http://www.krcrtv.com/blob/view/-/39619170/data/1/-/kiliq4z/-/Press-Release-from-Hoopa-Tribe-about-lawsuit.pdf
PRESS RELEASE
Hoopa Valley Tribe 17 May 2016
Contacts
Chairman Ryan Jackson (530.249.8653)
Mike Orcutt (707.499.6143)
Tom Schlosser (206.386.5200)
Hoopa Tribe Sues Federal Government over
Inadequate Protections for Juvenile Salmon
The Hoopa Valley Tribe has filed a 60day notice of intent to
sue the Bureau of Reclamation
(BOR) and NOAA Fisheries for violating the Endangered Species
Act (ESA). Failure by these federal agencies to reinitiate
consultation on the flawed 2013 Klamath Project Biological
Opinion
(BiOp) will simply add to the millions of sick and dead juvenile
salmon already lost due to the Klamath Irrigation Project. High
infection prevalence of the deadly salmon parasite Ceratomyxa
nova has been directly linked to the Project and its effect upon
natural flows in the river. “The juvenile fish kills in 2014 and
2015, while not as noticeable to the naked eye as dead adults on
the banks, are as devastating to Hupa people as the 2002 adult
fish kill” said Ryan Jackson, Chairman, Hoopa Valley Tribe.
The BiOp limited the number of fish that could be harmed or
killed by the Project. This threshold was knowingly violated in
2014 and 2015, with nearly 100% infection rates of juvenile
salmon in those years. "Tribal and nontribal fisheries will be
substantially depressed as adult salmon which outmigrated in
2014 return in record low numbers this year and next" said Mike
Orcutt, Hoopa Fisheries Director. BOR and NMFS have refused to
take appropriate actions to make sure this does not happen again
and have clearly violated the ESA by not reinitiating
consultation. Continued catastrophic losses of salmon can be
expected in the Klamath Basin given this inaction by the
agencies. “Despite numerous attempts to make this right with the
agencies, their lack of action has required us to take legal
action to protect our fishery and way of life" said Jackson.
The Hoopa Valley Tribe inhabits the largest reservation in
California and is one of only two tribes in the state with
federally reserved fishing rights, entitling the tribes to 50%
of the allowable harvest of Klamath River fish. "Since time
immemorial, Klamath Basin has been the lifeblood of the Hupa
people. We will continue to stand up for the fish of the Klamath
Basin” concluded Jackson.
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