“Unfortunately, the Department [of Fish and
Game] has failed to provide meaningful
oversight of the Karuk fishery at Ishi Pishi
Falls.”
The petitioners reference a 2002 Los Angeles
Times article, which claims that the Ishi
Pishi Fishery is “a gray area of the law”
and that “[n]o one officially keeps track of
the 2,000 or so salmon that the tribe can
take in a good year.”
The petitioners suggest that the article
implies that a single dipnet fisherman can
catch up to 100 salmon per day.
Karuk Tribe spokesman S. Craig Tucker said
in an interview Wednesday, “If the Karuk
catch 200 salmon in a season, it’s a good
season.”
Neither number is supported by
documentation, and the petitioners go on to
say, “Petitioners have also made recent
inquiry of (1): the Department’s
representatives, who have confirmed that the
Department does not review, and does not
even possess records of Karuk Tribal
harvest, (2) federal fish regulators, who
also do not review or possess records of
Karuk Tribal harvest; and (3) the Karuk
Tribe itself, which professes to have no
records.”
The petitioners go on to claim that the
Department of Fish and Game (DFG) is
violating California Environmental Quality
Act rules by allowing Karuk fishing at Ishi
Pishi Falls without an environmental impact
report being prepared.
“Even if the Commission and Department do
have lawful authority to grant special
rights under California law to Karuk tribal
members, it is entirely irresponsible for
those rights to be granted without a careful
study and regulation of the environmental
impacts,” the petition states.
The petition also reads, “While petitioners
would prefer not to put a stop to Tribal
fishing, in view of the Department’s
strategy of regulating nearly all other
productive ativity in the area out of
existence on account of salmon declines,
stopping Karuk fishing (other than in
compliance with generally applicable fishing
regulations) is the only responsible thing
to do until a full CEQA or other
legally–sufficient review is completed to
determine the impacts.”
The petitioners also reference a November
2005 survey in which some Karuk families
reported catching coho salmon. The
petitioners also claim that they have
“representatives” who have seen Karuk tribal
members taking coho in years where the fish
were listed as endangered species.
In the Karuk press release, Karuk Vice-Chair
Leaf Hillman stated, “Our fishery is
non-lethal. This allows us to selectively
harvest fish.
“In other words, we release Endangered
Species Act-listed Coho and smaller chinook
back into the river unharmed and we eat the
rest.”
In both cases, documentation backing the
claims is not provided.
The petitioners mention that the importance
of DFG allowing take of endangered species
is that it can expose the governing agency
to litigation for allowing the illegal
activity to continue.
The petitioners also argue that the act of
allowing the Karuk tribe special fishing
rights is unlawful, based on the lack of
federal fishing rights for the Karuk tribe.
The petition states, “Article 1, § 25 of the
California Constitution vests the right to
fish in ‘the people’ generally, and Article
1, § 7 specifically declares that ‘a citizen
or class of citizens may not be granted
privileges or immunities not granted on the
same terms to all citizens’ and generally
provides ‘equal protection of the laws.’”
In the conclusion to the petition, the
petitioners say, “For the foregoing reasons,
it is imperative to eliminate the Karuk
Tribal fishery at Ishi Pishi Falls unless
and until an Act of Congress provides
federally–protected fishing rights for
members of the Tribe.”
The petitioners then threaten the DFG and
Fish and Game Commission with a lawsuit if
their petition is denied.
“We urge rulemaking proceedings to remove
the Karuk fishery exemption from its
sportsfishing regulations,” the petition
states.
The language of both the petition and the
Karuk release points to a fight that may go
beyond simply a matter of saving the fish.
Hillman says at the end of the Karuk
release, “We just want to do what we [were]
doing when the first wave of miners showed
up in 1850 – fish and feed our families.
“Over the last 150 years miners have taken
nearly everything from the Karuk people. We
will not allow them to take our last
fishery.”
The DFG is preparing responses to the
litigation, petitions and questions from
both sides of the issue.