
The Karuk Tribe and four environmental groups today expanded their complaint challenging the Westside Post Fire logging plan to include the United States Forest Service and Klamath National Forest over allegations that they violated federal law protecting imperiled salmon and their watersheds.
The groups filing the complaint include the Environmental Protection Information Center, Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, Center for Biological Diversity, and Klamath Riverkeeper.
The lawsuit alleges the Klamath National Forest Plan, as approved by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries, illegally increases the risk of extinction for threatened populations of coho salmon.
The plaintiffs allege the National Marine Fisheries Service of NOAA Fisheries violated the Endangered Species Act when it issued a Biological Opinion and Incidental Take Statement for the Westside Fire Recovery Project on Forest Service lands in the Klamath River watershed.
NOAA Fisheries is an agency that the late Zeke Grader, the longtime Executive Director of the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, nicknamed "No Fisheries" for its many failures to protect salmon and other fish over the years.
Coho salmon, now listed under the state and federal Endangered Species Acts, were historically one of the most abundant fish species on the Klamath, Trinity and other California rivers. The coho population has declined dramatically after decades of bad forestry practices, water diversions and habitat degradation.
The Klamath National Forest proposal will increase fire danger, degrade water quality, and harm at-risk salmon populations, according to a statement from the Tribe and their allies. An alternative to the Project developed by the Karuk Tribe would result in about 33% of the logging that the Forest Service proposed, but would be far more protective of fisheries, water quality, and communities at risk of wildfire.
The Westside proposal short changes our community by denying us an opportunity to restore the forest, manage wildfire, and put locals back to work, said Karuk Chairman Russell Buster Attebery. There is no way that the Forest Service plan will pass a legal challenge. The Karuk