
After listening to several dozen speakers from the California Striped Bass Association, NCGASA Delta Anglers Coalition and other organizations, the California Fish and Game Commission at its meeting in Sacramento on August 7 directed staff to continue working with CDFW and stakeholders to revise a draft Delta fisheries management policy, including potential revisions to the existing striped bass policy.
The policy will be again discussed at the Commission meeting on December 11, 2019, starting at 8:30 a.m at the Natural Resources Building Auditorium, First Floor, 1416 Ninth Street, Sacramento CA 95812.
President Sklar and Commissioners Russell Burns, Samantha Murray and Peter Silva were present. Commission Vice President Jacque Hostler-Carmesin was absent.
Before the unanimous Commission vote, President Sklar said, “I understand the role of stripers in the ecosystem… I move to postpone this issue until the December 2019 meeting.”
Fishermen and scientists were encouraged that the Commission didn’t adopt the controversial change in the striped bass policy, spurred by the Coalition for a Sustainable Delta, an Astroturf group funded and created by Stewart and Lynda Resnick, the billionaire agribusiness tycoons that are pushing for increased water exports from the Delta for San Joaquin Valley agribusiness.
Fish advocates say that the Coalition is concentrating on “predation” to divert attention from the main culprit in the dramatic decline of winter Chinook salmon, Delta smelt, longfin and other fish species — the massive export of northern California water south of the Delta.
“As far as today goes, I'm glad they're willing to bring the discussion back to Sacramento,” said David J. Ostrach Ph.D., Chief Scientist Ostrach Consulting, a leading scientific expert on striped bass and Delta fish species. “That is unlike the kangaroo rat decision today where they were dealing with a Southern California issue up here.”
However, he said he was concerned about the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) preparing the bibliography. “I'm hoping that they will be all-inclusive and not bias it,” said O.