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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
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Will the real Governor Schwarzenegger -
"Green Governor" or "Fish Terminator" - stand up?
In yet another egregious display of green washing, Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger today commended 11 Eastern states for
agreeing to a low carbon fuel standards as he plans the
construction of a peripheral canal that will destroy the
ecosystem of the California Delta, the largest estuary on
the coast of the Americas.
“I applaud these 11 Eastern states for recognizing the power
of California’s groundbreaking low carbon fuel standard (LCFS)
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and oil dependency while
rewarding innovation and expanding consumer choice,"
Schwarzenegger said. "Like California, these other states
are leading the way in recognizing that we must take action
now to fight global warming, and I look forward to working
together to find additional solutions like the LCFS that
both protect our environment and grow our economy at the
same time.”
In contrast to the "Green Governor" role Schwarzenegger
played today, his handpicked cabinet level Delta Vision
Committee on Friday released its plan to break ground on an
environmentally devastating and obscenely expensive
peripheral canal by 2011.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is pushing for his canal as a
monument to his gigantic ego at a time when Central Valley
chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin smelt, threadfin shad
and striped bass are in a state of collapse. The collapse of
these fish species is the result of massive increases in
water exports from the Delta and declining water quality
under the Schwarzenegger and Bush administrations.The canal
will create the infrastructure for the state and federal
governments to export even more water from the Delta and
only exacerbate the already imperiled state of Delta fish
populations. For more information, go to
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/01/03/18558107.php
or
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/01/05/18558773.php
Meanwhile, a new economic report released by NOAA’s
Fisheries Service says that U.S. commercial and recreational
fishing generated more than $185 billion in sales and
supported more than two million jobs in 2006. California's
commercial and recreational fisheries, industries that
depend on the health of the Bay-Delta Estuary, figured
prominently in the report's break down of the sales, income
and job figures for each coastal state. In his mad drive to
build a peripheral canal, Schwarzenegger is favoring one
industry, subsidized agribusiness on the west side of the
San Joaquin Valley, over Delta agriculture and California's
commercial and recreational fisheries.
The highest amount of sales generated by the commercial
fishing industry were in California ($9.8 billion), Florida
($5.2 billion), Massachusetts ($4.4 billion), Washington
($3.8 billion), and Alaska ($3 billion). The most jobs were
generated in California (179,000), Florida (103,000),
Massachusetts (83,000), Washington (75,000) and Texas
(47,000).
Recreational fishing generated its highest economic effect
in total sales and jobs generated in Florida ($7.6 billion
sales, 131,000 jobs); Texas ($2.2 billion sales, 34,000
jobs); California ($1.9 billion sales, 23,000 jobs); North
Carolina ($1.2 billion sales, 24,000 jobs); and Louisiana
($1.2 billion sales, 27,000 jobs).
The commercial fishing industry—harvesters, seafood
processors and dealers, seafood wholesalers and seafood
retailers—generated $103 billion in sales, $44 billion in
income and supported 1.5 million jobs in 2006, the most
recent year included in the report, Fisheries Economics of
the United States, 2006, which covers 1997 to 2006.
Recreational fishing generated $82 billion in sales, $24
billion in income, and supported 534,000 jobs in 2006.
“The report documents clearly that managing fisheries
sustainably is good for the environment and the economy,”
said Jim Balsiger, NOAA acting assistant administrator for
NOAA’s Fisheries Service. “Fishing helps create a
substantial number of jobs around the nation.”
Fisheries Economics of the United States, 2006 also includes
descriptive statistics on commercial fish landings, revenue,
and price trends; recreational fishing effort, catch, and
participation rates; and employer and non-employer
establishments, annual payroll, and annual receipt
information for fishing-related industries such as seafood
retailers and ship and boat building.
The report is the first volume in a new series designed to
give the public accessible economic information on fishing
activities in the U.S., and is a companion to Fisheries of
the United States, and the forthcoming Fishing Communities
of the United States.
The report also provides a snapshot of fishery management
plans, limited access privilege fishing programs (a type of
catch share program), buyback programs, and ecolabeling
programs as well as the status of fish stocks and an
inventory of protected marine resources.
Fisheries Economics of the United States, 2006 is available
online at:
http://www.st.nmfs.noaa.gov/st5/index.html
Hard copies of the report are forthcoming.
Governor Schwarzenegger and his Delta Vision Committee
should carefully review this report before proceeding with
their plan to build a peripheral canal and more dams.
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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
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