|







|
Become a friend of
the Klamath Bucket
Brigade
Send
Donations Here
All donations are tax
deductible
|
|
This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
|
|
|

Broad
Coalition Proposes Solutions to the Salmon Crisis
by Dan
Bacher
March 20, 2008
A panel
of representatives from tribal, recreational fishing, commercial fishing
and environmental groups proposed solutions to the salmon crisis in
California
and
Oregon
, the result of the
unprecented collapse of
Central Valley
chinook salmon, during a
news conference in
Sacramento
on March 14. Caleen
Sisk-Franco, spiritual leader of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, Bill
Jennings, executive director of the California Sportfishing Protection
Alliance, Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen's Associations (PCFFA), Dick Pool, owner of
Pro-Troll Fishing Products, and Jason Rainey, executive director of the
South Yuba River Citizens League (SYRCL), spoke at the event.

img_0357.jpg
“Unless
people do a complete paradigm shift, there will be no more salmon. If we
don’t put water for fish as the top priority, we will lose our wild
salmon. We can’t live without the salmon. We won’t be here when the
salmon are all gone.” Caleen Sisk-Franco, Spiritual Leader of
the Winnemen Wintu Tribe
Broad
Coalition Proposes Solutions to the Salmon Crisis
By Dan Bacher
A panel of representatives from fishing, tribal and environmental groups
held an historic news conference in Sacramento on Friday, March 14, to
discuss proposed solutions to the huge crisis in California Delta
fisheries and the unprecedented collapse of the Central Valley chinook
salmon runs.
The event took place during the Pacific Fishery Management Council
(PFMC) meeting at the Double Tree Hotel. Over 14 newspaper, television
and radio reporters from throughout the state and
U.S.
attended the conference,
while 6 others joined the event via phone.
Representatives of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, Miwok Tribe, commercial
fishing groups, recreational fishing groups and environmental
organizations packed the room in support of measures to restore
Central Valley
chinook salmon and Delta
fish populations after decades of mismanagement by the state and federal
governments.
The coalition proposed immediate, practical and necessary measures that
will begin to rebuild salmon stocks. They believe these solutions could
help prevent future fishery disasters for
California
and
Oregon
.
These solutions were led by the urgent need to reduce the destructive
impacts of export pumping and diversions in the Delta and to improve
water quality in the Delta and on
Central Valley
rivers.
Other solutions proposed included improving access to blocked salmon
habitat; improving habitat in Central Valley rivers and streams by
enhancing flows, providing cooler temperatures and restoring functional
floodplains; reducing the impacts of hatchery operations on fish of
native origin; and providing effective governmental leadership.
State and federal fishery managers have already closed early commercial
and recreational salmon seasons that begin May 1. The PFMC crafted three
options for salmon season, including two proposals for a complete
closure of salmon fishing south of
Cape Falcon
,
Oregon
and other option with an
extremely limited "token" season, during the afternoon after
the conference.
"We're facing a total salmon closure for first time since
commercial salmon fishing began on the
San Francisco
Bay
and Delta in 1848,"
said Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA). “There are many factors that went
into our salmon decline, but none as significant as the loss of
freshwater flows to the Delta and San Francisco Bay which are essential
for maintaining the biological function of this estuary and sustaining
native salmon and other fish populations."
Grader said we need to focus on keeping our commercial and recreational
salmon fishermen and businesses solvent while concentrating on fixing
the Bay and Delta, restoring flows and with them the fish.
"The regulators here - the PFMC - are not to blame for this fiasco,
they were simply the messengers," stated Grader. "The fault
rather lies with the failure to regulate the diverters and protect the
flows needed to maintain the greatest estuary on the west coast of North
and
South America
and the great salmon runs
that inhabited and migrated through it."
Grader, pointing to graphs showing declines in
Central Valley
salmon runs and increases
in water exports, said salmon populations have declined in direct
relation to the level of exports from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River
Delta.
Grader also released the outline of the PCFFA’s strategic plan for the
recovery of
California
salmon stocks and
restorations of watersheds supporting the fish.
