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Cooke Aquaculture agrees to pay $332,000 fine after net pen failure

After trying to appeal the penalty, Cooke Aquaculture has agreed to pay fines to the Department of Ecology for the release of thousands of Atlantic salmon in 2017.

Cooke Aquaculture has agreed to pay the $332,000 fine for the negligent release of thousands of Atlantic salmon in August 2017, the state Department of Ecology announced Monday.

The department says Cooke tried to appeal the penalty, "but in a legal settlement with Ecology, agreed to pay the full penalty."

The settlement will divide the $332,000 payment, according to the department -- $265,600 to "an environmental project related to regional salmon enhancements or habitat restoration" and $66,400 to Ecology's Coastal Protection Fund. 

Cooke violated its water quality permit leading up to and during the net pen collapse near Cypress Island where about 250,000 non-native salmon were released in the Salish Sea. Previous estimates, based on Cooke's reports, put the number of escaped fish at 160,000, according to the Department of Fish and Wildlife.

The state investigation found Cooke poorly cleaned and maintained the nets, failed to follow repair protocols, and paid insufficient attention to engineering.

“This investigation confirms Cooke Aquaculture was negligent in operating its net pen,” Ecology Director Maia Bellon said in a statement. “What’s even worse is that Cooke absolutely could have – and should have – prevented this incident.”

The net pen was damaged in July, and Cooke made “shortcut repairs” while underrepresenting the severity of the damage to regulatory agencies, according to the department.

Clean nets weigh less than two tons, but the investigation found each of Cooke’s 10 nets weighed more than 11 tons due to an excessive buildup of mussels, seaweed, and other marine life.

The state says this increased drag on the nets from currents and overpowered the anchoring system, likely causing the July damage and net pen failure in August.

Related: Salmon stolen at fish farm after net pen failed

“The collapse was not the result of natural causes,” Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz said in a statement. “Cooke’s disregard caused this disaster and recklessly put out state’s aquatic ecosystem at risk.”

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