
August 11, 2006
Issue Alert
The Family Farm Alliance yesterday
stood by fishermen in an
![]()
The
Secretary
of Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez yesterday declared a commercial fishery
failure for West Coast salmon fishermen this season from Cape Falcon (Oregon)
to Point Sur (California)
due to low numbers of fish caused primarily by the drought.
This
is only the second time in
Deputy
Secretary of Commerce David Sampson and Dr. William Hogarth, director of NOAA
Fisheries, traveled to the
“We
stand by the commercial fishing industry and will do what we can to help them
through this difficult time,” said Sampson. “We heard their calls and
acted quickly.”
After
the group toured the
harbor area, Senator Smith convened a meeting during which 20 farmers,
fishermen, and local elected officials listened to concerns and heard proposed
solutions to the challenges facing the
New Ties Bind Farmers, Commercial Anglers
“I
think the best solutions are developed from the ground up,” Senator Smith
said. “The last five years have shown us that the status quo isn’t
working. I’m encouraged to see farmers, fishermen, and local leaders
working together to develop policies that keep both our fishing and farming
communities whole.”
“The
meeting was a tremendous success,” said Dick Carleton, who farms in the
EARLIER
IN THE DAY,
Secretary Gutierrez, Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski and California Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger announced the decision in a teleconference call with the
national media.
“I
am pleased that our joint efforts between
The
coastal salmon issue – characterized by most media accounts as a divisive
“farmer vs. fishermen” issue – has been manipulated by certain
environmental groups that place the blame for the fishery restrictions on
irrigation and dams located on the
MEDIA
COVERAGE SINCE MARCH
has taken a very consistent and dominant anti-farming position, essentially
accepting arguments made by environmentalists that Klamath Project operations
(located hundreds of miles from the ocean) are responsible for the coastal
crisis.
Last
spring, Dick Carleton decided to find out for himself whether the fishermen
were as angry at the farmers as the newspapers and environmental groups were
saying. His efforts, in part, to bring the two parties together over the past
several months has led to increased trust and an emerging coalition that is
beginning to be noticed by policy makers.
“I am heartened by the support that inland farming communities, such as the Klamath Water Users Association, have given to the small rural fishing communities of coastal Oregon and California,” Gutierrez said last month.
At
the request of
“Farmers
and fishermen are producers who want to work cooperatively toward real
solutions,” said Scott Boley, who operates Fishermen Direct in
The
farmers and fishermen present proposed
similar solutions, including the need to address disease issues in the
“I
truly believe that the farmers and fishermen, once we put the facts on the
table, can find a viable solution to this,” said Scott Cook, a troller from
Bandon (Oregon).
“Everyone in the country has been lead to believe that farmers and fishermen
are enemies. This message has been pushed mostly by outside environmental
groups in the mainstream media, and I think our leaders are seeing this. The
policy makers want to solve the problem, and I think they’re tired of the
misrepresentations and the lawsuits coming from these groups.”
“The
media and public may have thought there was a conflict between farmers and
fishermen,” added Jeff Reeves, a commercial fisherman and the vice-chair of
the Oregon Salmon Commission. “I think those days are long over, as far as
we’re concerned.”
“Without
the cooperation of the Klamath basin farmers and the Family Farm Alliance, we
most likely would not have been heard by the federal officials,” said
Reeves. “We tremendously appreciate your help. Without it, we probably would
have gotten nowhere.”