A coalition
of environmental and fishery
groups filed suit today in
San Francisco Superior Court
against the California
Department of Fish and Game
(DFG), seeking to overturn
new regulations that
streamline the killing of
endangered coho salmon.
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
February 25, 2008
Contact: Severn Williams,
California Trout
510-336-9566 c 415-336-9623
Paul Mason, Sierra Club
California
916-557-1100 x 120 C
916-214-1382
Scott Greacen, EPIC
707-822-7711 C 707-834-6257
CONSERVATION GROUPS
FILE LAWSUIT OVER
CALIFORNIA'S SALMON RULES
Suit Claims Schwarzenegger
Administration Fails to
Protect Imperiled Fish from
Logging Impacts
San Francisco, CA - A
coalition of environmental
and fishery groups filed
suit today in San Francisco
Superior Court against the
California Department of
Fish and Game (DFG), seeking
to overturn new regulations
that streamline the killing
of endangered coho salmon.
The groups charge the
regulations, adopted by DFG
in December 2007, violate
the California Endangered
Species Act (CESA). The
coalition includes the
Environmental Protection
Information Center (EPIC),
Sierra Club and California
Trout.
"California Trout fought
long and hard to have coho
salmon listed as endangered
by the State of California,"
said Brian Stranko,
California Trout Chief
Executive Officer. "DFG has
a legal obligation to
protect native salmon. We
are disappointed that this
administration has put the
interests of the logging
industry above the long-term
survival of coho salmon, a
species clearly at risk."
At the heart of the lawsuit
is DFG's move, under the new
regulations, to delegate its
duty to protect fish to the
agency that approves logging
plans, the California
Department of Forestry and
Fire Protection (CDF or
CALFIRE). The DFG
regulations are tied to a
package of new rules the
State Board of Forestry (BOF)
adopted last year that allow
the timber industry to
continue "business as usual"
logging practices that harm
salmon habitat.
"Fish and Game is trying to
pawn off its responsibility
to protect our threatened
salmon on CDF," said EPIC's
Scott Greacen, "but CDF has
just put in place road
management rules that ensure
coho will continue to be
routinely harmed by logging
practices."
Coho salmon have been state
listed as threatened or
endangered from the Oregon
border south through the San
Francisco Bay since 2004,
and have been listed as
endangered from San
Francisco to Monterey Bay
since 1995. The federal
government also lists coho
salmon as an endangered
species.
The plaintiffs argue that
DFG approved incidental take
permit guidelines for timber
regulations that violate
CESA, the California Fish
and Game Code, the
California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA), and
Administrative Procedures
Act. "Incidental take"
refers to the accidental
killing of one or more coho
salmon in the course of
logging activity.
"These rules focus more on
making it easier to kill
endangered salmon, rather
recovering their habitat,"
said Paul Mason, deputy
director of Sierra Club
California. "We need to
restore salmon habitat, not
streamline the killing of
the few remaining wild coho
salmon."
The lawsuit also alleges
that DFG and the Board acted
improperly when adopting the
incidental take regulations
because both agencies failed
to address concerns raised
repeatedly by the plaintiffs
during the rule-making
process. Another lawsuit
against the BOF was brought
by EPIC and the Sierra Club
late last year regarding the
same set of regulations.
About California Trout:
Founded in 1971, California
Trout was the first
statewide conservation group
to focus on securing
protections for California's
unparalleled wild and native
trout diversity. California
Trout employs conservation
science, education, and
advocacy to craft effective
public policy to protect
California's water resources
and fisheries.
About the Sierra Club: The
Sierra Club is the country's
oldest and largest
grassroots environmental
group, with 1.3 million
members and supporters.
Explore, enjoy, and protect
the planet.
About EPIC: The
Environmental Protection
Information Center is a
community-based advocacy
group headquartered on the
North Coast of California.
For thirty years, EPIC has
pioneered effective
litigation strategies to
protect forests, rivers, and
the species that need them.