Sharon Fisher When my daughter was small, we used to go tent camping a couple of weekends each summer in various places around the Northwest. I soon discovered the Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds situated around the lower Snake River dams near the Tri-Cities. The campgrounds were great, but I often regretted how much history of the Lewis & Clark Trail was now underwater in the process. That’s part of why the current discussion about the breaching of the four dams on the lower Snake is so interesting to me: There’s no obvious solution and no clear winner. With the dams, the fish may go extinct. Without the dams, the fish may still go extinct, and it would require a huge change in business practices in the whole region. Intrepid reporter Catie Clark attempted to summarize a discussion held by the Andrus Center for Public Policy, and she described how much had to be left on the cutting-room floor (is that a metaphor kids these days even understand anymore?) in the process. That