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Wiggins: That sucking sound … is your salmon PDF Print E-mail
Written by Patricia Wiggins   
Friday, 27 February 2009
Some environmental problems are abstract, affecting places far away and species rarely seen. Others are as close as our supper plates.


The crash of salmon in California affects us all. This once-abundant fish, famed for huge king salmon in numbers so great they crowded our rivers, is now teetering on the edge of extinction. While some specific populations are not listed under the Endangered Species Act, several king salmon and coho salmon runs are listed as “threatened” or “endangered.”


These are not just trophy and sport fish. They form the backbone of California ecosystems, tribal cultures, local economies, a commercial fishing industry and a once-plentiful, wonderful food. Most Californians would mourn the loss of salmon, and rightly so – it would be a resource squandered.


This will likely be the second year in a row with no commercial or sport ocean salmon season. This is not an anomaly – it is the sad result of a long-term trend that government and the public have been unable to stop. And, as last year’s no-catch season demonstrates, a blanket ban on fishing will not, by itself, reverse that trend.


Salmon have borne the brunt of development in California. With every major dam, they lose habitat. With every ounce of polluted runoff from farm or city, they lose water quality. With every quart pumped from once free-flowing rivers, they lose water.


In-stream pumps trap juveniles against screens; invasive species steal habitat and eat young fish; wildland roads dump sediment into streams; and hatchery management practices are incapable of replacing natural spawning. Add to this the natural – and human-induced – changes wrought on climate, the ocean and streambeds, and the salmon face one tough uphill swim.


One particularly pernicious practice affecting water quality and the beds of streams is motorized in-stream motorized gold mining. Gasoline-powered engines on suction dredges on pontoons or rafts are used by people to scoop up riverbeds in order to find grains of gold in Northern California streams. Sediment from suction mining covers emerging salmon in stream gravels, and the suction alone, in the deep, cool parts of wild streams, entrains and kills young fish.


Statewide, there are about 3,000 miners operating in places like the Klamath, Scott and Shasta watersheds who buy permits from the California Department of Fish and Game (DFG). Resident permits cost about $50. Combined with non-resident permit sales, they generate from $150,000 to $200,000 annually – for a program which costs DFG over $1.25 million each year to enforce.


In contrast, California fishermen buy 2.4 million fishing licenses each year. The sport-fishing industry supports a total of 43,000 jobs paying $1.3 billion in wages and salaries annually. Fishing equipment sales total over $2.4 billion per year. And salmon, fish highly susceptible to the impacts from suction dredges, are traditionally the most important fish to Northern California commercial fishermen and native tribes.


Yet, late last month, the DFG rejected a petition to restrict mining in areas most important to fish. The department director seemed more swayed by a partisan letter from the Siskiyou County Board of Supervisors in support of the miners than ecological realities. In sharp contrast to overwhelming evidence, the board stated that there is no emergency.


DFG’s action – or rather, the department’s shameful lack of action – is unconscionable. Environmental choices should be based on fact, as well as on fair evaluation of economic realities. Gold mining is a minor, recreational activity. Many commercial fishermen, along with sellers of fishing equipment and others in a multi-million-dollar industry, deserve equal if not greater consideration. DFG has already admitted publicly that the regulatory status quo is harming fish like the coho salmon.


DFG officials have a responsibility to protect our state’s fishery resources, the livelihoods of our fishermen and women, and the supply of local seafood for our tables. And if they don’t fulfill that responsibility, the state legislature, along with other concerned individuals and organizations, must hold them accountable.


Accordingly, I plan to introduce legislation to ban suction-dredge mining in California. While some miners will denounce a ban as infringing upon their “freedom,” no human beings should be “free” to hasten the elimination of these magnificent fish. And millions of other Californians – including fishing families, recreational fishermen and salmon consumers – have an interest to protect, as well.


And on Feb. 5, attorneys for the Karuk Indian Tribe and the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations filed suit, seeking a temporary restraining order seeking to prevent DFG from issuing additional mining permits and to halt all suction dredge mining operations.


We are, hopefully, at a turning point on the path of survival for California’s salmon. There is an agreement in principle to remove dams on the Klamath River. There is reconsideration of Delta pumping and water management. There are broad efforts to bring back the coho, with many people gritting their teeth to cooperate with a broad range of restrictions, starting with fishermen.


It is time for miners to give up their self-interest, too, to give these fish a moment to recover. And it’s high time for the Department of Fish and Game to go from protecting miners to protecting fish … for all Californians.


State Sen. Patricia Wiggins (D-Santa Rosa) chairs the Joint Legislative Committee on Fisheries & Aquaculture. She represents California’s 2nd District, which includes Lake County.


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HOW about a budget on time
written by CobbMt, February 28, 2009
And that seems to be job one. Politicians need an open primary to cut the dead timber out of the State Forest.
The extremists on the left - like this local lady, and the right like those in Clovis need to exit stage left.
excellent piece
written by Baxter, February 28, 2009
Succinct and to the point. Though the desirability of saving any species from extinction should be a no-brainer, the sad fact is that America today continues to be a place where dollar arguments hold the greatest value in many people's minds. Better known as "short term" thinking. Short term thinking is killing us all, and while the bell seems to be tolling just for salmon right now, don't be fooled -- it tolls for all of us, if we don't wake up and start making radical changes in how we live, and how we co-exist with the rest of God's creations.

