EUREKA -- Several people gathered
outside the Humboldt County
Courthouse on Monday to show
solidarity with a San Francisco
event where Rep. Mike Thompson
announced his intention to call for
aid to local fishermen and a
permanent solution to the problems
in the Klamath River.
Rep. Lynn Woolsey and Thompson
announced the bill in front of
hundreds of salmon fishermen at a
rally on San Francisco's Pier 47.
”The Bush administration's gross
mismanagement of the Klamath River
has led to this year's and last
year's shortened salmon season,”
Thompson, the bill's author, said
Monday in a prepared statement.
“Yet, the administration isn't
offering any assistance to the
affected fishing communities nor do
they have a plan to restore the
salmon. That is why tomorrow we will
be introducing legislation that
would offer
$81 million dollars in federal
assistance. It will also contain
measures to revive the Klamath
salmon and hold this administration
accountable to ensure they cannot
manipulate the river for political
gain ever again.”
Supervisor Jimmy Smith, a
long-time county voice on fishery
issues, said the gathering was meant
to show that there is local support
for those who are suffering because
of problems on the Klamath River.
”It shows that we want to support
the entire coastal community, as
well as the upper river -- the
tribes and the in-river fisheries
and make them a part of it,” Smith
said. “And it also shows that we
support a solution that is basinwide,
whatever it takes to make that river
well again so that it's a productive
place for all the fisheries and for
the fish.”
His companion on the board,
5th District Supervisor Jill
Geist, agreed. She said she has been
working with all stakeholders along
the Klamath River to help devise a
solution to the river's ills.
”Those of us who are up here are
not able to get down and show our
support, so this is a token of our
support and our hearts and wishes
are down in the Bay Area right now
with Mike Thompson,” Geist said.
“This is an issue that tremendously
affects us here on the North Coast.”
Andre Cramblit, a member of the
Karuk Tribe, recalls his experience
on the Klamath River during the 2002
fish kill.
”It was really an emotionally,
spiritually and personally
devastating experience,” Cramblit
said. “So I'm here to explain my
support and let people know that
there's other perspectives on this
salmon issue.”
Thompson's bill has three parts
-- it would provide $81 million in
emergency appropriations for
impacted commercial fishermen and
related businesses in the region; it
would direct the Department of
Commerce to complete a Klamath
salmon recovery plan within six
months of the bill's passage, and
after the completion of the plan
$45 million would be allocated
for conservation projects; and the
Department of Commerce would be
required to report to Congress on
the progress of the Klamath on a
yearly basis.
Thompson said the bill will
officially be introduced today. It
has
35 co-authors and has a good
chance for success, he said.
”There's precedent for this to
happen,” Thompson said. “It's the
second year in a row that the
fishing community has been terribly
impacted because of the
administration's water policy and
there's a need in the community for
this type of help.”
It's not just about fishermen, he
said -- it's about the tax base of
the community, the economic base of
the community.
It's about paying health
insurance and making house payments,
he said.
James Faulk can be reached at
441-0511 or
jfaulk@times-standard.com. |