Coastal Fishermen Fight Back With Petition
March 30, 2006Coastal
fishermen are facing a possible season closure. They
have submitted the following petition stating that
all fish returning to the Klamath are to be counted
equal, regardless of spawning in the gravel, or
spawning in a hatchery.
A formal petition submitted by all Chinook
fisherman and effected party’s to amend the
fisheries management plan:
Where as the National Marine Fishery Service and the
Pacific Chinook Fishery Management plan only
recognizes naturally spawning Chinook salmon to meet
the floor requirements of 35,000 returning Chinook
salmon, we do hereby submit.
That all Chinook Salmon returning to the Klamath
River be held equal and counted regularly,
regardless of their origin, spawning method, or age.
Where as:The Magnuson Act defines the term "fishery"
as
(A) one or more stocks of fish which can be treated
as a unit for purposes of conservation and
management and which are identified on the basis of
geographical, scientific, technical, recreational,
and economic characteristics; and
(B) any fishing for such stocks.
16 U.S.C. § 1802(13). A "stock of fish" is "a
species, subspecies, geographical grouping, or other
category of fish capable of management as a unit."
16 U.S.C. § 1802(37). National Standard Three of
the Magnuson Act states the Council must manage, to
the extent practicable, an individual stock of fish
as a unit throughout its range and interrelated
stocks of fish as a unit or in close coordination.
16 U.S.C. § 1851(a)(3).
Accordingly, the Magnuson Act obligates the
Council to develop fishery management plans and plan
amendments concerning whole fisheries or stocks of
fish based on equal consideration of all members of
a fishery or stock of fish. But, in the case of the
Pacific Chinook fishery and the Klamath River fall
Chinook stock, the Council developed in 1989 an
amendment to the Pacific Chinook Fishery Management
Plan which selectively considers only a portion of
the Klamath River fall Chinook stock-those that will
spawn naturally-and which operates in some years to
unnecessarily restrict the entire Pacific Chinook
commercial troller fishery on the basis of those
selected Chinook.
The 1989 Amendment requires that 35,000 Klamath
River fall Chinook escape the harvest to spawn
naturally, allegedly whether the Chinook are of
naturally spawned or hatchery origin. Nonetheless,
the 1989 Amendment fails to manage the Pacific
Chinook commercial troller fishery on the basis of
the whole stock of Klamath River fall Chinook.
As a result, the 1989 Amendment contradicts the
Magnuson Act provisions noted above and exceeds the
Council's Magnuson Act authority because the 1989
Amendment distinguishes the Pacific Chinook fishery
and Klamath River fall Chinook stock on a basis not
provided for under the Magnuson Act-specifically, by
distinguishing between Klamath River fall Chinook
that will return to spawn naturally and Chinook that
will be collected by hatcheries. In sum, because
the best scientific information available
establishes that Chinook that spawn naturally and
Chinook that are collected by hatcheries are the
same species that consist of the same stock of fish,
the Council must manage them together as a unit or
in close coordination rather than, in essence, as
separate stocks.
The 1989 Amendment operates to restrict
unnecessarily the Chinook commercial harvest. For
example, the Council restricted the 2005 Chinook
commercial harvest for the purpose of obtaining a
naturally spawning escapement of 35,000 Klamath
River fall Chinook, meaning that a minimum of 35,000
Klamath River fall Chinook must escape the ocean
harvest and return to spawn naturally in the Klamath
River. The Council focused on only those Klamath
River fall Chinook that would spawn naturally, to
the exclusion of Klamath River fall Chinook that
would return to the Klamath River and be collected
at hatcheries.
Of course, given that all Klamath River fall
Chinook-both those that will spawn naturally and
those collected by hatcheries-constitute the same
species swimming side-by-side as part of the same
fishery and stock of fish, "35,000 Klamath River
fall Chinook that will spawn naturally" can not be
separated out as an individual fishery or stock of
fish. Instead, "Klamath River fall Chinook that
will spawn naturally" is a sub-entity not
recognized-and, most importantly, not authorized-by
the Magnuson Act.
Accordingly, in order to ensure the Council's
management of the Pacific Chinook fishery and the
Klamath River fall Chinook stock complies with the
Magnuson Act, the Council is hereby petitioned to
amend the Pacific Chinook Fishery Management Plan to
require a Klamath River fall Chinook escapement of
merely 35,000 Klamath River fall Chinook-regardless
of their origin, spawning method, or age.
In addition, as a result of the Council's focus
on only those Klamath River fall Chinook that will
spawn naturally, Chinook commercial troller
fishermen are suffering from their inability to fish
for a living and provide for their families.
Commercial troller fishermen have families,
mortgages, car payments, fishing vessel payments,
and expenses related to fuel and fishing gear. They
depend on income from their fishing businesses to
cover their businesses' and family's financial
obligations.
But, in addition to financial hardship, the
Council's focus on only those Klamath River fall
Chinook that will spawn naturally also imposes
personal hardships on commercial troller fishermen,
such as separation from their families. Because the
Council's naturally spawning requirement often
closes the fishing season where commercial troller
fishermen normally fish, the Council's requirement
often forces the commercial troller fishermen to
travel to the few remaining areas that are open for
a slightly longer time in an effort to realize any
income.
Similarly, the Council's focus on only those
Klamath River fall Chinook that will spawn naturally
devastates not only the actual commercial troller
fishermen, but also the businesses in the commercial
troller fishing industry that depend on the
fishermen to remain viable. The Council's naturally
spawning requirement, by artificially reducing the
Chinook commercial harvest and season, reduces the
demand for business products and service because
commercial troller fishermen no longer have the
income, for example, to perform necessary vessel
safety maintenance.
Finally, commercial troller fishermen fear for
their safety as a result of the Council's
requirement. Because the Council artificially
shortens the fishing season it causes a derby
fishery, a situation which places the vessels and
their crews in grave danger by increasing the risk
of accidents between vessels and putting tremendous
pressure on smaller vessels to fish in inclement
weather for which they are unsuited and unsafe. In
short, the Council causes commercial troller
fishermen to race to catch as many fish as possible
during the unnecessarily shortened season, even
during inclement weather in which they would
otherwise not fish. Many vessels often race to the
same general area, resulting in dangerously crowded
conditions.
In sum, the Council's focus on solely Klamath
River fall Chinook that will spawn naturally forces
commercial troller fishermen to unwillingly engage
in and undertake substantial safety risks in order
to provide for themselves and their families-risks
they would not otherwise take or face but for the
Council's requirement. Thus, in addition to
contradicting the Magnuson Act's terms and exceeding
the Council's Magnuson Act authority, the Council's
1989 Amendment threatens annually to put many of
commercial troller fishermen out of business, and
threatens their lives by placing them in extreme
danger and unsafe conditions. For these additional
reasons, the Council is hereby petitioned to amend
the Pacific Chinook Fishery Management Plan to
require a Klamath River fall Chinook escapement of
merely 35,000 Klamath River fall Chinook-regardless
of their origin, spawning method, or age.
James C Moore Scott Cook Jeff Reeves
Commercial Salmon Troller Commercial Salmon Troller
Vice Chair Oregon SalmonComm
Commercial Salmon Troller
|