Since 2006, PCFFA, in conjunction with NOWWE and Porgans and Associates,
have been actively engaged in developing a Strategic Plan of Action (POA)
designed to recover salmonid species, restoring and monitoring
watersheds, via satellite, radio telemetry and video surveillance. The
groups plan to publish a series of White Papers over the course of the
next several months.
“The 2008 and 2009 fishing seasons are toast,” said Dick Pool,
president of Pro-Troll Fishing Products and a three-term Director of the
American Sportfishing Association. “We must now start working on
programs to restore salmon for the 2010 and 2011 seasons and beyond.”
He pointed out the economic devastation caused by the salmon collapse
and urged the federal and state governments to take both immediate and
long term actions to restore the once robust Sacramento River fall
chinook salmon run.
“The sportfishing industry is reeling from the unparalleled
destruction of one of the premiere fisheries in the country,” said
Pool. “The cause has nothing to do with fishing. Water policies
dictated by corporate agricultural interests supported by the state and
federal water agencies have destroyed the migration and spawning habitat
needed by these fish.”
The economic contribution of recreational fishing to
California
is very large, since there
are 2.4 million sport fishermen in the state, according to Pool. The
activity generates $2.4 billion in retail sales with an economic impact
of $4.9 billion. It also generates $1.3 billion in wages and salaries
and supports 43,000 jobs in the state. All of these are threatened if
the fishery declines are not reversed.
“I urge every fisherman and those who care about natural resources, to
log onto Water4Fish.org and join the grassroots political effort to
demand a turn around,” said Pool. “Our leaders have let us down
terribly and we have every right to demand changes. The campaign
recently passed 50,000 participants, but we need thousands more before
we can get the changes we need.”
While salmon anglers face unprecedented closures this year, Caleen
Sisk-Franco, spiritual leader of the Winnemem Wintu (
McCloud
River
) Tribe, said the tribe lost
their salmon fishing over 75 years ago when Shasta Dam was built. The
Winnemem Wintu, who held a war dance in September 2004 to stop a
proposal by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to raise Shasta Dam, have
been leaders in the battle to restore the California Delta.
“The dam blocked over 200 miles of cold water tributaries, including
the
McCloud
River
where we lived for
thousands of years,” she noted. “Our lives changed when we could no
longer caught wild salmon on the McCloud – and so will yours when
salmon are not longer available.”
“Unless people do a complete paradigm shift, there will be no more
salmon,” Sisk-Franco said. “If we don’t put water for fish as the
top priority, we will lose wild salmon. We can’t live without the
salmon and we won’t be here when the salmon are all gone.”
Bill Jennings, executive director of the California Sportfishing
Protection Alliance, pointed out the increasing decline of water quality
in the Delta and
Central Valley
rivers, the result of a
complete failure of the state of
California
to monitor and enforce water quality laws.
“There is an unprecedented and appalling decline in water standards
under the Schwarzenegger administration,” said
Jennings
. “The bottom line is that
we can’t restore salmon if we use our waterways as sewers and dumps
and don’t enforce the Clean Water and Porter-Cologne Acts.”
Jason Rainey, representing the South Yuba River Citizens League, said
that while some fishery managers have only pointed to poor ocean
conditions as responsible for the dramatic decline in 2007, many factors
above sea-level have been negatively affecting salmon populations and
some of these have not yet improved.
“In the Yuba watershed we can increase both the number and the fitness
of juvenile salmon that migrate to the Feather and
Sacramento River
. Providing access to
habitats blocked by dams, enhancing river flows through hydro project
relicensing, and restoration of floodplains and riparian habitat will
make a substantial difference in restoring our salmon runs,” he
stated.
David Nesmith, Environmental Water Caucus facilitator, was the moderator
for the news conference.
"Fish need water,” Nesmith summed up. “We must leave more
clean, cool water in the Delta and our rivers so salmon can live."
Reporters from The Union Newspaper in Grass Valley, KOVR 13 TV, AP Wire
Service, SF Chronicle, Sacramento Bee, LA Times, Capitol News Service
TV, Contra Costa Times, KABC Radio, KGO Radio, KFSN Radio, KFBK Radio,
Santa Rosa Press Democrat, Christian Science Monitor, KPIC Channel 5 TV,
Bay City News Service, the Fish Sniffer magazine, KCBS and other news
outlets covered the conference.
