Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
Jim Foley's presentation on unregulated Karuk
Tribe dipnetting of Federally protected salmon To the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors 3/17/09 Today I made a presentation the Siskiyou County
Board of Supervisors. I asked them to summon California Department
of Fish and Game before the board to answer questions about why
Fish and Game has granted a special "exception" to the rules that
everyone else must follow.
Request for assistance from the Siskiyou County Board of
Supervisors
On March 2nd. 2009 a broad coalition of concerned
citizen groups, led by the New 49er’s prospecting organization and
comprised of agricultural, ranching, mining and other concerned
citizens, submitted a petition to the California Dept. of Fish and
Game to repeal an illegal exception to the state Fish and Game
Code. This exception allows the Karuk Tribe to engage in an
unregulated and unmonitored fishery at a time when the Tribe,
Commission and Department are actively involved in efforts to
restrict all other economic activities in the Klamath Basin,
including but not limited to agriculture, logging, mining, grazing
and hydroelectric generation.We seek the repeal of an exception to the CDFG General Area Closures set forth in § 7.50(b)(91.1)(b)(2): Exception: “members of the Karuk Indian Tribe listed on the current Karuk Tribal Roll may fish at Ishi Pishi Falls using hand-held dip nets.” Our coalition takes this step with extreme reluctance, but we cannot remain silent while our own activities in the vicinity of this fishery, with no adverse impact on fish whatsoever, are threatened by the Tribe and Department. Specifically, the Tribe and Department appear to contend that status of fishery resources in the area is so dire that any and all human activity which fish biologists speculate may possibly injure fish must be shut down, except intentional killing of the fish for human consumption. Indeed, the Tribe has commenced one federal and two state lawsuits and has repeatedly sought legislative and administrative actions attempting to destroy federally protected citizen rights. At the same time, the Commission and Department continue to authorize, and the Tribe continues to conduct, an unregulated dipnet fishery with substantial direct, immediate, and adverse impacts on fishery resourcesthe fish are killed. A September 22, 2008 article in the Los Angeles Times reports that the fishery is conducted in “a gray area of the law” and that “no one officially keeps track of the 2,000 or so salmon that the tribe can take in a good year”. “Right now, their fish are not even “paper fish,” said Neil Manji, a senior fisheries biologist for the California Department of Fish and Game. “Anything they catch, it’s kind of like ghost fish.” Leaf Hillman, vice chair of the Karuk Tribe, is quoted as saying, “People have been satisfied for many, many years to pretend the issue doesn’t exist.” Coho salmon in the Klamath River are listed as a federally-protected threatened species, 50 C.F.R. § 223.102(a)(10) Any “take” of Coho is a violation of federal law. They are also listed as threatened under California law. 14 C.C.R. § 670.5(b)(2)(E) According to a November 2005 report on the Karuk Tribal diet 3.2% of Karuk households reported harvesting “11 to 50” Coho, and 11.1% of Karuk households reported harvesting “10 or less” Coho in the 2004-2005 season, a season in which catches were reportedly at “record lows”. A 2006 master’s thesis at Humboldt State University reports that 30% of the tribal households harvested Coho. We have also noted that the current draft of the “Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources Eco-Cultural Resources Management Plan” does not specify any protections whatsoever for Coho salmon, referring only to the goal protect “activities” in tributaries that contribute to the quality and availability of spawning, rearing and migration habitat. The Plan acknowledges that: “Fish harvested include; Fall Chinook Salmon, Fall, Winter and early Spring Run Steelhead, Coho Salmon, Crayfish, Trout and Pacific Lamprey. Many of the listed fish are harvested at Ishi Pishi Falls, while all are harvested to a lesser extent at many locations throughout the Karuk Aboriginal Territory. Ishi Pishi Falls is currently the only place traditional salmon fishing methods are consistently practiced and known by management agencies and the general public.” In light of the above conditions and the impact they have on our entire community, we respectfully ask this board to summon CDFG to appear before this board to answer questions regarding why they continue to illegally authorize an activity such as this, when they are charged with “protecting” our fish and game resources.
______________________________
James Foley
Property and Mining Rights Advocate
Klamath River, California |
Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:14 AM Pacific
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