
In a big victory for fishing groups who were mobilizing for a huge turnout of anglers at the California Fish and Game Commission meeting in Folsom on August 25, Stewart Resnick's Coalition for a Sustainable Delta and their water contractor allies withdrew their petition to increase bag limits and reduce size limits for striped bass and black bass in the San Francisco Bay-Delta.
According to an official notice on the meeting posted on the Commission's website, the petition number 2016-011 (striped and black bass) has been withdrawn by the petitioners. As a result, the Commission will not be taking action on this petition.
"We won, and it was worth all of our efforts," said Dick Pool, administrator of Water4Fish, upon hearing of the petition withdrawal. "However, we still have Congress trying to pass a non-native fish eradication bill."
"There is no need to go to the California Fish and Game Commission meeting set for this Thursday," John Beuttler of the Allied Fishing Groups advised anglers after hearing of the petition's withdrawal. "The Commission has announced that the Coalition for Sustainable Delta, California Chamber of Commerce, California Farm Bureau Federation, Kern County Water Agency, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, Northern California Water Association, San Joaquin Tributaries Authority, Southern California Water Committee, State Water Contractors, and Western Growers have withdrawn their petition number 2016-011 (striped and black bass regulations)."
Michael Boccadoro, the spokesman for the Coalition for a Sustainable Delta, told the Sacramento Bee that supporters of the water contractors were frustrated that they would be allowed only 10 minutes to present their case before the Commission.
In a statement, the coalition said, “In recent days, Commission staff recommended maintenance of the status quo rather than taking any action in response to the petition to address this issue despite continuing reports showing declines in native endangered species.”
However, it is more likely that they withdrew the petition because of the intense opposition to it by anglers and prominent scientists including Dr. David Ostrach and Dr. Peter Moyle, and the likelihood that the Commission would reject the petition.
In a statement, the Coalition said, “It is clear that more.