Thanks for the comments. Bill did read my letter and sent this cordial reply take on it to me this afternoon:
Steve,
What in the world are you doing up earlier than I am, by the way? I hope you were heading for the Columbia...I'm gonna try the St. Helens area.
Thanks for the thoughtful letter Steve...I'll ask Guy about some of those figures. Frankly, however, I'm not sure what investigations you've made or information you developed, unless it was that. Faulting the tribes for using electricity for casinos is a little out there...the Belloni and other court rulings apply only to harvestable surplus, as I'm sure you're aware, not the
run. The states control the predictions (the Columbia's will change again this week...I noticed a 13,000 dam count the day they decided there weren't enough dailies higher than 10,000) and thus the surplus. I've not seen feds or tribes at any of the tac team meetings. Frankly, NMFS is so weak right now I'm not sure they could influence a fly to leave the kitchen. The issue
is over a valuable fish, not let-them-eat-chilean-salmon or BC farmed fish...this fish has a reputation for being different and it has a good
market. I think the states realize they screwed up with early allocations and especially with the steelhead take, but it's still experimental...there's some indication now that the tribes are considering some test netting
of their own...we'll follow that, too. And as for letting them net below the falls or in the gorge...well, that's out there with the casino lighting thing, Steve. [....... (leaving out some sensative editor info) ...]. This
being only the second year in more than 20 to fish down there and the fact that some are being saved for Umatilla, The Dalles, Pendleton, Tri-Cities and Spokane anglers who want their chance, too...
Call me at the office any time.
Leave a message and I'll call you back.
Thanks again,
Bill
-----------
Thank you Bill.
This is what I replied back to Bill with the following issue clarifications, subsequent to his letter:
4/28/02 -- Thanks for taking the time for the replies Bill. It so happens that we went to the St. Helen's area also this morning. I hope you had better luck than us - we had no bites for a half day fishing. We started fishing our way from dolphin #72 below Sand Island a ways, on down to #62. It was as dead fishing as I even seen down that way; while we were there for awhile anyway. No fish seen hooked, and all replies to inquiries were "no fish seen". My friend didn't have a water thermometer, but it felt upper 40's to me. So I am at a loss to explain why it was so slow out there with lots of fish due thru yet - I hope! I have heard that sometimes they release more water from Bonneville Saturday nights into Sunday, and the rising water can put fish off the bite. But perhaps it was slow in that area due to a lull in the run there - with better fishing elsewhere on the Columbia today? We spent a couple hours up the lower Willamette Channel and saw only a few fish caught out of many boats. No bites for our boat today. It will be very interesting to observe the dam counts in the near future, for sure! ...
My sources for the information I wrote are from the NMFS, ODWF, NSIA, and others I'm not comfortable revealing. I'm confident it's fairly accurate. ... As for your reply comments to my information and your thoughts about the heated issue of unfair Columbia fish allocations strongly favoring the Tribes, like many sportsman I do feel differently than you about encouraging people to buy their gillnetted hatchery and native fish on the road side; because it subsidizes this unfair and native fish taking fishery. And it gives a message that we are alright with it. As I mentioned in my first letter to you, we wouldn't be against these sales if the Treaties and Federal Court mandates for equal allocations of the fish were lived up to, and the Tribes also made better efforts to save the native fish. They have not; including refusing to go along with the states strong requests to switch to the tangle nets, as the commercials are mandated to use now.
I haven't "faulted" the Tribes for using dam produced electricity; I have taken issue with them 'faulting' non-Indians for doing so as they themselves have always used it too; now in large amounts in their fish compensating casinos. Because their main negotiating weapon for unfair and illegal by Federal Court mandate allocations is the fish run damage caused by the dam's electricity producing turbines - yet they have used it all along too! In that regard, I don't see it as the issue stretch that you and they do. And it is certainly very pertinent, because it is the main basis for the key Secretarial Order # 3206, of which I explained in my first letter, that is one of the two main factors leading to such a grossly unfair allocation differential - 13% ESA impact on native fish for Indian netters to 1% for us sportsmen - which are not surplus fish; they are endangered fish! It's these that drive the fishing allocations, not surplus hatchery fish. As the 70's Fed. Ct. mandates said, equal split of "fish deemed harvestable" - which is the estimated tolerable kill impact on native fish, in this current era.
I do agree with you that the sportsmen proposed commercial netting locations above the majority of sportfishing effort is a long stretch of hope. But it is not entirely unfeasable. They may well prefer that to another gamble with an anti-netting ballot initiative.
And I agree with you that the NMFS has been rendered ineffective due to being placed between the proverbial "rock and a hard place". The 'rock' is a combination of Col. Tribal Comm. selfish goals, abetted by # 3206, and their contined threat of regional ecomomic disaster by suing to have the Feds take down some Columbia River dams. The 'hard place' is the combination of signed Treaties and Federal Court mandates that the states of Oregon and Washington are armed with; and used in their filed lawsuit that was settled out of court - poorly for the sportfishers. I'd love to see some stronger northwest political leadership pursue an injunction and possible lawsuit challenging the US Dept. of the Interior's narrow sighted Order # 3206, and an upholding of the 70's Fed. Ct. mandates as the proper jurisdictional force in these allocations! That is a key for getting the sportfishers closer to fair NW fish allocations! Especially with the sportfishers having the least impact on released native fish, and also paying more for the harvestable hatchery fish.
Us sportfishers are primarily asking you to consider these factors of the equation when writing published opinions of netting rights, and helping subsidize their netting by sending more fish buyers their way. Thank you from most of us sportsmen, for your consideration. I am fully aware of your good intent and integrity, Bill. And I would be happy to discuss this further with you anytime it's convenient for you. Thanks again. Take care. - Steve (RT)
-----------------
As for what you all can do to help this situation is use this information, and other forth coming information, and write your own personalized letters to Oregon and Washington Congressmen, and influential members of the state's fisheries departments. Big numbers of letters will help get us a fairer allocation on the Columbia and other rivers!
-----------------
Hey Dan (slackliner), you did everything right on your V-sled tiller handle today. You can't hook fish unless biters get near your proper gear. So, tight lines 'slackliner'.
We came across Nanook (Rick) out there, and got to say hello to him and his 2 ladies out there. That cracker didn't even have a bit yet. Of course, they had only been there for about 15 minutes.
Steve