Fish Sniffer On Demand Digital Edition Issue 3908 Mar 27- Apr 10 | Page 23
Mar 27-Apr 10, 2020
VOL.39 • ISS. 8
Tribes and Fishermen Urge State to
“Shut Down” Delta Tunnel
O
ver 200 people including
members of at least seven Cali-
fornia Indian Tribal nations, along with
some recreational anglers and environ-
mentalists, marched on the meeting room
of the Sheraton Inn in Redding on the
evening of March 2, shouting “Shut It
Down” and “No Water for Profits,” in
strident opposition to the Governor’s
Delta Tunnel project.
After marching into the room, they
testified before the Department of Water
Resources staff about damage that would
be caused to their livelihoods and culture
if the Delta Tunnel is constructed. The
meeting only took place under pressure
from the Hoopa High Water Protectors
Club and their allies, who demanded at
the first scoping meeting on February 3
that a meeting be held in the north state.
There were so many speakers that the
DWR moderators, under pressure from
all of people who had traveled there,
finally decided to hold the comment
period a half hour longer than originally
planned. Not one person who showed up
indicated support for the Delta Tunnel.
Annelia Hillman of Orleans, Yurok
Tribal Member and artist, set the tone
for the evening when she got the crowd
chanting “Shut it Down!” during the
rally. Dozens of youth spoke, sang songs
and testified during the rally and scoping
meeting.
Kylee Sorrell, Hoopa High Water
Protectors Club representative, reflected
the view of many tribal youth that
showed up at the meeting.
“I should be in school,” she said. “I
should be able to be a kid. I should not
have to be continually fighting for my
river and culture.”
Margo Robbins, an adviser for the
Hoopa High School Water Protectors
Club, stated, “We’re here today at the
Delta tunnel scoping meeting to let the
government know that we cannot sustain
any more diversions from the Trinity
River.”
“As native people, we rely on the river
and the salmon as part of our traditional
heritage. We cannot afford to let anything
further erode our river systems,” Robbins
testified.
Morning Star Gali of Save California
Salmon, a Pit River Tribal Member,
said regarding the water planned for
export in the Delta Tunnel, repeated to
the DWR staffers a question that she had
asked Natural Resources Secretary Wade
Crowfoot at a meeting in Sacramento in
February:
“The economies, heath and subsistence
of Tribal and coastal communities rely on
salmon, how will cutting regulations help
protect these communities and restore
salmon and why is DWR not reaching
out to North State rural and salmon
dependent communities on things like the
tunnel and water portfolio.”
The Governor’s Delta Tunnel’s plan is
being promoted by the Newsom Admin-
istration after a fall when low numbers
of fall Chinook salmon ascended the
Trinity and Klamath rivers. As a conse-
quence, the Klamath River fall Chinook
abundance forecast of 186,600 adult
salmon is even lower than the 2019
forecast and will likely result in big
restrictions and/or closures for Tribal,
recreational and commercial ocean
fishermen this year.
Carrie Buckman, the DWR program
manager who conducted the Redding
meeting and previous scoping meetings
around the state, said, “The project does
not include any changes to the Trinity or
Klamath rivers,” after Dania Colegrove,
a Hoopa Valley Tribal Member, asked
why the Trinity River wasn’t included in
the map of watersheds impacted by Delta
Conveyance.
However, meeting attendees weren’t
impressed with DWR’s claim that the
Delta Tunnel wouldn’t impact flows on
the Trinity, the largest tributary of the
Klamath.
“Despite many promises over the years
to leave Trinity River flows intact, we
have uncovered evidence that there are
plans to increase exports of Trinity water
to the Central Valley,” said Georgianna
Myers of the Yurok Tribe. “The Delta
tunnel project only increases the risks to
the Trinity River.”
“Promises to protect the Trinity in the
past were broken time and again. We say
no more. The fisheries in the Klamath and
Trinity are at a breaking point, and we
cannot endure any more. Simply put, the
Klamath and Trinity rivers are everything
to us,” she concluded.