Wiggins has done an excellent job of pointing out the figures that render impotent any economic defense of continued dredge mining. On the issue of "freedom" she equally devestates arguments suggesting that minors have "rights" to destroy ecosystems, when much larger numbers of people desire the "freedom" to enjoy those same ecosystems as recreational fishing venues.

I wish we lived in a world wherein stopping the continued wholesale destruction of habitat could be supported on this argument alone: Because stopping said destruction is The Right Thing To Do. Period.

But alas, we don't live in such a world. One needs to provide economic analysis proving there is more money to be made by doing the right thing, and without such economic analysis, you can count on crowds of "freedom lovers" screaming in protest: "What do you value more? Humans or fish?!" (The absurdity of the question tends to leave one speechless, but nonetheless, many people really are ignorant enough to believe that question makes sense.)

Thank you, Senator Wiggins, for providing a sound financial basis for doing the right thing. For those to whom every argument must be reduced the crunching of numbers, this piece illustrates that the only economically logical approach is to stop dredge mining.

Shame on the Siskiyou BOS for their backward decision. I hope Senator Wiggins and others are successful in achieving a state-wide ban.

We should all contact the Governor's office to voice our support of the ban. And we should let Senator Wiggins know that we appreciate her efforts.

...
written by James, February 28, 2009
With due respect to all, but this urinating on my wounds with your plight for animals and globel warming while ignoring those that have been abused by the power of dishonesty within this local government. To have none to stand up with in this system and say this is not exceptable. To let stand, then I ask again what use is the Constitution ,the Bill of Rights or the oath took by them. What is the meaning not to be abridge with the seeking a grievance? Care about the salmon,care about our earth but please stop being corrupt with us you forget that have rights you care not to address.
what a wonderful world we live in
written by bearer, March 01, 2009
Now we learn that evil men hide in our mountains raping the mountians of gold and they are the reason salmon are no longer making it to the ocean.

I have an idea, why don't you write a bill that says lawmakers do not get per diem every day they are late with the budget? And for good measure, add an amendment to it that fines lawmakers one and one half days pay for each day they are late.

Then write a bill that says lawmakers do not get Cadillacs and Lincolns for their state cars. In fact, write it to limit the top dollar expenditure be no more then $14k.

While you are at it, introduce a bill that eliminates any borrowing at all to balance the budget.

And my all time favorite bill would be a bill making it a misdemeanor for a politician to lie to anyone in their district.
Are they obeyers of the law ?
written by James, March 01, 2009
What good is passing new laws when the ones sworn to have little meaning thus abridging is the norm.What we have is the feds taking our money telling the state what to do,the state taking our money telling the county what to do and the county taking our money telling us what to do. The reality is their as corrupt as you can get. The system whereby they take money from those that are regulated for our good and thats not dishonest? Try to report the wrongs of you elected officals see how far that gets you.All of you that would take offence that your person is a good and honist person,its the others that are corrupt. To be honest and work within a corrupt system has no validity all will justtify their action in short order. The need to hide that their only human making excuses for their actions."After all one must comppromise" As it stands it will only get worse, You are putting your live on it.
amazing sentence construction
written by Baxter, March 01, 2009
"this urinating on my wounds with your plight for animals and globel warming while ignoring those that have been abused by the power of dishonesty within this local government." etc etc etc

I have seldom encountered such hilariously fractured syntax, outside of computerized auto-translation programs. James, is English your first language? Do you write these messages in a different language, and then use a computer to translate them? I'm just looking for an explanation for this amazing sentence construction.

???

Amazing example of poking fun over discussion
written by bearer, March 01, 2009
Why are so many of the "educated" lacking in the ability to discuss topics in a mature manner?

Has the education system left the educated with complexes?

What is the cause of the "educated" insisting on acting like third graders?

I am just looking for an explanation.

???
Baxter
written by James, March 02, 2009
I would and will not now be the match that burns the brightest from the box when struck. Freely admittion that age has took some toll on me and as the story needs to be told and could use a smart person. Lets talk. Point is we spend more time,energy and lost capital saving everthing but us. bearer Im not sure that I was chastising you only that more laws when those that lead show little respect for the oath they take. So to pass more laws to make them obey the laws they don't? Hard for me to understand that one. The arrogance of power, who is telling them their not God? Who is holding them accountable? This government is urinating on our wounds,wounds open with a thousand cuts with the loss of right as set down in the constitution and Bill of Rights. Sorry to be long winded.
James
written by bearer, March 02, 2009
I was addressing Baxter.

I am in agreement as to people like the author of this piece live in an alternate reality. She hold office only because people do not think when they vote. Instead they act like mindless zombies marking the box next to party affiliation while having no idea what the person the voted for really represents.
bearer
written by James, March 03, 2009
Thought so but it is never my intent to abuse of offend anyone other than those that ask for our vote.Most have turned into pompous asses with the arrogance that power brings to the forefront by their actions. This openly violating the Constitution with no oversight is the true meaning of Lord Actons remark." power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely" You within this Lake County government that chose your rules,regulations or department procedures over your oath the Constitution with the Bill of Rights, I find that highly offensive. So you all corrupt the system further by the lack of over sight and hide your errors you allowed to turn into complicity of malfeasance. I will add that the lapdogs to this government,the grad jury with the leadership of Brondell Locke is the true meaning of wasted effort that on the par with the likes of Brown,Smith and Farrington but lets not forget Lewis and Robey.

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