The threat facing salmon is so dire that regulators are expected to continue the 2008 salmon fishing ban through 2009.
So it seems incredible that in the creeks and tributaries of the state's major rivers where salmon lay their eggs, suction gold mine dredging continues under regulations that are now 15 years old. These rules are badly out of date and inadequate to protect dwindling number of fish.
Recreational miners use giant dredges to vacuum the creeks and river beds, sucking up tons of sand and rocks in search of tiny flecks of gold. In the process, state fish and game experts say, they destroy precious salmon spawning grounds and kill salmon eggs, young salmon, trout and sturgeon.
The California Department of Fish and Game has the power to stop the damaging practice. It should do so immediately.
The Karuk Indian Tribe and a handful of conservation groups, including California Trout and the Sierra Fund, have petitioned DFG to issue emergency regulations to limit when and where dredging can be done on the Klamath River, its tributaries and five other streams in the Sierra including the north fork of the American River near Auburn.
In 2006, the Karuks sued Fish and Game to force the department to overhaul its suction dredging rules. Pushed by suction dredge miners, the courts ordered the department to complete a California Environmental Quality Act review before it acted. That review was supposed to take 18 months and be completed by July 2008.
The department has already missed its deadline by 6 months and the review hasn't even begun. Meanwhile, harmful dredging continues.
As the petition seeking the emergency actions makes clear, the fish are in peril. A 2008 federal report documented a 73 percent decline in coho salmon returning to spawning grounds in California between 2004 and 2007. Another study concluded the coho "was in danger of extinction."
Suction dredge gold miners claim that their activities improve the spawning grounds, especially on streams where dams have impeded the flow of water allowing silt to build up. They say global warming, not suction mining, has harmed the fishery. But fish experts both inside and outside the department disagree.
At a minimum it will take the department two more years of study before the CEQA review is completed and rules can be updated to protect fish. That is two more years of status quo dredging while endangered salmon populations continue to dwindle.
The Department of Fish and Game should act before that trend becomes irreversible.
COMMENTS:
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HarleyKid1 wrote on 01/22/2009 01:01:03 PM:
The reporter who wrote this editorial should get more than one opinion on this subject be for running the report. I’m a small recreational miner and I belong to three mining association and love looking for gold. I have five dredges starting from a 2” to a 6” dredge, I buy a dredging permit every year and fallow the entire rule that the DFG and USF serves put out there, as well as the rules of the three mining association I belong to. If the person that reported on this would have watched some one dredging they would see for them self that we do not destroy precious salmon spawning grounds and kill salmon eggs, young salmon, tout and sturgeon or any thing else because DFG only lets us dredge at a time when it is ok to do so. No body says any thing about how mush Led, Mercury, and other things like removing trash from the USF camp grounds and properties that belongs to all Americans. Harley Kid
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ecrosby wrote on 01/21/2009 09:47:50 AM:
I respectfully have to disagree with your assertions. Lawsuits are brought against agencies for failure to act and are a last resort. All lawsuits are preceded with a filing of a intent to litigate which allows for the two parties to attempt a settlement. If these negotiations fail and either party believes it can prevail in court than it proceeds. If for example the agency prevails than no legal fees are paid to the party filing the lawsuit. Actually CDFG's admission in court triggered the EIR review, which by the way from the article is already late in coming hence the petition limit, not ban instream mining until the EIR is complete. I am also curious where you get your information regarding this same group tried to prevent money for the EIR.
I am a 66 year old male who owned a 4" dredge. If Im lucky, I use it 10_20 hours a year. I am also a avid fly fisherman and the sec. of a fly fishing club. I LOVE trout and salmon. I KNOW tat my dredging only aids the fish. Your artical talks of distroying the eggs and fingerlings in the gravel beds. If you were objective enough to look, you would find that the majority of the river beds are covered with the top soil which has washed into the river due to fire and population developers. The fish eggs and fingerlings have no were to take refuge from the adult fish.Our dredging removes the over burden and replaces the gravel. Which gives the eggs and smull fish a place to be protected untill they are large enough to servive. Ron Bryant 805-709-2987