Featured Press Release

Alaska Native, fishing, and conservation groups support Western Alaska Tribes’ lawsuit, call for changes to federal fisheries management
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Alaska Native, fishing, and conservation groups support Western Alaska Tribes’ lawsuit, call for changes to federal fisheries management

ANCHORAGE, ALASKA—Alaska Native and fisheries conservation organizations have filed an amicus curiae “friend of the court” brief supporting the lawsuit brought by the Association of Village Council Presidents, Tanana Chiefs Conference, and city of Bethel against federal fisheries managers. The lawsuit alleges the National Marine Fisheries Service (NFMS) violated the National Environmental Policy Act by authorizing large-scale industrial fishing companies to catch billions of pounds of fish without appropriately considering the impacts in light of rapid environmental changes, ongoing species collapses, and closures on in-river salmon fisheries.

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Tribal representation & comanagement, comprehensive habitat protection in the face of climate change, need for trawl bycatch reduction take center stage during Senate testimony
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Tribal representation & comanagement, comprehensive habitat protection in the face of climate change, need for trawl bycatch reduction take center stage during Senate testimony

BETHEL, ALASKA—On Friday the Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corporation hosted more than one hundred Alaska Native leaders and community members in the main meeting hall of the Bethel campus for a field hearing held by the U.S. Senate Indian Affairs Committee. Senator Lisa Murkowski chaired the meeting as invited expert witnesses and community members spoke on the record about the deeply felt impact of wild salmon declines along Arctic, Yukon, Kuskokwim Rivers. They emphasized the importance of giving salmon every chance possible to rebound, Tribal representation and comanagement in all fisheries management regimes, and the need for immediate action to address declines.

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Council Discards Testimony, Punts Action on Bycatch
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Council Discards Testimony, Punts Action on Bycatch

ANCHORAGE, ALASKA—Despite continued impassioned testimony from Alaskans, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council this week again postponed setting any kind of limit for chum salmon bycatch and for reducing seafloor damage caused by “midwater” trawl gear. It also failed to address the deep and growing inequities in federal fishery management off Alaska’s coast. More than 50 people, the majority of them rural Alaskans and tribal government representatives, testified before the Council.

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NOAA’s next steps could start to rebalance the scales between factory trawlers and Alaskan communities 
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

NOAA’s next steps could start to rebalance the scales between factory trawlers and Alaskan communities 

JUNEAU, ALASKA— Thousands of Alaskans and Americans, as well as the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Bering Sea Fishermen’s Association, Native Peoples Action, SalmonState, Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association (ALFA), The Boat Company, Bear Trail Lodge, and DeepStrike Sportfishing, have formally urged federal fisheries managers to institute new, desperately needed updates to their management guidelines.

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Update to guidelines for federal fisheries could give AK Tribes, small boat fishermen, sport fishermen & charter operators a voice on trawl bycatch, fisheries access & climate resilience 
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Update to guidelines for federal fisheries could give AK Tribes, small boat fishermen, sport fishermen & charter operators a voice on trawl bycatch, fisheries access & climate resilience 

JUNEAU, ALASKA—Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission, Bering Sea Fishermen’s Association, SalmonState, Alaska Longline Fishermen’s Association (ALFA), The Boat Company, and DeepStrike Sportfishing applaud the start of a federal process that gives Alaskans an opportunity to weigh in on potential new guidelines for federal fisheries management — including trawl bycatch, support for community-based fisheries, and much-needed consideration of climate change in management decisions.

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Council fails to heed urgent call as communities face another salmon season marked by subsistence and small boat closures
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Council fails to heed urgent call as communities face another salmon season marked by subsistence and small boat closures

ANCHORAGE—After days of powerful testimony and comments from hundreds of Alaskans over the course of its week-long April meeting, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council once again failed to meaningfully address the issue of the pollock trawl fleet’s prolific bycatch of chum salmon, king salmon, herring, halibut, snow crab, Bristol Bay red king crab, and many other species. Instead of recognizing the need to manage Alaska’s oceans as an ecosystem and accepting its own Salmon Bycatch Committee (SBC) and Advisory Panel’s (AP) recommendations for a range of measures to reduce chum salmon bycatch, the Council threw out the guidance of the advisory boards they charged with developing this very proposal and assigned the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to start again from square one in proposing a cap. This decision postpones any meaningful action for this fishing season at the very least.

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Alaskans to Council: The Bering Sea is an ecosystem, not a pollock factory
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Alaskans to Council: The Bering Sea is an ecosystem, not a pollock factory

ANCHORAGE—As the North Pacific Fishery Management Council convenes in Anchorage for its April meeting, SalmonState delivered more than 700 comments from Alaskans and concerned citizens urging the council to take meaningful action to address the pollock trawl fleet’s catching and wasting of chum salmon, Chinook salmon, halibut, crab and other species. While nearly every other sector of Bering Sea-reliant fisheries suffers — traditional fishing has been shut down; small boat fisheries are closed; crab fisheries are closed — the council’s inaction means trawling, the largest, most wasteful fishery, continues full steam ahead with the catching and wasting of those same species.

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Despite task force recommendations, North Pacific Fishery Management Council again fails to act on bycatch
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

Despite task force recommendations, North Pacific Fishery Management Council again fails to act on bycatch

ANCHORAGE— Despite hearing hours of heartfelt, powerful testimony from Indigenous Alaskans, fishermen, and other concerned citizens and after receiving recommendations from Governor Mike Dunleavy’s Alaska Bycatch Review Task Force, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council failed to take meaningful action to reduce the pollock trawl fleet’s prolific catching, killing and wasting of highly valued king salmon, chum salmon, snow crab and Bristol Bay red king crab. One bright spot from the week-long meeting, however, was a report from the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), which indicated it may review guidelines governing bycatch.

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North Pacific Fishery Management Council to determine whether or not to act on bycatch
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

North Pacific Fishery Management Council to determine whether or not to act on bycatch

ANCHORAGE—The North Pacific Fishery Management Council, which is tasked with managing the Bering Sea Aleutian Island and Gulf of Alaska pollock trawl fleet, will meet over the next seven days to determine whether or not it will take meaningful action to address the trawl fleet’s prolific bycatch of king salmon, chum salmon, red king crab, snow crab, and other species.

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SalmonState welcomes the Alaska Salmon Research Task Force Act as a first step towards addressing devastating salmon declines
Mary Catharine Martin Mary Catharine Martin

SalmonState welcomes the Alaska Salmon Research Task Force Act as a first step towards addressing devastating salmon declines

JUNEAU—On December 17, U.S. Senators Dan Sullivan and Lisa Murkowski introduced the Alaska Salmon Research Task Force Act which, if passed, would form a panel of salmon stakeholders and experts to assess current salmon research and develop recommendations to guide future salmon research and management.

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