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http://www.dfw.state.or.us
SALEM, Ore.—Following up on a commitment from May 2022, the Fish and Wildlife Commission met with interested federally recognized Tribes from western Oregon to hear additional information regarding the Commission's April 2022 decision to terminate the North Umpqua summer steelhead hatchery program.
Representatives from the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians (CCBUTI), Coquille Indian Tribe, Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde and Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians all provided information in-person or remotely.
Several Tribes specifically asked the Commission to rescind their April 2022 decision to end the North Umpqua hatchery summer steelhead program and look for other ways to reduce the number of hatchery fish on natural spawning grounds, one of the main factors that led to the Commission's decision.
ODFW recently entered into new cooperative management agreements with several of the nine federally recognized Tribes in Oregon, including the Coquille Indian Tribe and CCBUTI, that advance the government-to-government relationship between those Tribes and the State of Oregon.
Commissioners listened to the Tribes but took no other action in response to their information. Today's meeting was just to hear from the Tribes.
Due to a court order after the Commission's April 2022 decision, hatchery summer steelhead smolts were volitionally released in the North Umpqua River in May 2022. The Commission's decision remains enjoined until the Oregon Court of Appeals rules on the case.
Also today, the Commission:
A recording of today's meeting is available at https://www.dfw.state.or.us/agency/commission/
The next Commission meeting is Feb. 16-17 in Portland and includes a meet-and-greet at the Pacific Northwest Sportsman Show on Thursday, Feb. 16. More details will be available next month.
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NEWPORT, Ore. – Oregon's commercial Dungeness crab fishery season opens from Cape Falcon to Cape Arago on Jan. 15 after......