The leader of California's Senate has blocked Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger's first appointment to the
California Fish and Game Commission after she
voted to delay plans to protect the state's rare
coho salmon as an endangered species.
Wild coho salmon, which once numbered about
250,000, have dropped to about 5,000 statewide.
Marilyn Hendrickson, who is serving as an interim
commissioner, joined two holdovers from the Davis
administration last week in voting against the
recommendations of state biologists to add
Northern California coho to the state's list of
threatened and endangered species.
Hendrickson, co-owner of a fishing tackle
manufacturing company, was set to be confirmed by
the Senate Rules Committee on Wednesday. But her
name was abruptly yanked from the list of
appointees by Senate President Pro Tem John Burton
(D-San Francisco) because of the vote.
"We aren't happy with her," said Burton, who is
also chairman of the Rules Committee. "We are
going to have a meeting with her and straighten
things out — or find a new commissioner."
Schwarzenegger's appointments to key positions of
environmental stewardship have varied widely,
ranging from environmental advocates to employees
and lobbyists of logging and agricultural
companies.
In the case of the Fish and Game Commission, he
picked Hendrickson, 65, who with her husband, Joe
"Sep" Hendrickson, owns Sep's Pro Fishing Inc.,
which makes and sells ultra-light tackle to catch
trout, landlocked king and Kokanee salmon.
Hendrickson also is vice president of a nonprofit
group set up to work with state officials to
enhance "angling opportunities in the state" and
co-produces a "California Sportsmen" radio show.
She declined to explain her reason for voting for
the delay. As for Burton pulling her name from the
confirmation hearing, she said: "I'm not the least
bit perturbed." She has until March to be
confirmed by the Senate and term limits will force
Burton out of office later this year.
Last month, Burton and Senate Environmental
Quality Committee Chairman Byron Sher (D-Stanford)
sent all of the commissioners a letter urging them
to take the final step in adding coho salmon that
spawn in rivers north of Punta Gorda in Humboldt
County to the list of "threatened" species, and
those that spawn south of Punta Gorda as
"endangered."
"There is no scientific basis for further delay on
this matter," the senators wrote.
Yet that is exactly what the commission did at its
meeting in Crescent City last week, ignoring the
recommendations of both the state Department of
Fish and Game and the National Marine Fisheries
Service.
Commissioners Michael Flores, James Kellogg and
Hendrickson postponed action on the commission's
decision last February that directed state
officials to begin the process of giving coho
salmon protected status. Instead, they asked that
state officials check whether federal officials
might do more, given that the coho have some
measure of protection under the federal Endangered
Species Act.
It was the latest delay in a string of
postponements that began in 2000, and have
increasingly annoyed Burton and Sher. "If we don't
do something, we aren't going to see these fish
anymore," Burton said.
None of this affects sports or commercial fishing.
It has been illegal to catch coho salmon since
1988. But state endangered-species protections
would add more restrictions on logging, and on
ranchers and farmers.
For instance, it would force all farmers on
affected rivers, particularly in the Shasta and
Scott valleys, to place screens that would stop
juvenile salmon from being siphoned out of the
river with water used to irrigate alfalfa fields.
It might also lead to restricting how much water
can be diverted from streams and rivers, which
worries those farmers.
"The fear of the landowners is that they are going
to be tied up in court, overly burdened by
restrictions and will have to take their land out
of [agricultural] production," Flores said.
He said he was sympathetic to their plight and
wanted to encourage them to take voluntary
measures to protect the salmon, as they have begun
to do.
Although some positive steps are being taken, not
enough is being done to save those fish from
extinction, said Tom Weseloh, a regional manager
of California Trout, a conservation group. He
blames the timber industry, which wants to avoid
restrictions on logging practices, and alfalfa and
cattle ranchers who are diverting too much water
from rivers and streams where juvenile salmon live
and grow before they head to the ocean.
"The water in these streams is over-allocated,"
Weseloh said, "so a lot of these streambeds go
dry. Dry streams cannot grow fish."
Commissioner Sam Schuchat, who along with
Commissioner Bob Hattoy was on the losing end of
last week's vote, said he was worried about the
consequences of delay.
"I'm convinced that if we don't protect this
species as endangered, it's going to go extinct in
the next decade," Schuchat said. "It may already
be too late."
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