[env-trinity] Urgent Action Alert - Call in today to stop a Klamath-Trinity River Fish Kill!
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Fri Aug 15 10:57:30 PDT 2014
Call in today to Stop a Klamath-Trinity Fish Kill - tell them that the
Trinity River needs water now!
Call David Murillo, Region Director Bureau of Reclamation,
916-978-5000 (He visited Hoopa yesterday, the staff Jewell sent)
Call Sally Jewell, Department of the Interior, (202) 208-3100
(His boss)
Federal officials at the Department of the Interior recently announced
that, unlike previous years, they would not release Trinity River
water from Lewiston Dam to avoid a Klamath River fish kill. The
Trinity River is the Klamath’s largest tributary and is home to the
Hoopa Valley Tribe. The Yurok and Karuk Tribes on the Klamath also
depend on the salmon that are affected by lack of water in the
Klamath.Water will instead go to the Central Valley to allow farmers
to irrigate the dry eastern valley.
Juvenile and adult salmon are already dying in the Klamath River yet
almost 90% of the Trinity River’s water is being sent to the Central
Valley. If water is not released from the Klamath's largest tributary,
the Trinity, there is little doubt we will have a repeat of the 2002
Klamath River fish kill, which killed at least 60,000 adult salmon.
The last fish kill lead to disaster declarations, and severely hurt
the West Coast fishing industry. We cannot let this happen again.
Call The Department of Interior now and say it is politics, and not
science and reason, which are stopping the release of Trinity water. A
preventative release of Trinity water needs to happen now.
For more information, read the following article and watch the short
klamathmedia video link that is included in the piece:
http://www.fishsniffer.com/blogs/details/tribal-protesters-urge-secretary-jewell-to-stop-klamath-river-fish-kill/
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/08/14/1321592/-Tribal-protesters-urge-Secretary-Jewell-to-stop-Klamath-River-fish-kill
Chairwoman Vigil-Masten also mentioned the lack of water in the
Klamath and Trinity rivers having a profound impact on tribal members,
especially during a time when there are no jobs, a lack of industry
and a lack of financial resources.
“But, the people taking the water are doing quite well,” said Vigil-
Masten. “To me, it’s really frustrating to that millions of dollars
are being made on the backs of our salmon and our drinking water.”
800_sallyjewel01_1.jpg
original image ( 1280x720)
Tribal protesters urge Secretary Jewell to stop Klamath River fish kill
by Dan Bacher
Tribal members from the Trinity and Klamath rivers, carrying an array
of colorful signs, converged on a press conference in Redding,
California on Tuesday, August 12 to urge Sally Jewell, Obama's
Secretary of Interior, to release Trinity River water out of Lewiston
Dam to stop a massive fish kill from taking place on the Klamath.
Jewell met with the protesters, including Hoopa Valley Tribal
Chairwoman, Danielle Vigil-Masten, outside the press conference, but
made no promises, according to a press release from Got Water and the
Alliance to Stop a Klamath River Fish Kill.
Slogans on the signs held by tribal members included "Free Our River,"
"Water + Fish = Life," and "Our Salmon, Our River, Our Culture," "Save
the Trinity," "Sally Jewel, Trinity River Salmon Need Water Now,"
"Quit Killing Our Fish," and "Release the Dam Water." You can view a
klamathmedia video of the protest at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QouOWqNizs
River advocates say releasing water from the Trinity River, the
largest tributary to the Klamath, could prevent a large scale Klamath
adult fish kill like the one that occurred in September 2002, when
over 68,000 salmon perished, due to disease fostered by low, warm
water conditions.
Although the press conference was focused on California fires,
fishermen and Tribal members said Jewell is ignoring an "even more
dire looming disaster," according to Dania Colegrove, Hoopa Tribal
member and activist with Got Water.
“The Klamath fish kill of 2002 led to poor salmon returns devastating
West Coast fisheries for years afterward. Since then Tribes,
scientists and the Department of Interior have worked together to
avert fish kills by preventively releasing water during drought years,
” said Colegrove.
Colegrove said preventively releasing water from the Lewiston Dam into
the Trinity River cools water and curtails fish diseases in the
Klamath River. This scientifically proven method has worked in past
years.
"This year Secretary of the Interior Jewell and the Bureau of the
Reclamation say fish must begin to die and test positive for disease
before emergency flows will be considered," explained Colegrove.
