logo
California commercial salmon season is shut down — again. Will the state's iconic fish ever recover?

California commercial salmon season is shut down — again. Will the state's iconic fish ever recover?

Yahoo19-04-2025

A Chinook salmon is seen in an undated photo. (Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS)
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
Facing the continued collapse of Chinook salmon, officials today shut down California's commercial salmon fishing season for an unprecedented third year in a row.
Under the decision by an interstate fisheries agency, recreational salmon fishing will be allowed in California for only brief windows of time this spring. This will be the first year that any sportfishing of Chinook has been allowed since 2022.
Today's decision by the Pacific Fishery Management Council means that no salmon caught off California can be sold to retail consumers and restaurants for at least another year. In Oregon and Washington, commercial salmon fishing will remain open, although limited.
'From a salmon standpoint, it's an environmental disaster. For the fishing industry, it's a human tragedy, and it's also an economic disaster,' said Scott Artis, executive director of the Golden State Salmon Association, an industry organization that has lobbied for river restoration and improved hatchery programs.
The decline of California's salmon follows decades of deteriorating conditions in the waterways where the fish spawn each year, including the Sacramento and Klamath rivers.
California's salmon are an ecological icon and a valued source of food for Native American tribes. The shutdown also has an economic toll: It has already put hundreds of commercial fishers and sportfishing boat operators out of work and affected thousands of people in communities and industries reliant on processing, selling and serving locally caught salmon.
California's commercial fishery has never been closed for three years in a row before.
Some experts fear the conditions in California have been so poor for so long that Chinook may never rebound to fishable levels. Others remain hopeful for major recovery if the amounts of water diverted to farms and cities are reduced and wetlands kept dry by flood-control levees are restored.
This year's recreational season includes several brief windows for fishing, including a weekend in June and another in July, or a quota of 7,000 fish.
Jared Davis, owner and operator of the Salty Lady in Sausalito, one of dozens of party boats that take paying customers fishing, thinks it's likely that this quota will be met on the first open weekend for recreational fishing, scheduled for June 7-8.
'Obviously, the pressure is going to be intense, so everybody and their mother is going to be out on the water on those days,' he said. 'When they hit that quota, it's done.'
One member of the fishery council, Corey Ridings, voted against the proposed regulations after saying she was concerned that the first weekend would overshoot the 7,000-fish quota.
Davis said such a miniscule recreational season won't help boat owners like him recover from past closures, though it will carry symbolic meaning.
'It might give California anglers a glimmer of hope and keep them from selling all their rods and buying golf clubs,' he said.
It continues to be devastating. Salmon has been the cornerstone of many of our ports for a long time.
– Sarah Bates, commercial fisher based in San Francisco
Sarah Bates, a commercial fisher based at San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf, said the ongoing closure has stripped many boat owners of most of their income.
'It continues to be devastating,' she said. 'Salmon has been the cornerstone of many of our ports for a long time.'
She said the shutdown also has trickle-down effects on a range of businesses that support the salmon fishery, such as fuel services, grocery stores and dockside ice machines.
'We're also seeing a sort of a third wave … the general seafood market for local products has tanked,' such as rockfish and halibut. She said that many buyers are turning to farmed and wild salmon delivered from other regions instead.
Davis noted that federal emergency relief funds promised for the 2023 closure still have not arrived. 'Nobody has seen a dime,' he said.
Before the Gold Rush, several million Chinook spawned annually in the river systems of the Central Valley and the state's northern coast. Through much of the 20th century, California's salmon fishery formed the economic backbone of coastal fishing ports, with fishers using hook and line pulling in millions of pounds in good years.
But in 2024, just 99,274 fall-run Chinook — the most commercially viable of the Central Valley's four subpopulations — returned to the Sacramento River and its tributaries, substantially lower than the numbers in 2023. In 2022, fewer than 70,000 returned, one of the lowest estimates ever.
About 40,000 returned to the San Joaquin River. Fewer than 30,000 Chinook reached their spawning grounds in the Klamath River system, where the Hoopa, Yurok and Karuk tribes rely on the fish in years of abundance.
The decline of California's salmon stems from nearly two centuries of damage inflicted on the rivers where salmon spend the first and final stages of their lives. Gold mining, logging and dam construction devastated watersheds. Levees constrained rivers, turning them into relatively sterile channels of fast-moving water while converting floodplains and wetlands into irrigated farmland.
Today, many of these impacts persist, along with water diversions, reduced flows and elevated river temperatures that frequently spell death for fertilized eggs and juvenile fish.
Peter Moyle, a UC Davis fish biologist and professor emeritus, said recovery of self-sustaining populations may be possible in some tributaries of the Sacramento River.
'There are some opportunities for at least keeping runs going in parts of the Central Valley, but getting naturally spawning fish back in large numbers, I just can't see it happening,' he said.
Jacob Katz, a biologist with the group California Trout, holds out hope for a future of flourishing Sacramento River Chinook. 'We could have vibrant fall-run populations in a decade,' he said.
That will require major habitat restoration involving dam removals, reconstruction of levee systems to revive wetlands and floodplains, and reduced water diversions for agriculture — all measures fraught with cost, regulatory constraints, and controversy.
There are some opportunities for at least keeping (salmon) runs going in parts of the Central Valley, but getting naturally spawning fish back in large numbers, I just can't see it happening.
– Peter Moyle, UC Davis fish biologist
State officials, recognizing the risk of extinction, have promoted salmon recovery as a policy goal for years. In early 2024, the Newsom administration released its California Salmon Strategy for a Hotter, Drier Future, a 37-page catalogue of proposed actions to mitigate environmental impacts and restore flows and habitat, all in the face of climate change.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife Director Charlton H. Bonham said the decision to allow limited recreational fishing 'brings hope. We know, however, that this news brings little relief' to the industry.
He said salmon 'are still recovering from severe drought and other climate challenges and have not yet benefitted from our consecutive years of wet winters and other actions taken to boost populations.'
However, Artis of Golden State Salmon Association said while the state's salmon strategy includes some important items, it leaves out equally critical steps, such as protecting minimum flows for fish. He said salmon are threatened by proposed water projects endorsed by the Newsom administration.
'It fails to include some of the upcoming salmon-killing projects that the governor is pushing like Sites Reservoir and the Delta tunnel, and it ignores the fact that the Voluntary Agreements are designed to allow massive diversions of water,' he said.
Experts agree that an important key to rebuilding salmon runs is increasing the frequency and duration of shallow flooding in riverside riparian areas, or even fallow rice paddies — a program Katz has helped develop through his career.
On such seasonal floodplains, a shallow layer of water can help trigger an explosion of photosynthesis and food production, ultimately providing nutrition for juvenile salmon as they migrate out of the river system each spring.
Through meetings with farmers, urban water agencies and government officials, Rene Henery, California science director with Trout Unlimited, has helped draft an ambitious salmon recovery plan dubbed 'Reorienting to Recovery.' Featuring habitat restoration, carefully managed harvests and generously enhanced river flows — especially in dry years — this framework, Henery said, could rebuild diminished Central Valley Chinook runs to more than 1.6 million adult fish per year over a 20-year period.
He said adversaries — often farmers and environmentalists — must shift from traditional feuds over water to more collaborative programs of restoring productive watersheds while maintaining productive agriculture.
As the recovery needle for Chinook moves in the wrong direction, Katz said deliberate action is urgent.
'We're balanced on the edge of losing these populations,' he said. 'We have to go big now. We have no other option.'
This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leader in Fields of Archaeology and Anthropology Named to Chronicle Heritage Board
Leader in Fields of Archaeology and Anthropology Named to Chronicle Heritage Board

