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A
Perfect Storm: House Panel Will Hold Hearing on West Coast Salmon on May
15
by Dan
Bacher
May 14, 2008
A House
Subcommittee will hold an oversight hearing on the management of West
Coast salmon fisheries on Thursday, May 15 at
10 a.m.
(eastern) in
Washington
,
D.C.
Hopefully, this hearing
will spur some concrete actions to restore salmon populations on the
Sacramento
, Klamath,
Columbia
and other river systems.
The hearing occurs at a time when commercial and recreational salmon
fishing has been closed off
California
and
Oregon
, due to the unprecedented
collapse of
Central Valley
fall run chinook salmon.
The House Natural Resources Committee, Subcommittee on Fisheries,
Wildlife and Oceans will hold the hearing at Room 1324
Longworth
House
Office
Building
. The hearing, entitled,
“A Perfect Storm: How Faulty Science, River Mismanagement, and Ocean
Conditions Are Impacting the West," will be webcast live on the
Committee's Web site at: http://resourcescommittee.house.gov.
Witnesses at the hearing will include:
Mr. Roger Thomas, Golden Gate Fishermen’s Association, Sausalito, CA
Mr. Dick Pool, Pro-Troll Fishing Products and American Sportfishing
Association, Concord, CA
Mr. Joel Kawahara, commercial salmon fisherman, Seattle WA
Ms. Laura Anderson, Local Ocean Seafoods, Newport, OR
Mr. Rod McInnis, Southwest Regional Administrator, NOAA Fisheries
Service
Mr. Mike Rode, Former California Fish and Game
Dr. Jack Williams, Senior Scientist, Trout Unlimited
Mr. Jim Litchfield, Litchfield Consulting
Mr. Jason Peltier, representing San Luis Delta Mendota Water Authority
On April 10, 2008, the Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC) voted
to close the 2008 commercial and recreational Chinook salmon fishing
season in California and most of Oregon. A closure of this magnitude is
unprecedented in the history of these fisheries.
On May 9, the California Fish and Game Commission closed salmon fishing
in the
Sacramento River
and its tributaries except
for one limited stretch. The Commission adopted a zero salmon bag limit
in all 14 Central Valley rivers and streams except for a one-salmon bag
limit in the Sacramento River from Red Bluff Diversion Dam to Knights
Landing from November 1 to December 31. The effective date of the
regulatory package should be on or before July 15.
While the Bush and Schwarzenegger administrations point to "ocean
conditions" as the reason for the sudden salmon fishery collapse,
commercial fishermen, recreational anglers, Indian Tribes and some
prominent scientists contend that massive increases in water exports
from the California Delta and declining water quality are the key
factors behind the decline.
The ocean and river closures will have a huge impact upon the economy of
California
, particularly coastal and
Central Valley
communities that depend
upon salmon fishing and tourism for much of their income.
"The economic impact on coastal communities in
California
and
Oregon
will be substantial and
cascading,” according to a letter from the Fisheries Subcommittee.
“From 2001 to 2005, the average economic value of the commercial and
recreational fishery was estimated to be $40 and $21 million,
respectively. However, these figures ignore the economic and employment
losses in associated industries such as docks and harbors, boating,
equipment supply, and restaurants.”
The states of
Washington
,
Oregon
, and
California
have already requested $274
million in federal disaster assistance. Carlos Gutierrez, U.S. Secretary
of Commerce, declared a commercial fishery failure for the West Coast
salmon fishery on
May 1, 2008
"While the reasons for the sudden collapse of the fall Chinook
stock are complex, agency scientists have pointed to reduced ocean
productivity in 2005 as a potentially determining factor," the
letter stated. "Yet many human-caused, in-river impacts have also
been unfavorable to salmon stocks, some of which are listed under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA). While ocean conditions are clearly beyond
the control of fisheries managers, management and rebuilding plans for
salmon should be designed to rebuild and maintain healthy populations
that are able to withstand the natural fluctuations that will inevitably
occur."
Under the ESA, NOAA Fisheries is responsible for ensuring that human
impacts do not result in species extinction. Yet, in three separate
instances on three separate West Coast rivers - the
Sacramento
, Klamath and
Columbia
- the courts have
determined that NOAA failed in their responsibility to protect salmon
from extinction through their biological opinions.
"While new court-mandated biological opinions have the potential to
improve management and prevent complete closures of the salmon fisheries
in the future, there are significant questions regarding the repeated
failure of NOAA to draft biological opinions that can pass scientific
muster with the courts," the letter concluded.
Hopefully, this hearing will spur some concrete short term and long term
actions to restore declining salmon populations on the
Sacramento
, Klamath and
Columbia
rivers.
Meanwhile, on May 13, North Coast Congressman Mike Thompson (D-CA)
announced that $170 million has been included in the Farm Bill to aid
families and businesses in
California
,
Oregon
and
Washington
affected by the biggest and
most devastating Pacific salmon season closure in American history.
“This funding is desperately needed by the communities and families
who rely on salmon fishing, many of whom face losing their businesses
and homes due to two years of no fishing,” said Thompson.
Thompson, recreational and commercial fishing groups, conservation
organizations and California Indian Tribes along the
Pacific
North
Coast
have been working for years
to restore salmon habitat. However, Thompson contended that low water
levels caused by "unsustainable and unlawful water plans" put
in place by the Bush Administration have contributed to the precipitous
decline in West Coast salmon populations.
“We also need to pay attention to the political forces that helped
create this disaster,” said Thompson. “Because of the Bush
Administration’s poor water policies that were found to be in
violation of the law, every major salmon river in the continental
U.S.
is now being run by the
courts. As a result, the agencies responsible for restoring these rivers
aren’t giving Congress the information we need to make them healthy
again. The Bush Administration should be making decisions based on
science, not politics.”
The House and Senate are expected to pass this final version of the Farm
Bill later this week, according to Thompson.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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/2008/05/14/18499086.php
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