
Klamath River Tribal Members, the Winnemem Wintu Tribe, commercial and recreational fishing groups and Restore the Delta will hold a rally on Tuesday, January 23 in Sacramento to protest the Trump Administration’s plan to maximize Delta exports, followed by a U.S. Bureau of Reclamation public meeting to receive oral/written comments.
The rally will take place on the sidewalk outside 650 Capitol Mall at 1 p.m., while the public meeting will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Stanford Room, 650 Capitol Mall, Sacramento, CA 95814.
A new proposal by the Trump Administration to maximize water deliveries to the Central Valley Project and increase Delta pumping comes at a time when salmon runs and Delta smelt numbers have reached record lows. This proposal could impact flows on the Sacramento, Feather, American-San Joaquin, Trinity, and Klamath rivers.
Last year, commercial and recreational salmon fishing were severely curtailed in California due to poor Klamath and Sacramento River salmon returns. The Klamath River suffered the worst salmon return in history, which also effectively shut down Tribal subsistence and commercial fishing for California’s largest tribes.
The Delta smelt could be the first fish species to become extinct in the United States since the Endangered Species Act was signed in 1973. With only two Delta smelt identified in the last fish survey, state and federal agencies need to focus time, money, and energy on restoring smelt populations instead of turning up the pumps.
The Trump Administration’s recent announcement to increase Delta exports to Central Valley farmers poses an imminent threat to California’s fish species. The Delta smelt is our small but mighty canary in the coal mine; it is an indicator of the health of the Delta ecosystem. If it goes, the future impacts to the health of humans and to other Delta fish and wildlife would be devastating.
For more details on the public comment meeting January 23rd in Sacramento at the Capitol Mall, click here.