Tribal members told Jewell the fish are already dying. Yet 2,800 cfs
is currently going to the Central Valley to benefit corporate
agribusiness interests while only 400 cfs, roughly 17%, is going down
the Trinity River.
“Once disease starts to spread to large numbers of fish it can’t be
stopped. Fish are dying now. We cannot wait any longer, ” Colegrove
said.
Colegrove said Jewell is sending about 90% percent of the Trinity
River to the Central Valley Project to meet the demands of large-scale
agribusiness interests such as the Westlands Water District and
Stewart Resnick's Paramount Farms in Kern County. When the dams and
tunnels were constructed on the Trinity, it was established that
Central Valley users have junior water rights and a series of laws
were set up to protect the river and fish. These laws established that
fish, and the Tribes that depend on them, are the top priority for the
Trinity River’s flow.
“Although she met with us and promised to send someone, we are not
sure she will act to stop a fish kill. Hopefully we were loud enough
for her to hear us,” Colegrove said.
Colegrove said Tribal members and fishermen are "fed up" and have
weeks of actions planned to make sure the Department of Interior stops
a fish kill.
Secretary Jewell, after being unexpectedly greeted by demonstrators,
agreed to have a discussion with the Hoopa Valley Tribal Chairwoman,
Danielle Vigil-Masten, where Jewell stated, “There is an opportunity
to do emergency releases, if we see temperature rise, we’ll make sure
that people come out.”
Members of the Hoopa Valley Tribe emphasized that will be too late,
since stressed and dying salmon need water now.
Chairwoman Vigil-Masten also mentioned the lack of water in the
Klamath and Trinity rivers having a profound impact on tribal members,
especially during a time when there are no jobs, a lack of industry
and a lack of financial resources.
“But, the people taking the water are doing quite well,” said Vigil-
Masten. “To me, it’s really frustrating to that millions of dollars
are being made on the backs of our salmon and our drinking water.”
Vigil-Masten's statement is backed up by recent USDA data stating that
California almond growers, one of the major recipients of exported
Trinity River and Delta water, will harvest a record 2.1 billion
pounds this year.
The National Agricultural Statistics Service's estimate is up 5
percent from last year’s crop and 8 percent from the initial 2014
forecast on May 1. If this figure hold ups as the harvest proceeds, it
would exceed the record of 2.03 billion pounds in 2011. (http://www.modbee.com/2014/06/30/3417479/usda-forecasts-record-almond-crop.html#storylink
=cpy)
California supplies about 80 percent of the almonds for the world
market and the Northern San Joaquin Valley accounts for nearly a third
of the state's production. County crop reports reveal that almonds
brought approximately $1.4 billion in gross income to the valley's
growers in 2012.
Secretary Jewell also said that she has not made it to the Klamath and
Trinity rivers to see the drought’s consequences.
Chairwoman Vigil-Masten suggested that Secretary Jewell look out of
her airplane window and see the brown and fire scorched areas of
Northern California for herself and then compare that to the green
landscape and flooded fields of Southern California.
Chairwoman Vigil-Masten pointed to herself and the protest group,
stating, “Then think of us…the people that you are taking water from!”
As documented in my article, "The Emptying of Northern California
Reservoirs," the state and federal water agencies systematically
emptied Northern California reservoirs during a drought year, 2013, to
fill Southern California reservoirs and supply the Westlands Water
District and the Kern County Water Agency with subsidized Delta and
Trinity River water. As a consequence, Trinity, Shasta, Oroville,
Folsom and other Northern California reservoirs were drained to record
or near-record low levels, leaving little water for carryover storage
in 2014.
While the drought is very real, it has been aggravated by complete -
some say criminal - mismanagement of the state's reservoirs and rivers
by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and California Department of Water
Resources. (http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/02/07/1275862/-The-Emptying-of-Northern-California-Reservoirs
)
Meanwhile, Governor Jerry Brown is fast-tracking his Bay Delta
Conservation Plan (BDCP) to build the peripheral tunnels under the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. If built, the project would hasten
the extinction of Sacramento River Chinook salmon, steelhead, Delta
and longfin smelt, green sturgeon and other fish species, as well as
imperiling the salmon and steelhead populations of the Trinity and
Klamath rivers.
Under the guise of habitat "restoration," the $67 billion project
would take vast tracts of Delta farmland, among the most fertile soil
on the planet, out of agricultural production in order to ship large
quantities of northern California water to corporate agribusiness
interests irrigating toxic, drainage-impaired land on the west side of
the San Joaquin Valley.
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