinook were collected during the month of September, which captured were transported to Speelyai Fish Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-Septemberbrood stock. The Xxxxxx Sorting Xxxx Collection Facility was non-operational 10 days during this ran continuously throughout the month of operation due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28thJune. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the in addition of to the Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfsthroughout the month of June. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 ranged between approximately 2,340 cfs to 2,510cfs during September. No spill events occurredJune. Discharge, cubic feet per second 7 Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. (Attachment C) To date, a total 1,033 1,218 (452 741 m: 581 477 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length steelhead have been transported and released into the headwaters upstream of Swift Reservoir (27 of which were captured via tangle net in the lower river as part of the Hatchery and Supplementation Plan Monitoring). In addition, eight coastal cutthroat trout exceeding thirteen inches have been transported upstream of Swift Reservoir this year. Swift Floating Surface Collector (Attachment C) A total of 8,288 fish were collected at the Swift Floating Surface Collector (FSC) during the month of June. The majority (87 percent) of these fish were juvenile coho (n=7,192), followed by hatchery rainbow trout (n=569), juvenile spring Chinook (n=300), juvenile steelhead (n=152), cutthroat trout (n=68), steelhead kelt (n=7) and bull trout (n=1). All hatchery rainbow trout, bull trout, and salmonid fry (< 60mm) were returned back to Swift Reservoir. The FSC continuously ran throughout the month of June. Other None < Meeting adjourned at 1:00 p.m. > Agenda items for 2014.August 13, 2015  July 9, 2015 Meeting Notes  Xx. Xx Xxxxxxxxx – Development of New Information to Inform Fish Passage Decisions at the Yale and Xxxxxx Hydro Projects on the Xxxxx River Smolt releases at LRH; first pass water and release options  Fish Release Procedure and Evaluation at Xxxxx River Hatchery  Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) Subgroup; 90-day review of redline draft  Study/Work Product Updates Public Comment: Xx Xxxxxx (Columbian) requested information on hatchery brood stock numbers for Xxxxx River adult Chinook salmon. Xxxxxx also requested information on reservoir water conditions and projected summer time elevations. Next Scheduled Meetings: August 13, 2015 September 10, 2015 Xxxxxx Hydro Control Center Xxxxxx Hydro Control Center Xxxxx, WA Ariel, WA 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

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Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility and General Operations. (Attachment A) During the month of September, a total 4,923 fish were captured at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility; the majority (62%) of these fish were early run coho (n = 3,059) and (34%) hatchery summer steelhead (n = 1,670). Of the 1,670 steelhead collected, 692 (14%) were fish previously captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility, marked, and released back downstream as part of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (WDFW) fish recycling program. Fifty-two wild fall Chinook were captured and returned to the lower river. All coded wire tagged (CWT) early run coho, hatchery summer steelhead, and adipose clipped fall Chinook were transported to Xxxxx River Fish Hatchery and processed by WDFW. Eight spring Chinook were collected during the month of September, which were transported to Speelyai Hatchery for broodstock. In addition, other species collected in September included cutthroat trout (n=4), sockeye salmon (n=35), resident rainbow trout (n = 14), salmonid smolt (n=3), large scale sucker (n=1), northern pikeminnow (n=1), and chiselmouth (n=1). To date, 934 spring Chinook have been captured at the Xxxxxx Sorting Facility this year. Early run coho (n=3,062) and fall Chinook (n=131) counts began peaking in mid-September. The Xxxxxx Sorting Facility was non-operational 10 days during this month of operation due to mechanical interruptions which occurred on September 4th, 10th-15th, and September 26th-28th. The Auxiliary Water Supply (AWS) system, which can boost attraction flow up to 400 cfs, was operated daily with the addition of the Ladder Water Supply (LWS) approximately set for approximately 30cfs. River flow below Xxxxxx Dam remained constant at about 1,280 cfs during September. No spill events occurred. Low dissolved oxygen (DO) conditions have been observed at the Xxxxxx Xxxx Collection Facility which a have attributed to poor fish holding conditions. DO readings as low as 6.5 mg/L have been observed throughout the facility. This has been attributed to reservoir conditions at the service water intake to the facility particularly in the late summer and early fall. PacifiCorp is currently working to incorporate an aeration system into the facility’s service water system and/or holding tanks to ensure adequate DO levels year round. PacifiCorp will continue to keep the ACC advised if the Xxxxxx trap is not operational. The ACC concurred that a good time for a tour of the Xxxxxx Collector is after the November ACC meeting. XxXxxx and Xxxxxxxxx will make the arrangements and notify the ACC. Discharge, cubic feet per second Upstream Transport A total 2,180 early run coho were collected from the Xxxxxx xxxx trap in September and transported upstream of Swift Dam. In addition, two cutthroat trout greater than 13 inches were also transported upstream in September. To date, a total 1,033 (452 m: 581 f) BWT winter steelhead, 8,129 early run coho (4,273 m: 3,697 f: 159 Jack), and 18 cutthroat trout exceeding 13 inches in length have been transported and released into the headwaters of Swift Reservoir for 2014.

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