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Leader in Fields of Archaeology and Anthropology Named to Chronicle Heritage Board

PHOENIX, June 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Dr. Elizabeth Perry, a renowned anthropologist and President and CEO of Crow Canyon Archaeological Center in Cortez, Colorado, has been named to the Board of Directors at Chronicle Heritage. Crow Canyon is a 501(C)(3) nonprofit organization that empowers present and future generations by making the human past accessible and relevant through archaeological research, experiential education, and American Indian knowledge. The center is located on a 170-acre campus in southwestern Colorado. Dr. Perry is a seasoned business executive and professional archaeologist, and is an innovative leader of successful companies and non‐profit organizations with social/cultural and educational/research missions. In her career, Dr. Perry has led environmental and cultural resources management initiatives and major projects, is skilled in lands, natural resources and technology investment and development, and is effective at collaboration and consultation among corporations, government agencies, and Native American and Alaska Native communities. As President and CEO of Crow Canyon, Perry reports to the nonprofit's Board of Trustees and is accountable to thousands of stakeholders. She was recruited to Crow Canyon in 2018 to design and implement an organizational turnaround, which resulted in the elimination of debt and significant growth of financial reserves, enabling the organization to focus on mission-driven programs. Prior to Crow Canyon, Perry was the CEO of Koniag Inc., an Alaska Native corporation with over 700 employees nationwide and nearly 4,000 predominantly Alaska Native shareholders. She led Koniag's approximately $270 million parent company with full profit and loss responsibility and accountability for the creation and implementation of strategic business plans across Koniag's subsidiary companies and nonprofit affiliates. Perry's responsibilities included the preservation and management of assets in lands, natural resources, real estate, and securities, and investing for the greatest economic and cultural impact. She grew business sectors including cultural and environmental resources management, energy and water resources, technology, government contracting, real estate, securities, and natural resources development. Before Koniag, Perry was an executive and professional archaeologist at SWCA Environmental Consultants, leading operations in the company's Pacific West region. Perry has a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Arizona and has led numerous research projects and produced peer-reviewed publications. She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Fort Lewis College Foundation and the PaleoWest Foundation. About Chronicle Heritage Chronicle Heritage is a global cultural and heritage resource management consultancy committed to the possibilities in a prosperous balance between the needs of the future and the uses of the past. Throughout our history we have worked for clients in both the public and private sectors, guiding one successful project after another through the complex regulations that govern the management of prehistoric, historic, architectural, ethnographic, archaeological, and paleontological resources. Along the way, we have earned an industry-wide reputation for creativity, innovation, and leadership. View original content: SOURCE Chronicle Heritage Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

