For that matter, why not have a fish passage (ladder) on the Coquitlam River too to bypass the dam? About time to restore the vitality of these urban rivers totally 'damned' by BC Hydro, LOl.
I believe the Coquitlam system would be far more costly to put in a fish way. However, Cost has never been the issue. The 3 or so million for the Alouette fish ladder could be easily raised. The problem lies with BC Hydro lack of approval or should we say will. The water flow would have to be managed differently.
Would of been nice if our provance would of made BC hydro complete this fish ways as part of the Site C project but what done is done.
http://www.tricitynews.com/news/group-hopes-to-bolster-coquitlam-river-sockeye-1.2359089Group hopes to bolster Coquitlam River sockeye
"Consultants with experience in designing and constructing fish passages have looked at the site and a proposal will be presented to BC Hydro for more research and a possible solution this fall.
"We think it's entirely feasible to resurrect this run [but] we need an engineering fix right now," said Orr, who noted that the company R2 Resource Consultants has designed fish passage structures in the U.S.
For example, some dams have a system that creates a current drawing salmon to an outlet to the river. However, a Coquitlam River solution could be as simple as raising the water level at the Coquitlam dam and creating specially designed outlet for the fish to depart, Orr said.
"Those are the kind of experiments that need to be done along with the engineering feasibility of how to get these fish out.""