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For Immediate Release
Contact Matt Mais
(707) 482-1350 ext. 306
Cell: (707) 954-0976
Fish and Game to discuss details of acknowledging tribal rights
The commission is close to making an historic decision
On the rugged coastline of Northern California, a quiet revolution is unfolding that will
undoubtedly alter the course of the Golden State’s brief history.
A broad and unified coalition, ranging from fishing industry representatives to world renowned
environmental groups like the Ocean Conservancy from county governments to Native
American governments, is advocating the California Fish and Game Commission decriminalize
the traditional tribal harvest of coastal resources.
“This is clearly an abundance of support and shows how things have change in the 21st century
in terms of how California wants to treat its indigenous populations,” said Yurok Tribal
Chairman Thomas O’Rourke Sr. “However, it remains to be seen if the California Fish and Game
Commission is on the same page.”
The vehicle that brought the issue forward was the Marine Life Protection Act Initiative process
in the North Coast Study Region. Implementation of the MLPA has occurred throughout the
state in a privately funded joint effort overseen by a region-specific committee known as the
Blue Ribbon Task Force (BTRF). The BRTF assembled a 31-member working group, known as
North Coast Regional Stakeholder Group, which developed a singular proposal that honors
traditional tribal gathering rights.
As part of the last stages of locking down where marine protected areas will be set, the
California Fish and Game Commission, which makes the final decision, is meeting Wednesday to
make recommendations on whether or not to recognize existing, religious, ceremonial,
subsistence and cultural harvesting.
While California Resources Secretary John Laird in February instructed the Fish and Game
Commission to ensure “ongoing tribal activities will be accommodated and that other activities
in the North Coast region marine protected areas will be at the scientific level of protection
intended by the unified stakeholder proposal,” the Department of Fish and Game staff and the
staff of the MLPA Initiative have submitted proposals that significantly diverge from the Unified
Proposal and cut out tribal rights.
The plans lump tribal people with recreational fishers, which will have devastating impacts on
tribal culture. Asking tribal members to follow a foreign set of regulations that have no
connection to culture is not different than the federal policy of the early 1900s “Kill the Indian,
Save the man. Yurok tribal cultural practices dictate that all resources must be managed for all
future generations.
“Any attempt to institutionally subvert our right to gather coastal resources is essentially an act
of ethnic cleansing,” O’Rourke Sr. said. “We depend on these traditions to carry on our culture
for the rest of time.”
Throughout the process there have been proposals to aggressively deny existing Native Rights.
While some of the proposals support Native rights it is not clear which way the Fish and Game
Commission will go.
O'Rourke concluded: Regardless of the outcome of this process we will still continue to gather
marine resources in a traditional way. Tribal rights are nonnegotiable.”
The Yurok Tribe, the largest tribe in California, has 5,500 members. The Tribe’s ancestral territory
runs eighty-three miles along the California coastline from the Little River to Damnation Creek. To
the east the Tribe’s ancestral lands reach above the Klamath River’s confluence with the Trinity
River. For more information about the Yurok Tribe, please visit www.yuroktribe.org.