SitNews - Stories in the News - Ketchikan, Alaska

Alaska Granted Motion to Join Defense of Salmon Fisheries in Southeast

 

April 13, 2021
Tuesday PM


(SitNews) Juneau, Alaska - The State of Alaska’s motion to intervene in a federal case that would threaten Southeast Alaska’s salmon fisheries was granted by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington last week. The Wild Fish Conservancy, a conservation organization based in Washington state, claims that Alaska’s management of fisheries under the Pacific Salmon Treaty threatens the survival of several salmon stocks in Washington and Oregon, and the endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales that depend on them. 

Ketchikan Museums - Ketchikan, Alaska

“This is yet another example of radical outside interest groups attempting to put Alaskans out of work and shut down one of Alaska’s vital industries. The Alaska constitution ensures our fisheries are among the most sustainable and best managed in the world, providing opportunities for both current and future generations. We will not sit idly by as the livelihoods of our residents are under attack,” said Governor Mike Dunleavy.

The lawsuit seeks to shut down all salmon fisheries in the federal waters off the coast of Southeast Alaska. Federal waters run 3 to 200 miles offshore and comprise approximately 87 percent of the fishable area in Southeast Alaska. Authority to manage salmon fishing in the federal waters of Southeast Alaska was delegated to the State by the National Marine Fisheries Service consistent with the Magnuson Stevens Act.

The fishing industry is clearly a critical aspect of Alaska’s economy. The Southeast Alaska salmon fishery has averaged $806 million in output, $484 million in gross domestic product, $299 million in labor income or wages, and 6,600 full time equivalent jobs. 

Doug Vincent-Lang, Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Fish said, “Sustainable management of our fisheries was one of the primary drivers behind statehood. I don’t take unjustified accusations and threats to state management of our resources lightly. We abide by the terms of the Pacific Salmon Treaty and comply with the terms of the Biological Opinion that is tied to it. We have a responsibility to look out for our fisheries and the citizens of Alaska that rely on them.”

The State of Alaska has joined the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Alaska Trollers Association in defending the Southeast Alaska salmon fishery. “It is important for Alaska to be represented on these types of issues,” said Attorney General Treg Taylor. “Alaska’s fisheries are some of our most vital resources, and we need to vigorously defend them from lawsuits attempting to shut them down.”

An environmental organization, The Wild Fish Conservancy, asked a federal judge in April 16, 2021, to halt a fishery in Southeast Alaska that harvests salmon vital to the survival of endangered Southern Resident killer whales. Wild Fish Conservancy filed suit against the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in March 2020, charging that the federal government violated the Endangered Species Act by failing to protect Southern Resident killer whales and wild Chinook in its analysis of the fishery. Last year's filing asks the court to halt the fishing season scheduled to begin on July 1, 2020 until the NOAA assessment is corrected, and it can be shown that the fishery would not push the surviving 72 Southern Resident killer whales further toward extinction. US Magistrate Judge Michelle Peterson denied the injunction in June, 2020.

 

On the Web:

Alaska fishermen and conservation groups urge Washington organization to address real issues facing Northwest Chinook and orcas
SitNews - April 27, 2020

The motion for a preliminary injunction, filed April 16, 2020

To save endangered orcas, halt Southeast Alaska’s Chinook salmon fishery
Wildlife Conservancy - April 16, 2020

 

 

Edited By Mary Kauffman, SitNews

Source of News:

Office of Governor Michael Dunleavy
www.gov.alaska.gov

Representations of fact and opinions in comments posted are solely those of the individual posters and do not represent the opinions of Sitnews.



Send a letter to the editor@sitnews.us

Contact the Editor

SitNews ©2021
Stories In The News
Ketchikan, Alaska

 Articles & photographs that appear in SitNews are considered protected by copyright and may not be reprinted without written permission from and payment of any required fees to the proper freelance writers and subscription services.

E-mail your news & photos to editor@sitnews.us

Photographers choosing to submit photographs for publication to SitNews are in doing so granting their permission for publication and for archiving. SitNews does not sell photographs. All requests for purchasing a photograph will be emailed to the photographer.