Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
6/16/06 Letter from environmental groups
to Congress regarding disaster relief for coastal
fishermen, and money to "fix" Klamath's problems,
which according to this letter are caused by dams
and Klamath irrigators.KBC
Klamath Water Users Response to Thompson Bill 4/21/06
Wanted to send out a copy of the text of the
disaster relief support letter Earthjustice organized
from national and West coast conservation groups
that went to the US Senate last week and today to
key members holding the purse strings in the House
of Representatives (Wolf, Mollohon, Ohey and
Lewis). The letter also urges Congress to fix the
Klamath's problems.
As most of you know, Wyden, Smith, and Boxer
secured amendments yesterday to Magnuson-Stevens
in the Senate that 1. Create eligibility for
fishing communities to receive disaster relief 2.
Request that NOAA complete a recovery plan
for Klamath salmon. Unfortunately, neither
amendment guarantees any money, so the pressure
must continue.
Regards,
Jim (ONRC)"
Jim McCarthy
McCarthy Consulting
PO Box 151
Ashland, OR 97520
541-941-9450
541-482-7282 (fax)
American Rivers * Association of Northwest
Steelheaders * Berkley Conservation Institute *
Center for Native Ecosystems * Earthjustice
National Audubon Society * Natural Resources
Defense Council National Wildlife Federation *
Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association *
Oceana * Oregon Council Trout Unlimited * Oregon
Natural Resources Council Fund * Pacific Rivers
Council * Sierra Club
The Honorable Frank Wolf
Dear Mr. Wolf:
On behalf of our millions of members, we the
undersigned organizations are writing to applaud
the efforts of Senators Smith, Wyden, Boxer,
Feinstein, Representative Thompson and others to
secure disaster relief for coastal salmon fishing
communities in Oregon and California, and to
express our disappointment that the Senate was
ultimately unable to include $81 million in
disaster relief in emergency appropriations.
This funding would have provided desperately
needed aid to fishing communities facing an
economic crisis arising from the closure of over
700 miles of California and Oregon coast to salmon
fishing. This massive fishing closure will have
dire consequences not just for commercial fishing
families, but also for hundreds of other
businesses in coastal communities and throughout
the Northwest. We strongly support federal
legislation to assist these communities in
weathering the economic loss the salmon fishing
closure is causing.
It is important to note that the Pacific Fisheries
Management Council (PFMC) and U.S. Department of
Commerce did not institute this closure due to
over-fishing or an overall shortage of salmon.
Some Pacific coastal rivers, such as the
Sacramento in California, are expected to host
good returns of Chinook salmon this year. But the
PFMC has taken this drastic action as part of a
last-ditch effort to protect what remains of the
Klamath River’s once mighty salmon runs.
It is expected that fewer than 30,000 salmon will
return to the Klamath River this year to
spawn—fewer than are needed to sustain the
population, let alone support a robust fishery.
Because it is impossible for fishermen to
determine the river of origin of a particular
salmon once they are in the Pacific Ocean, the
PFMC has determined that a near total commercial
salmon fishing closure is needed to protect what
remains of the Klamath River’s salmon.
The ongoing decline of salmon in the Klamath is
not the result of natural circumstances. A series
of fish-killing dams, excessive water diversions,
and poor water quality, have taken a severe toll
on this river system, which once boasted the third
largest runs of salmon on the West Coast. In the
fall of 2002, excessive water diversions led to a
massive fish kill that claimed over 65,000 adult
salmon before they could spawn. Low flows and
poor water quality sparked juvenile fish kills in
the spring of 2002, and in each spring since.
It is the continuing decline of the Klamath River,
and the ongoing fish kills, that have sparked the
ocean salmon fishing closures that are threatening
communities up and down the Northern California
and Oregon coasts this year. Our hearts go out to
these communities that depend on commercial salmon
fisheries, and to the Native American and
recreational fishermen who also rely on Klamath
River salmon. But families in these communities
deserve more than our sympathy – they deserve
action to help them weather the economic hardship
the closure is causing, and a long-term effort to
finally solve the environmental problems of the
Klamath Basin. As long as the Klamath River’s
problems are left un-addressed, these fishing
communities will continue to face fishing
restrictions and economic hardship.
Recent progress toward recovering salmon runs in
the in the Sacramento River provide a positive
model for recovery in the Klamath. By the early
1990s it seemed the Sacramento River winter run
salmon would soon join other California runs in
extinction. In 1991 the winter run of the
Sacramento – a species once numbering in the
hundreds of thousands – stood at a mere 211 adult
fish. The steady downward spiral through the 1970s
and 1980s was due to problems similar to those
facing the Klamath River today. For the past
several years, officials estimate that an average
of approximately 8,000 adult fish have returned to
spawn. The population of spawning spring run
Chinook also appears to be growing, and the fall
run is expected to produce strong returns this
year. This progress has been made possible by
habitat restoration, fish barrier removal,
temperature protections and improved flow
conditions.
Although the winter and spring runs and Central
Valley steelhead remain listed species, progress
in the Sacramento Valley shows that, with adequate
political will, the collapse of salmon populations
can be reversed.
Congressman Thompson and Senators Boxer, Feinstein
and Wyden have introduced legislation in the House
and Senate that would improve the health of the
Klamath river by
securing $45 million for a series of immediate
conservation measures, including requiring NMFS to
produce a recovery plan for threatened coho
salmon, installing and updating water monitoring
equipment, improving river habitat and fish
passage and adding additional NMFS staff and
resources to better track and study the Klamath
River's salmon. We believe that this a good first
step in restoring the Klamath River.
Americans look to Congress for leadership in
making hard decisions, resolving conflicts, and
providing resources to help our communities
weather unforeseen disasters. Through no fault of
their own, salmon fishing communities up and down
the Northern California and Oregon coasts are
facing severe economic hardship this year, and
they need our help. We urge you to act
immediately to secure disaster relief for these
communities. We also need you to provide the
leadership necessary to reverse the decline of the
Klamath River and its salmon. Congressional
leadership is needed to help the Klamath Basin
find balanced solutions to the environmental
problems it faces.
Sincerely,
S. Elizabeth Birnbaum
Vice President for Government Affairs
American Rivers
Norman E. Ritchie
Co–President
Association of Northwest Steelheaders
Jim Martin
Conservation Director
Berkley Conservation Institute
Jacob Smith
Director
Center for Native Ecosystems
Susan Holmes
Senior Legislative Representative
Earthjustice
Mike Daulton
Director of Conservation Policy
National Audubon Society
Karen Wayland
Legislative Director
National Resources Defense Council
Matt Little
Northwest Representative
National Wildlife Federation
Liz Hamilton
Executive Director Northwest Sportfishing Industry Association
Ted Martin
Conservation Director
Oceana
Tom Wolf
Chair
Oregon Council Trout Unlimited
Jay Ward
Conservation Director
Oregon Natural Resources Council Fund
Deanna Spooner
Conservation Director
Pacific Rivers Council
Sean Cosgrove
Senior Washington Representative
Sierra Club
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