NPFMC, State and Federal decision makers fail to act, as some Alaska salmon runs at reach an all time low
June 21, 2022
According to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game fewer Chinook Salmon have passed sonar counters on the Yukon River than any other year on record.. In a normal year tens of thousands of Chinook should be countered by this date but ADF&G has counted only 2,460 fish, compared to 20,282 by this time last year. Meanwhile, new reports on trawl bycatch and western Alaska salmon population status recently released by the Alaska Department of Fish & Game (ADF&G) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) paint a devastating picture. While subsistence fisheries on the Yukon and Kuskokwim Rivers have seen closures due to low runs, the pollock trawl fleet continues to catch and discard a significant number of Chinook and chum salmon that originated in those river systems. “Simply put, the system is broken and the public has completely lost trust in the Council process,” said SalmonState Executive Director Tim Bristol. “The time for action is now, Alaska is on the verge of losing something that doesn’t really exist anyplace in the world anymore. We believe in science, we believe in sound management and thoughtful and careful decision making but this process has been captured by the biggest and the richest and does not work for the rest of us anymore.” ADF&G’s stock status report released at the end of May determined:
ADF&G has announced subsistence and sportfish closures in these regions due to poor returns.
NOAA’s genetics studies of 2020 and 2021 trawl salmon bycatch released at the end of May determined:
“If there were the science based processes that Alaskans were promised when the Magnuson-Stevens Act was created, then the North Pacific Fisheries Management Council would have taken action years ago to mandate a reduction in bycatch” said Lindsey Bloom, a commercial fisherman and campaign strategist at SalmonState. “Local people who depend on these fish for physical, spiritual, and cultural survival are restricted again this year from taking a single salmon, while factory trawlers are allowed to take tens of thousands bound for those same rivers. The federal and state management bodies are obligated to sustain the continued existence of salmon and our salmon fisheries and the numbers and data presented at this council meeting support nothing less than decisive action to reduce salmon allowed to be taken as bycatch. The process has been totally hijacked by big corporations and politics and is no longer a system Alaskan’s can trust.” The NPFMC meeting was held Monday, June 6 through Tuesday, June 14, with salmon items as a hot topic almost everyday. The video recordings of the full meeting can be found here. The council did not take any meaningful action on the trawl fleet’s salmon bycatch. Source of News:
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