
At its June meeting in Redding, the California Fish and Game Commission voted to move the proposed policy on Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta fisheries management from the Wildlife Resources Committee to the full Commission at their August 7 meeting in Sacramento for further review and potential changes.
Scores of anglers throughout the state attended this meeting to oppose the proposed repeal of the 1996 Striped Bass Policy and the adoption of the new Delta Fisheries Management Policy. The water contractors and their Astroturf groups, including the Coalition for a Sustainable Delta, created by agribusiness tycoons Lynda and Stewart Resnick, have for years tried to increase bag limits and decrease the size limits for striped bass, even though both species thrived together for over 130 years and both species are victims of massive water exports out of the Delta. The anglers and their allies have defeated these attempts to reduce numbers of striped bass every time.
Anglers fear that the repeal of the striped bass policy and the adoption of the new policy would result in weakening protections for striped bass and other introduced fish species.
By decreasing striped bass populations, the state would increase populations of predatory Sacramento pike minnows and introduced silversides that the striped bass feed upon, disrupting the current predator-prey relationships and likely causing even more harm to salmon, Delta smelt, and other fish populations.
“The new Delta Fisheries Policy calls for strict protections for salmonids and listed fish only,” according to the action alert from the NorCal Guide and Sportsman’s Association, the group that organized buses and carpools throughout Northern California to go to the meeting. “This is the first step for removal and destruction of our delta bass fisheries and more! If repealed and adopted, it will allow the commission to direct the department towards increased bag limits and reduced size restrictions!”
After one angler after another spoke, the Commission voted to move the policy recommendation forward to a full Commission discussion on August 7.
During the meeting, people from all over Northern California, the Delta region, and the Central Valley spoke against the policy.