Yurok Tribe and Commercial Fishing Group, PCFFA, File Suit to Save Klamath Salmon

Press release from the Yurok Tribe:

Yurok citizen Eldon Kinney stands in front of the United States Court House in 2018 after US District Court Judge William H. Orrick ordered the BOR to release more water to curtail another disease outbreak from C. Shasta.

Yurok citizen Eldon Kinney stands in front of the United States Court House in 2018 after US District Court Judge William H. Orrick ordered the BOR to release more water to curtail another disease outbreak from C. Shasta. [Photo provided]

This afternoon, the Yurok Tribe and the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA) filed a lawsuit against the Bureau of Reclamation and the National Marine Fisheries Service in response to low flows and high salmon disease rates under the federal agency’s new management plan for the Klamath River. The groups are represented by the environmental law firm Earthjustice.

The recently implemented Klamath Biological Opinion (BiOp) created environmental conditions that worsened an outbreak of the lethal pathogen Ceratonova shasta (C. shasta), infecting an observed majority of this year’s juvenile salmon. The Biological Opinion, issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service, is intended to ensure that the Bureau’s operations plan for the 225,000-acre Klamath Irrigation Project does not jeopardize the survival of federally listed fish and mammal species, such as coho salmon and southern resident killer whales. However, for several days in May, the Biological Opinion had the river flows for salmon at or near drought minima at the same time Upper Klamath Lake was within one half of an inch of flooding. These conditions occurred at the same time a serious fish disease outbreak was occurring in the river, but with no water made available under the new BiOp to remediate the outbreak.

“We had no other choice but to take the Bureau to court because the Klamath BiOp is killing the river.” said Joseph L. James, the Chairman of the Yurok Tribe. “The Klamath salmon stocks are currently in an extremely fragile state as the fish population is only just now starting to rebound from previous disease outbreaks. The Yurok people depend on the Klamath’s salmon runs for survival and we should not have to bear the brunt of the agency’s poor decision-making. During the course of the water year, the Yurok Tribe repeatedly sought modification of the Plan to provide higher May-June flows, or barring that, at least the provision of an additional 20,000 acre-feet of water for emergency disease management flows.”

“Stronger protections are needed for Klamath salmon to safeguard against deadly parasites,” said Patti Goldman, managing attorney for Earthjustice’s Northwest regional office. “Infection rates among the young salmon have been especially high recently and we cannot afford to allow this trend to continue.”

“Our folks in the commercial fishing industry also have no choice except to challenge this new Biological Opinion. It does not provide enough water, or enough protection, to prevent the extinction of salmon in the Klamath River that our coastal communities depend upon for their livelihoods,” said Glen Spain, NW Regional Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA), which represents commercial salmon fishing families coastwide. “In short, the new BiOp is based on flawed science, unproven models and worst of all it jettisons key disease prevention flows the Courts have already determined are necessary. This is unacceptable.”

In March 2017 and again in April 2018, United States District Court Judge William H. Orrick, in response to a different lawsuit filed by the Tribe, Earthjustice and PCFFA, ordered the Bureau to release more water to curtail another disease outbreak from C. shasta. There is no provision for additional flows in the current BiOp to address the escalation in infection rates that took place earlier this year. One solution would be the reinstatement of the 2018 ruling, which would make more water available to prevent further damage to the coho and Chinook salmon populations. Increased water releases during disease outbreaks reduce disease transmission to fish, speed outmigration away from infection zones, and generally improve water quality.

Despite the snowpack being 126 percent of the long-term average, under the new BiOp the Bureau released drought-level flows at Iron Gate Dam even as Upper Klamath Lake was full. The stretch of the Klamath River immediately below Iron Gate Dam is a place researchers have identified as having elevated infection rates. Compounding the problem are high daily water temperatures below Iron Gate which put additional stress on infected fish.

Up until now, high C. Shasta infection rates had mostly occurred in low flow conditions on the upper Klamath River near Iron Gate Dam. For example, during the droughts in 2014 and 2015, observed infection rates among juvenile fish reached 84 and 91 percent. Returning in 2016 and 2017, the salmon runs impacted by the disease were some of the worst on record. To protect the few fish that entered the river, the Tribe canceled its commercial fishery for three years in a row and its subsistence fishery for the first time ever, which caused a tremendous hardship for the Yurok people. The commercial ocean salmon fisheries suffered similar widespread closures, and a federal fishery disaster declaration. It is all but certain that Klamath’s fish runs will suffer if this new BiOp’s plan continues to be implemented.

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Willie Caos-mayham
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4 years ago

🕯🌳Thank you Kym for that information.

Jeffersonian
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Jeffersonian
4 years ago

The commercials are slaying undersized fish in the ocean, the indians continue netting, the dams still remain, and the pot growers are sucking up the water. There is no hope. The pfmc is and always has been out of touch. The cdfw is even more hopeless. And then its all heard by some big city judge who knows nothing about the river. The eel has gone the same way. And we sport fishermen have been paying a restoration fee for years.This is govt. In action. with absolutely no results, and then there is trinity dam, sending its water down the sacramento, and blocking the best spawning habitat in the system, which no politician will touch.

Fummins
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Fummins
4 years ago
Reply to  Jeffersonian

Jeffersonian nailed it!!

nines
Guest
4 years ago
Reply to  Jeffersonian

That’s just about exactly the size of it, but I’m really happy to see this anyway… helps alert anyone left with any initiative to the need for responsible action.

Jeffersonian
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Jeffersonian
4 years ago
Reply to  nines

You are right .we cant give up the fight.

State Of Mine
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State Of Mine
4 years ago

What I don’t understand is why people want to tear the dams down. Seems like the guy holding the sign would want to take control of the dams. Mother Nature can be real cruel, and if you have reserves of cold water you can do some management and help things out tremendously for a while. Figure out a way to get the fish around the dams and spend the money there ya bunch of dummies.
Oh yeah, kill the danged pikes off in the Eel too. Have the tribes do a Noah’s arc trip, then dry that river up for a few hot months.

RT
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RT
4 years ago
Reply to  State Of Mine

The dams on the Klamath do not have cold water behind them in the summer months – it’s a hot toxic stew of algae-riddled scum. Also, the lack of big flushing flows (to disturb and move the bedload) below the dams has provided a refuge for the poylchete worms that are the vector of the diseases which infect and kill the juvenile salmon.

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[…] plan for the Klamath River. The groups are represented by the environmental law firm Earthjustice. >click to read< […]

bell
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bell
4 years ago

thank you Yurok Tribe for taking this reasonable issue to court.

Felice Pace
Guest
4 years ago

So far the ESA is the only thing that has put more water into the Klamath River. But ESA flows can only prevent jeopardy as defined in law. To get flows sufficient to restore the abundant salmon runs, requires federal tribes that have fishing rights to assert water rights as well. But so far only the Klamath Tribes have asserted rights to Klamath River flows but that has been denied by Oregon and is pending in court.

Meanwhile, the Klamath’s federal tribes are engaged in closed-door negotiations with the Trump Administration and irrigators that are really about one thing: trading away tribal water rights (or the right to exercise them which is the same thing) in exchange for restoration funding in support of tribal government programs. In other words, the feds and irrigators are trying to get cash-strapped tribal governments to sell out the possibility of really restoring salmon in exchange for restoration funding in support of tribal programs and jobs.

The promise of tribal government funding is powerful coercion that few tribes have proven capable of resisting. The 30+ tribal water settlements since 1985 all compromise tribal water rights i,n order to keep western water with the mostly white irrigators who use 70 to 90% of western water supply. Will the same thing takle place on the Klamath? It really depends on tribal leaders.