Fishing and environmental organizations represented at the event
included Friends of the River, Recreational Fishing Alliance, NOWWE,
Porgans and Associates, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s
Associations, Water4Fish.org, American Sportfishing Association,
California Striped Bass Association, Earthjustice, South Yuba River
Citizens League, California Sportfishing Protection Alliance, Coastside
Fishing Club, Save the American River Association and Institute for
Fishery Resources.
For more information, call David Nesmith (510) 893-1330 or cell (510)
693-4979 and Dick Pool (925) 825-8560.
Practical and Necessary Actions to Solve the Salmon Crisis
Reduce impacts of export pumping and diversions in the Delta.
• Limit total exports through Delta to a maximum of 4.5 million
acre-feet per year and eliminate pumping during periods of peak smolt
migration.
• Require mitigation for all direct or indirect losses of salmon.
• Construct state of the art screening and salvage operations at water
diversions and pumping facilities including state and federal projects.
Improve water quality in the Delta and on
Central Valley
rivers and streams.
• Eliminate the
Central Valley
agricultural waiver to
pollution discharge.
• Reduce urban pesticide loading in urban storm runoff
• Enforce federal and state clean water laws.
Improve access to blocked salmon habitat.
• Remove destructive and obsolete dams, especially on the
Klamath River
and
Battle Creek
.
• Remedy passage and entrainment problems, especially on the
Yuba
River
and Butte Creek.
• Keep the gates up all year on the Red Bluff Diversion Dam.
Improve habitat in
Central Valley
rivers and streams by
enhancing flows, providing cooler temperatures and restoring functional
floodplains.
• Implement the
American
River
flow standards and fully
implement restoration flows on other rivers such as the Trinity and
San Joaquin
.
• Increase cold water habitat below salmon-blocking dams.
• Systematically provide for restored functional floodplain habitat
including mitigation for levee projects that limit salmon rearing
habitat.
Reduce impacts of hatchery operations on fish of native origin.
• Mark 100% of hatchery fished released.
• Implement "Integrated Hatchery Programs" and the standards
of the Hatchery Science Review Group.
• Truck all hatchery fish to acclimation pens below the delta.
Provide effective governmental leadership
• Provide funding resources to enable regulatory agencies to do their
job.
• Enforce all existing laws and regulations: State and federal Clean
Water Acts, Endangered Species Act, mitigation requirements, and river
flow standards and regulations
David Nesmith
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_1.jpg
David
Nesmith, facilitator of the Environmental Water Caucus, moderated the
news conference.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
Caleen Sisk-Franco
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_2.jpg
Calleen
Sisk-Franco, spiritual leader of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, spoke about
the historical relationship between the tribe and chinook salmon.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
Bill Jennings
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_3.jpg
Bill
Jennings, executive director of the California Sportfishing Protection
Alliance, blasted the Schwarzenegger adminstration for failing to
enforce the Clean Water and Porter-Cologne Acts.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
Dick Pool
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_4.jpg
Dick Pool, owner of Pro-Troll and coordinator of water4fish.org,
outlined immediate actions the state and federal governments need to
take to solve the salmon crisis.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
Jason Rainey
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_5_1.jpg
Jason Rainey, executive director of the SYRCL, pointed out the urgent
need to restore salmon habitats blocked by dams, enhance river flows
through hydro project relicensing, and restore floodplains and riparian
habitat. Photo by Dan Bacher.
Crowd at Conference
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_6_1.jpg
A diverse group, including representatives of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe,
Miwok Tribe, commercial fishing groups, recreational angling
organizations and environmental groups, attended the conference.
Photo by Dan Bacher.
Zeke Grader
by
Dan Bacher
Thursday
Mar 20th, 2008
9:58 AM

pic_8_1.jpg
Zeke Grader, executive director of the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen's Associations, points to a chart, prepared by Porgans and
Associates, showing increases in state and federal water exports. These
increases directly correspond with dramatic declines in salmon runs and
other
Central
Valley
fish
populations. Photo by Dan Bacher.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/03/20/18487191.php
|