[env-trinity] Hoopa Fights for Trinity River Restoration

TBedros765 at aol.com TBedros765 at aol.com
Fri Oct 26 13:48:11 PDT 2007


Pasted and attached please find a press release and letter from the Hoopa 
Valley Tribe. If you have questions, please contact me. 
Thank you,

Tod Bedrosian
Bedrosian & Associates
835 Klein Way
Sacramento, CA 95831
(916)421-5121

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


HOOPA VALLEY TRIBE TELLS CONGRESS TRINITY RIVER RESTORATION PROMISES MUST BE 
KEPT BEFORE SAN JOAQUIN RIVER RESTORATION IS PASSED


Media Contacts:     Clifford Lyle Marshall     (530) 625-4211 ext. 161
               Mike Orcutt               (530) 625-4267 ext. 13
               Tod Bedrosian           (916) 421-5121

Hoopa, Calif. – The Hoopa Valley Tribe of northern California has notified 
Congressional and administration San Joaquin River restoration supporters of the 
tribe’s concern the plan for the San Joaquin is fiscally gluttonous and could 
drain restoration funds from the Trinity River, which bisects the Hoopa 
Valley Reservation. 

“They risk killing a living river and the fish in it if the San Joaquin 
legislation (H.R. 24/S. 27) becomes a new consumer of California’s river 
restoration funding,” said Hoopa Tribal Chairman Clifford Lyle Marshall. In an Oct. 23 
letter, the Hoopa Valley Tribal Council asked 10 members of California's 
congressional delegation (list at the bottom of this press release) to change the 
funding mechanism for the San Joaquin River restoration and support legislation 
authored by Rep. Mike Thompson (H.R. 2733) to ensure the promise of 
restoration for the Trinity River.

In the letter, the tribe also notes federal funding shortfalls for the 
restoration of the Trinity River are allowing fish habitat to worsen. “Our tribal 
fishery is failing because of a collapse of the fish populations in the Klamath 
and Trinity rivers,” noted Marshall. 

The Hoopa Valley Tribal Council sent the letter to key members of Congress 
saying, “We need your assistance to ensure that the Federal government’s prior 
commitment and trust responsibility for Trinity restoration are not sacrificed 
to the San Joaquin settlement.” 

Since the San Joaquin settlement was first introduced in the fall of last 
year, the tribe has said the legislation’s funding mechanism will be used by the 
administration to divert restoration monies from the Trinity River restoration 
program approved in December 2000. Congressional representatives, 
environmental groups, water and power contractors in the Central Valley, and 
administration officials have asked the Hoopa Valley Tribe not to oppose the San Joaquin 
legislation. The tribe’s letter replies the tribe can only drop opposition to 
the San Joaquin restoration if funding for the Trinity River restoration is 
assured with legislation, H.R. 2733, authored by north coast Rep. Thompson and 
co-sponsored by Rep. George Miller.   

Marshall said the federal government betrayed its promises to restore the 
Trinity River when administration officials refused to support H.R. 2733 during a 
Sept. 18, House Natural Resources subcommittee hearing on the bill. The tribe 
supports H.R. 2733 as a way to bolster sagging federal restoration efforts on 
the Trinity River.

“We support river restoration throughout California, but Congress must 
recognize the San Joaquin restoration legislation could allow the Interior 
Department to create a billion-dollar vortex that will suck up available restoration 
funding for California rivers, including the Trinity,” said Marshall.

He said the Trinity River restoration project is under funded by $8 million 
annually and is seven years behind schedule, according to estimates developed 
this year by the Secretary of the Interior and the tribe. “Shifting limited 
funds to San Joaquin will reduce funding for Trinity River restoration further,” 
he said.
 
“Funding for the Trinity needs to be identified and confirmed now because 
conditions have worsened for the Trinity and Klamath rivers fishery.” Marshall 
said the Trinity River is the only tributary to the Klamath River producing 
quantities of salmon available for local harvest. “If the Trinity River goes down, 
so goes fishing for native people, sports fishermen and the commercial 
fishing industry for 900 miles of the Northern California and Oregon coastline.   
The San Joaquin will take decades to restore.   Funding for the Trinity will 
produce immediate returns on investment and immediate benefits to the coastal 
communities that rely on the salmon.”

Marshall said the Hoopa Valley Tribe would like to continue talks with Sen. 
Dianne Feinstein about restoration of the Trinity River. “The Senator has been 
a friend to the Trinity River in the past. I think she is concerned that the 
Bureau of Reclamation is only committing half of the money it should on the 
government’s promise to restore the Trinity River. Congressman Thompson’s Bill 
will fix the annual funding shortfall.   We hope she will introduce the same 
bill in the Senate.”

The federal government began diverting Trinity River waters to the Central 
Valley in l964, but promised enough water would be retained for the river’s fish 
and wildlife. Since then the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) has allowed up 
to 90 percent of the river’s water to be diverted. In the l980’s Congress 
recognized the diversion had caused an 80 percent reduction in salmon 
populations. In 1992, the Central Valley Project Improvement Act was passed to create 
funding for environmental restoration of California rivers harmed by commercial 
water users.  In 2000, a Record of Decision agreement signed by the Hoopa 
Valley Tribe and the U.S. Department of Interior for meeting federal trust 
responsibilities to restore and maintain the Hoopa Valley Tribe’s fishery.   Since 
then the tribe has had to litigate against Central Valley interests opposed to 
giving up water for fishery restoration and fight for restoration monies from 
the BOR. 

“The San Joaquin settlement is the latest blow to Trinity River restoration,”
 said Marshall

- 30 - 
The Oct. 23, 2007 letter from Hoopa Valley Tribal Chairman Clifford Lyle 
Marshall was sent to these California Congressional representatives, 
administration officials and other water users.
               
Member                Fax                               Phone

Feinstein                202 228-3954 or          202 224-3841
                               202 228-4741

Boxer                      415 956-6701             202 224-3553

Radanovich             202 225-3402             202 225-4540

Napolitano               202 225-0027             202 225-5256

Cardoza                   202 225-0819             202 225-6131

Costa                       202 225-9308             202 225-3341

Baca                        202 225-8671             202 225-6161

McNerney               202 226-0861             202 225-1947

Miller                      202 225-5609             202 225-2095

Thompson               202 225-4335             202 225-3311

CCs
Karen G. Wayland, Ph.D
Legislative Director
Natural Resources Defense Council
1200 New York Avenue, Suite 400
Washington, D.C. 20005
Phone 202 289-2402
Fax      202 289-1060

Honorable Dirk Kempthorne
Secretary of the Interior
MS 6217-MIB
1849 C Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20240
Phone 202 208-7351
Fax 202 208-6956

Kole Upton, Chairman
Friant Water Users Authority
c/o The Ferguson Group
1130 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
Suite 300
Washington, D.C.   20036
Phone 202 331-8500
Fax   202 331-1598








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