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Washington
Troll Catch and Profits Drop 50% from
Last Year
SOURCE:
Washington
Trollers Association
SEATTLE
, April 5 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Poor salmon returns
again
this year on the
Columbia River
have led the Pacific
Fisheries Management
Council to curtail fishing seasons for commercial trollers in
Washington
for the third consecutive year. Decisions expected today during the
fourth
day of PFMC meetings in SeaTac will determine the fishing fate of west
coast commercial, recreation and tribal fishermen.
The catch quota for
Washington
trollers is down 50% from
what it was
last year. The quota for Washington trollers for this year's fall
chinook
season in the Columbia north of Cape Falcon is 14-16,000 salmon, while
the
expected combined troll quota (catch for commercials and tribes) for
chinook harvest is expected to be below 51,000.
With the average chinook salmon being worth $63, this year's take for
tribal and commercial trollers combined has the potential to earn
roughly
$3.2 million dollars, which is $3.5 million less than what it was in
2002,
the last good and profitable year of returns. Specifically for
Washington
trollers, catching their upper limit of 16,000 fish will yield roughly
$1
million, compared to 27,258 fish yielding roughly $1.7 million last
year,
2006.
"This is an incredible blow to fishermen who have to try and make a
living on a fraction of their salary this year," said Joel
Kawahara, a
member of the board of the Washington Trollers Association and a troller
based in
Quilcene
,
Washington
. "
Washington
state fishermen are
continuously
cutting their seasons back to accommodate the shrinking limits because
we
want to keep our jobs and keep fishing in the future. But our backs are
up
against the wall for the third year in a row."
Trollers, charter fishermen and gillnetters spoke to representatives
from the offices of Rep. Norm Dicks, Rep. Jim McDermott, Rep. Adam
Smith,
Rep. Jay Inslee, Sen. Cantwell and Sen. Murray at a roundtable
discussion
at PFMC on Monday, April 2, to vocalize their concern for their jobs and
the need for leadership to deliver real salmon solutions. Duncan
MacLean, a
troller from
El Granada
,
California
, thanked Rep. McDermott's
office for
sponsoring the Salmon Economic Analysis and Planning Act (SEAPA), HR
1507,
this year in Congress. All office representatives were receptive in the
meeting and promised to deliver the testimonies to northwest leaders.
"The federal government has repeatedly failed to deliver an
effective
recovery plan for salmon in the
Columbia
and
Snake
Rivers
, and hard working
people in the Northwest are paying the price for that failure. We're
asking
our Northwest leaders to fill that void and deliver real
solutions," said
Steve Wilson, a commercial fisherman who lives in
Federal Way
,
Washington
.
"What we've faced over the last 30 years on the
Columbia
and
Snake
Rivers
is a slow-motion version of
last year's Klamath disaster," said
David Bitts, a salmon troller based in
Eureka
,
California
. "I'm not sure
how many years we can be expected to bounce back from the loss in
revenue.
We really appreciate the efforts to secure economic aid for our
struggling
fishermen this year, but, in the future we'd rather have real solutions
and
sustainable salmon runs."
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/
www/story/04-05-2007/0004560821&EDATE=
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