Congress of the United States - House of Representatives - Washington, DC 20515-3701
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
 
WU STATEMENT ON FEDERAL FISHERY OFFICIALS VISIT TO OREGON COAST
 
WASHINGTON, DC -- Congressman David Wu released the statement below as federal fishery officials prepare to visit Oregon's coast tomorrow to review the devastating effects of the federally mandated ocean salmon fishing closure. 
 
Dr. William T. Hogarth, director of the National Marine Fisheries Service, is one of the federal officials who will visit the Oregon coast. As director, Dr. Hogarth carried out the decision made last April to effectively close the commercial ocean salmon fishing season. 
 
"I sincerely hope that Dr. Hogarth will take time to meet with Oregon ocean salmon fishers and recognize that those hit hardest by an erroneous federal policy need and deserve assistance. This isn't a disaster fishers created, but rather a disaster caused by poor Klamath Basin water management decisions made back in Washington, DC.
 
"Fishing for salmon is not the cause for the decline of the fall Chinook run on the Klamath River and these folks can't pay the bills and support their families by working only 56 days.
 
"I join my Oregon and California colleagues in defending a way of life. And to ensure our way of life continues, we need a federal salmon recovery plan based on better up-river water management and habitat restoration.
 
"No other approach will ever restore the Klamath fall Chinook run."
 
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In April, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) completely closed commercial ocean salmon fishing south of Florence, Oregon to Big Sur California. North of Florence to Cape Falcon, Oregon, commercial salmon fishers are restricted to a 56-day fishing season. This is a further reduction from the 96-day commercial fishing season in 2005.
 
NMFS says their decision to close the salmon commercial fishing season is to restore the Klamath River fall Chinook salmon run. However, ocean salmon fishing only accounts for an estimated 5% of salmon loss.
 
This erroneous federal policy brings unnecessary economic harm to salmon fishers, their families, related businesses and Oregon's economy. Salmon fishers expect to only catch about 10% of what is normally caught off the coasts of Oregon and California.
 
Congressman Wu has written several letters on behalf of Oregon salmon fishers and has attended meetings with federal officials to discuss the April decision. Officials have agreed that water mismanagement and environmental degradation are the primary causes of salmon loss, not fishing.
 
After pressure from Congressman Wu and other Oregon and California members of Congress, NMFS declared a fishery resource disaster, which makes fishers and related businesses eligible for loans, but not grant assistance. Tomorrow's visit to the Oregon coast, and later to the California coast, will hopefully result in a commercial fishery failure and grant assistance to salmon fishers.
 
Congressman Wu also played an integral role in amending an annual spending bill to include $2 million in disaster relief for salmon fishers. The account created by the amendment acts as a place holder for further action in the Senate. Congressman Wu hopes Oregon and California Senators will continue to work towards the estimated $81 million needed to help every affected salmon fisher and related businesses in Oregon's and California's coastal communities.
 
The situation in the Klamath Basin is not new. This is not the first time salmon fishers have seen their season cut, nor the first time they have been denied assistance. However, when Klamath Basin farmers were required to sacrifice and irrigation water was held back to protect fish, a disaster was declared within weeks and farmers received aid less than four months later.
 
Current federal policy has failed both fishers and farmers. Congressman Wu is a cosponsor of legislation that would require the Federal government develop and implement a coordinated, comprehensive research and recovery plan for Klamath River fall Chinook and Coho salmon. A recovery plan based on better water management and habitat restoration is the only solution that will recover salmon runs in the Klamath Basin.
 
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