It's Expensive to Become a Teacher in California. This Bill Would Pay Those Who Try
It's Expensive to Become a Teacher in California. This Bill Would Pay Those Who Try

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

It's Expensive to Become a Teacher in California. This Bill Would Pay Those Who Try

This article was originally published in CalMatters. This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. When Brigitta Hunter started her teaching career, she had $20,000 in student loans and zero income – even though she was working nearly full time in the classroom. 'We lived on my husband's pathetic little paycheck. I don't know how we did it,' Hunter said. 'And we were lucky – he had a job and my loans weren't that bad. It can be almost impossible for some people.' Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter Each year, about 28,000 people in California work for free for about a year as teachers or classroom aides while they complete the requirements for their teaching credentials. That year without pay can be a dire hardship for many aspiring teachers, even deterring them from pursuing the profession. A new bill by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi, a Democrat from Torrance, would set aside money for school districts to pay would-be teachers while they do their student teaching service. The goal is to help alleviate the teacher shortage and attract lower-income candidates to the profession. 'Nothing makes a bigger difference in improving the quality of public education than getting highly qualified teachers in the classroom,' Muratsuchi said. 'This bill helps remove some of the obstacles to that.' To be a K-12 public school teacher in California, candidates need a bachelor's degree and a teaching credential, typically earned after completing a one-year program combining coursework and 600 hours of classroom experience. During that time, candidates work with veteran teachers or lead their own classes. Teacher credential programs cost between $20,000 and $40,000, depending on where a student enrolls and where they live. In 2020, about 60% of teachers borrowed money to finish their degrees, according to a recent study by the Learning Policy Institute, with loans averaging about $30,000 for a four-year bachelor's degree and a credential program. Entering the profession with hefty student loans can be demoralizing and stressful, the report said, adding to the challenges new teachers face. The average starting teacher salary in California is $58,000, according to the National Education Association, among the highest in the country but still hard to live on in many parts of the state. It could take a decade or more for teachers to pay off their loans. Muratsuchi's bill, AB 1128, passed the Assembly on Monday and now awaits a vote in the Senate. It would create a grant program for districts to pay student teachers the same amount they pay substitute teachers, which is roughly $140 a day. The overall cost would be up to $300 million a year, according to Assembly analysts, but Gov. Gavin Newsom has set aside $100 million for the program in his revised budget. Muratsuchi has another bill related to teacher pay, also working its way through the Legislature. Assembly bill 477, which passed the Assembly this week, would raise teacher salaries across the board. Christopher Carr, executive director of Aspire Public Schools in Los Angeles, a network of 11 charter schools, called the bill a potential 'game changer.' Teacher candidates often have to work second jobs to make ends meet, and sometimes finish with debt of $70,000 or more, he said. That can be an insurmountable barrier for people with limited resources. Paying would-be teachers would attract more people to the teaching profession, especially Black and Latino candidates, he said. School districts around the state have been trying to diversify their teacher workforces, based on research showing that Black and Latino students tend to do better academically when they have at least one teacher of the same race. Carr's schools pay their teachers-in-training through grants and a partnership with a local college, which has led to more of them staying on to teach full time after they receive their credentials, he said. That has saved the schools money by reducing turnover. 'This could open doors and be a step toward racial justice,' Carr said. 'California has a million spending priorities, but this will lead to better outcomes for students and ultimately save the state money.' Tyanthony Davis, chief executive director of Inner City Education Foundation, a charter school network in Los Angeles, put it this way: 'If we have well paid, qualified, happy teachers, we'll have happier classrooms.' Muratusuchi's bill has no formal opposition. The California Taxpayers Association has not taken a position. The California Teachers Association, the state's largest teachers union, is a supporter. 'This legislation comes at a critical time as we continue to face an educator recruitment and retention crisis,' said David Goldberg, the union president. 'Providing new grants to compensate student teachers for important on-the-job training is a strong step forward in the right direction to strengthening public education.' Hunter survived her student-teaching experience and went on to teach fourth grade for 34 years, retiring last year from the Mark West Union School District in Santa Rosa. The last 15 years of her career she served as a mentor to aspiring teachers. She saw first-hand the stress that would-be teachers endure as they juggle coursework, long days in the classroom and often second jobs on nights and weekends. But paying student-teachers, she said, should only be the beginning. Novice teachers also need smaller class sizes, more support from administrators and more help with enrichment activities, such as extra staff to lead lessons in art and physical education. 'We definitely need more teachers, and paying student teachers is a good start,' Hunter said. 'But there's a lot more we can do to help them.' This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