Richard Myers, a member of the Yurok
Cultural Committee and a former Coun-
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21
By Dan Bacher
cilmember from the village of Sregon,
emphasized that the state and federal
governments haven’t consulted with the
Tribes along the Klamath and Trinity
rivers, even though they will be impacted
greatly by the Delta Tunnel, voluntary
settlements, Sites Reservoir and other
water plans.
“There’s a trust responsibility here
some place. Somebody’s supposed to
talk to the tribes if there’s going to be
any impact on the river. So far, I haven’t
heard of any. And the state needs to talk
with all three or four tribes up and down
the river. We are people. And you can
see the shape of the river’s in now – it’s
horrible,” he said.
A dozen members of the Winnemem
Wintu Tribe and their Chief, Caleen Sisk,
showed up at the meeting and sang a
traditional song after the meeting ended.
The Winnemem are a traditional salmon
people working to bring back the native
run of McCloud River winter Chinook
salmon back from New Zealand, where
they were introduced 100 years, to their
native river above Shasta Dam.
“Truth and healing cannot happen under
Governor Newsom’s regime if the state
is going to support water projects that
destroy our salmon runs,” said Caleen
Sisk in a statement before the meeting,
referring to Newsom’s executive order
apologizing for the genocides survived
California Indigenous peoples around the
state. “We believe that whatever happens
to the salmon will happen to us as a tribal
people, and this Tunnel is part of the
larger plan that would make the extinc-
tion of salmon final.”
Sisk and other Tribal representatives at
the meeting called on Governor Newsom
to adhere to his obligation, as required
by the United Nations Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous People, to procure
free, prior and informed consent from
tribes for any project that may impact
their ancestral homelands. They are also
asking for the Governor to stand with
them to fight the Trump administration’s
new water diversion rules from Califor-
nia’s salmon rivers.
In her testimony, Sisk pointed out how
the Winnemem and other Tribes are
threatened by the federal plan to raise
Shasta Dam and the Delta Tunnel — and
criticized the limited amount of time
provided to comment, as well as the
failure to answer the questions she has
asked in tunnel scoping meetings she has
attended:
“We didn’t get even get 3 minutes to
speak against the Shasta Dam! Look at
the poisons in the bottom of that lake that
holds the water for exporting — even
though we hold the first in time water
rights.\
Fishing Guides who spoke included
Robert Weese of Northern California
Guide Service, who displayed documents
to the DWR staff showing how the state
and federal government had failed to
meeting the doubling goals for salmon
and steelhead set under the Central
Valley Improvement Act of 1992. He
also described how the DWR had broken
its agreement to produce 1 million
additional salmon as mitigation for the
Oroville Dam disaster of 2017.
Jack Trout of Jack Trout Fly Fishing,
who guides on the Klamath and Sacra-
mento Rivers and books other guides
for fishing adventures around the world,
said, “We need to send a message to
Gavin Newsom that they cannot do this
tunnel — and deliver our water down
to the south state. They need to work on
solutions.”
Atta Stevenson, Cahto Tribal Member
and a board member of the California
Indian Water Commission (CIWC), read
a letter to Governor Newsom signed
by her and the three other Commission
members — President Don Hankins, Vice
President Randy Yonemura and Secretary
Roger Aguilar — opposing the Delta
Tunnel. The first paragraph stated:
“The California Indian Water Commis-
sion strongly opposes the Delta Convey-
ance Project. It appears the Water
Resilience Portfolio, Sites Reservoir
and Voluntary Agreement do not give
credence nor acknowledge traditional
knowledge, historical data or salmon
sustainability for increased water diver-
sions from the Trinity, Klamath and
Sacramento Rivers.”
Public comments on the Delta Convey-
ance Scoping (Delta Tunnel) are due on
March 20, 2020 by 5 p.m. and may be
submitted via email at DeltaConveyanc-
eScoping@water.ca.gov. Talking points
can also be found on Save California
Salmon website on the Alerts page.
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