PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 24, 2009
Contact: Scott Harding, Executive Director, Klamath
Riverkeeper
(541) 488-3553,
scott [at] klamathriver.org
Oakland, CA – Klamath Riverkeeper has joined a recent
lawsuit against California Fish and Game for using
taxpayer dollars to fund an illegal recreational gold
mining program.
“California is spending taxpayers’ dollars to issue
permits that allow recreational gold miners to harm the
Klamath’s imperiled fisheries in the name of a few
flakes of gold,” says Scott Harding, the Executive
Director of Klamath Riverkeeper.
Weekend and hobby gold miners once used low-impact pans,
shovels, and picks to search for gold but in recent
years there has been a proliferation of suction dredges
on the Klamath River and its tributaries. A suction
dredge is a gas or diesel-powered vacuum placed on a
floating platform in the river or stream. The miner uses
the vacuum to suck up the river bottom, sort the gold
out in a sluice, and dump the leftover gravel, sand, and
silt back into the river.
The practice of suction dredging has been shown to
disrupt spawning beds, force fish into areas of
dangerously warm water, muddy river water, alter the
course of stream channels, and hurt or kill aquatic
organisms living in the river bottom. At times, ten or
more suction dredges can be found in one river mile on
the Klamath.
The California Department of Fish and Game has
previously admitted in court that its current suction
dredge mining regulations violate the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and Fish and Game Codes
§§5653 and 5653.9 (the statues which authorize the
Department to issue permits for suction dredging under
certain, limited conditions) because the activity causes
deleterious harm to fish – including endangered species,
such as the coho salmon.
California’s taxpayers heavily subsidize the suction
dredge mining permit program. The state spends $1.25
million more per year on the suction dredge mining
permit program than it receives in permit fees,
amounting to a $400 subsidy for each of the 3,200 miners
that obtain permits.
“We find it hard to believe that the State of California
is using taxpayer money to fund a recreational gold
mining program during a severe fiscal crisis and during
a sustained fisheries emergency. It makes no sense.”
says Harding.
The lawsuit seeks to halt suction dredge mining until
the Department of Fish and Game completes an existing
court-ordered revision of its suction dredge regulations
that brings it into compliance with CEQA and relevant
Fish and Game Code provisions.
Recreational mining businesses, such as the New 49’ers
in Happy Camp, CA, are bringing hundreds of suction
dredgers to the Klamath and its tributaries each year.
California’s regulations of the mining practice are more
lax than in other states, making it a popular
destination for hobby miners.
In addition to the environmental impact of this influx
of miners, social tensions have emerged as well. In
retaliation against the Karuk Tribe for joining this
lawsuit, the New 49’ers recently petitioned the
California Department of Fish and Game to eliminate the
Tribe’s traditional practice of dip net fishing on the
Klamath River. The Karuk have been dip-netting salmon
for thousands of years.
The suit was originally filed in Alameda County Superior
Court on February 5, 2009 and amended to on March 20 to
add Klamath Riverkeeper as a plaintiff. Other plaintiffs
include the Karuk Tribe, Center for Biological
Diversity, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermens
Association, Friends of the River, Institute for
Fisheries Resources, California Sportfishing Protection
Alliance, Craig Tucker, David Bitts, and Leonn Hillman.
Arguments for a preliminary injunction will be heard
this spring.
Klamath Riverkeeper is a 501(c)(3) non-profit
organization dedicated to restoring the Klamath River
and its tributaries, fisheries, and communities. Klamath
Riverkeeper has offices in Orleans, California and
Ashland, Oregon. For more information please visit
http://www.klamathriver.org.
For photos of suction dredging on the Klamath, please
email
scott [at] klamathriver.org.
###
Scott Harding
Executive Director
Klamath Riverkeeper
PO Box 897
Ashland, OR 97520
541.488.3553 (office)
541.488.6212 (fax)
http://www.klamathriver.org