‘Prudent remedy' for veto error is special session, Legislative Council advises
‘Prudent remedy' for veto error is special session, Legislative Council advises

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

‘Prudent remedy' for veto error is special session, Legislative Council advises

Gov. Kelly Armstrong speaks during a meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee on March 27, 2025. (Michael Achterling/North Dakota Monitor) Legal staff for North Dakota's legislative branch concluded the 'prudent remedy' to correct an error with Gov. Kelly Armstrong's line-item veto would be for the governor to call a special session, according to a memo issued Friday. But Attorney General Drew Wrigley, who is working on a separate opinion, maintains that Legislative Council has no role in determining the execution of the governor's veto. Armstrong announced May 22 a 'markup error' with a line-item veto that crossed out $35 million for a state housing development fund. The red X over the funding did not match what Armstrong indicated in his veto message that explained his reasoning. North Dakota governor unintentionally vetoes $35 million for housing programs A Legislative Council memo distributed to lawmakers Friday concluded that legal precedent supports the marked-up bill as the official veto document. 'Engaging in interpretive gymnastics' to disregard the markings on the bill could lead to unintended consequences in the future, Legislative Council concluded. Emily Thompson, legal division director for Legislative Council, said the Legislature needs to have an objective document to clearly illustrate what was vetoed, such as the specific veto markings on the bill, so lawmakers can exercise their veto override authority effectively. Lawmakers have six days remaining in their 80-day limit and could call themselves back into session to address the veto. However, the memo cautions that the Legislature may need those days to reconvene to respond to federal funding issues or other unforeseen reasons. Legislative Council recommends the governor call a special session, which would not count against the 80-day limit. A special session of the Legislature costs about $65,000 per day, according to Legislative Council. Armstrong is waiting for an attorney general's opinion to determine the next steps, according to a statement from his office. He previously said he would call a special session if necessary. Wrigley said Friday it's up to his office to assess the situation and issue an opinion on the governor's question. 'The power in question is strictly the governor's power and it has to be in compliance with the constitution and laws of North Dakota,' Wrigley said. 'That's the only assessment here. There's no role for this in Legislative Council. They have no authority in this regard.' Armstrong on May 19 issued two line-item vetoes in Senate Bill 2014, the budget for the state Industrial Commission. His veto message explained his reasons for objecting to a $150,000 one-time grant for a Native American-focused organization to fund a homelessness liaison position. But the marking also crossed out $25 million for housing projects and programs and $10 million to combat homelessness, which he later said he did not intend to veto. Chris Joseph, general counsel for Armstrong, wrote in a request for an attorney general's opinion that the markings served as a 'color-coded visual aid,' and the veto message should control the extent of the veto. Wrigley said his office is working on the opinion and aware that resolution of the issue is time sensitive. Bills passed by the Legislature with appropriations attached to them, such as the Industrial Commission budget, go into effect July 1. 'I look forward to publishing my opinion on that at the earliest possible time,' he said. The Legislative Council memo states, 'It would not be appropriate to allow the governor and attorney general to resolve the ambiguity by agreement.' In addition, Legislative Council concluded that if the governor's veto message is to be considered the controlling document for vetoes in the future, more ambiguities would likely be 'inevitable and frequent' and require resolution through the courts. The memo cites a 2018 North Dakota Supreme Court opinion involving a case between the Legislature and then-Gov. Doug Burgum that ruled 'a veto is complete and irrevocable upon return of the vetoed bill to the originating house,' and further stated the governor does not have the power to 'withdraw a veto.' 'Setting a precedent of the attorney general issuing a letter saying we can just go ahead and interpret the governor's veto message to mean what was, or was not, vetoed, that's a really concerning precedent to set,' Thompson said in an interview. Wrigley said any issues resulting from the opinion could be addressed by the courts. 'I sincerely hope that they (Legislative Council) are not trying to somehow publicly advocate, or attempt to influence a process for which they have no role,' Wrigley said. Legislative Council memo SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store