The Hoopa Valley Tribe will hold protest in Arcata Wednesday
The Hoopa Valley and Yurok Tribes said a federal plan to release Trinity Reservoir water this August and September to lessen the impact of a deadly fish disease will do little to stop a fish kill, since it releases only half the water requested by scientists.
Continued dry hydrologic conditions and the recent discovery of the presence of "Ich," the fish disease thought primarily responsible for the fish die-off in September 2002, when over 68,000 adult salmon perished, spurred the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation to supplement flows to the lower Klamath River in 2015. The Yurok Tribe discovered the outbreak of "Ich" on the lower river five weeks earlier than it found the disease last year.
"The Proposed Action includes supplemental flows to prevent a disease outbreak and a contingency volume to be used on an emergency basis to avoid a significant die-off of adult salmon," said Erin Curtis of Reclamation. "Real-time environmental and biological monitoring by federal, state and tribal biologists would be used to determine if and when to implement supplemental flows."
The Draft EA was prepared in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act and is available at http://www.usbr.gov/.... If you encounter problems accessing the document online, please call 916-978-5100 or email mppublicaffairs@usbr.gov.
Please email comments by close of business, Friday, Aug. 7, 2015, to sha-slo-krff2015@usbr.gov, or mail comments to Kylene Lang, Bureau of Reclamation, 2800 Cottage Way, MP-152, Sacramento, CA 95825, or email comments to 916-978-5055.
The Bureau's environmental assessment calls for 32,000 acre-feet of water from Trinity Reservoir to be released from Lewiston Dam between Aug. 19 and Sept. 20 to help remove the pathogens and to cool the water to spur further upriver migration by fall-run Chinook salmon. The proposed releases would increase the flows to 2,500 cfs - the same releases used last year to prevent a big fish kill.
However, the Bureau proposal provides for only half of the 63,700 acre feet of water that the Hoopa Valley and Yurok tribes had requested of the agency to sustain flows of 2,800 cfs.
The Hoopa Valley Tribe blasted BOR's proposal the Bureau of Reclamation's Environmental Assessment (EA) outlining proposed flow releases from the Trinity River "does little to protect fish and does not use the best available science."
"The Hoopa Valley Tribe has submitted a scientific and technically sound proposal to protect returning Chinook salmon that BOR has rejected," according to a statement from the Tribe.
Mike Orcutt, Fisheries Director for the Tribe, said, "It is disheartening after having put all of our resources into a good faith effort to develop a sound and scientifically valid proposal to have it be rejected. Further, much to our dismay BOR now puts forth a scientifically untested and cumbersome proposal offered by federal agencies who profess to be fishery experts.”
Orcutt said, "It seems that Interior is considering last minute proposals not intended to protect fish but rather meet political agendas (CVP water supplies) of San Joaquin Valley Agribusiness."
"It's now come to the 11th hour and we're still entertaining arm chair quarterback approaches to protecting Klamath-Trinity River fish," he added, noting that BOR will finalize its EA on Friday, August 7.
"If a fish kill does occur it will be environmentally and politically devastating, but a direct reflection to how this administration has managed water resources," said Hoopa Tribal Chairman, Ryan Jackson. "Another fish kill on the Klamath River would be devastating to North coast communities, especially when Interior can still make the right choice and protect our culture and way of life."
"Why are our people reduced to hauling dead fish from our river, instead of working with our trustees to prevent the disease that BOR’s operations cause?” Jackson asked.
"Everyone knows that the Klamath River is in the state of environmental collapse and daily reports on the conditions of the river foretell an imminent fish kill," he added. "Both Hoopa and Yurok Tribes have done everything in their power legally and scientifically to convince Interior. We fully intend to work with anyone that wants to help save Klamath Basin salmon. We're hoping to get Humboldt County on board and collectively accomplish that."
The Tribe said residents of Klamath and Trinity Rivers are "fed up with the deplorable water conditions" while their water is being piped over the hill to Central Valley agribusinesses.
Trinity River water is shipped, via a tunnel through the Trinity Mountains, to the Sacramento River watershed to Whiskeytown Reservoir and Clear Creek. The water is used by corporate agribusiness interests farming toxic, drainage-impaired lands on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley to grow almonds, pistachios, watermelons and other crops.
The Tribe decided to protest the Bureau's decision at a public scheduled scoping hearing on the Klamath River Long Term flow plan EIS on Wednesday, 5pm, at the Red Roof Inn, 4975 Valley West Blvd. Arcata CA.
"We are already seeing diseased and dying salmon in the Klamath and Trinity Rivers and the mouth of the Klamath River is nearly closed off during low tides," according to an action alert from the Tribe. "Most of our communities cannot drink the water, and some are completely without running water."
"Yet, BOR released a proposal last Friday that is supposed to protect returning salmon but is not based upon the best available science and is inadequate to prevent a fish kill this year? The Klamath River is on the state of environmental collapse and daily reports of conditions on the river predict an imminent fish kill."
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