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keep stripers alive in the delta! please read!

6K views 6 replies 4 participants last post by  Striperjim 
#1 ·
i dont know if this is against the rules, but its very important!

if you have 10 minutes, please check out this video and sign the petition! http://savedeltafish.wordpress.com/ it will help save the stripers from sf all the way up to the sacramento river, feather river ect... please sign the petition!

The bill will delist them as a game fish will allow them to be commerically harvested and be de-listed as a game fish! thanks for your time!
:thu:
 
#6 ·
Jim hello.gif...thanks to all that supported us with AB1253 Bill that would have iradicated all the stripers left...Now that it's over we are assisting with the Mass Bill H796 To make the stripers a gamefish status..I can't believe they started commercial fishing after the 1980 s debackle...We ,the west coasters will always be at your side , especially with this issue..We're making a trip to Cape Cod next June , & hope it will be commercial free soon .... We are expecting some good news tommorow on TV..as they're doing a expose on the Agri growers reselling excess water to smaller farms at a much inflated price..:lff3:.This is what wewere saying all along...Finally sunk in I guess...This will be a strong issue against the water mongers..Hopefully this is the start of their wall of lies crumbling around them...Thanks , again Your west coast friend, Jim :icon_stirthepot::icon_stirthepot::icon_stirthepot:
 
#7 ·
The deadline for comments for the BDCP is today May 14th. The comments can be sent via email at BDCPcomments@water.ca.gov.

Here is a sample letter that can be cut and pasted into an email comment. All anglers need to weigh in on this issue - Dave
California Striped Bass Association

Reword it to reflect one of 11000 members of stripers247.com if you like

Ms. Delores Brown
Chief, Environmental Review
Department of Water Resources
P.O. Box 942836
Sacramento, CA 94236

May 14, 2009

As a fisherman and member of the California Striped Bass Association, I am requesting the Department of Water Resources to consider and provide an adequate answer to the following fundamental questions regarding the Bay/Delta Conservation Plan's stated preferred alternative of a "dual conveyance" system, aka the Peripheral Canal.

How much water does the estuary require to maintain ecosystem integrity?
How much surplus water is available for export?
What are the economic and environmental consequences of various reduced export scenarios?

Without answers to these fundamental questions, the Department of Water Resources is unable to assess the ability to export water out of the Delta for agricultural and municipal uses in other regions of the state. It is clear that our Delta is at crisis with several of its 750 species of plants, animals and fish in endangered or threatened status. Of particular note is the number of fish species threatened or endangered within the past several years. Salmon and steelhead populations are down 90% from historic levels. Resident open-water species (Delta and longfin smelt, threadfin and American shad, striped bass, splittail and sturgeon) are at or near historical lows. Much of their native food supply - phytoplankton and zooplankton - has been reduced by 90-99%. The mass and diversity of bottom dwelling organisms has plummeted. Hundreds of non-native invasive species have become established, further destabilizing the estuary. In addition, the Delta is severely polluted by numerous pollutants. 
 
The first and foremost factor is the massive quantity of water exported south by the most powerful pumping network in the world: pumps that can reverse the tide and cause the San Joaquin River to flow upstream; pumps that can suck a volume of water including fish and their food supply equal to the capacity of the south Delta every four days. In some years, these pumps export almost three-fourths of the water that would have flowed to the sea. 
Despite the obvious affect on the ecosystem of the Delta, pumping water south has increased exponentially since the 1950's with particular increases since the year 2000.

It is our belief that the Bay Delta Conservation Plan's stated co-equal goals of water delivery and improved habitat for the Delta is unattainable. This plan is essentially a water delivery plan sold to the general public as a conservation plan.

This plan does not pass the environmental test or the economic test. A recent study by of the University of the Pacific estimates that the economic consequences to California from ending exports are far less than from continuing upon the same path with exports.

As stated by Jerry Johns, Deputy Director of the Department of Water Resources, at the March 2009 Stockton Scoping meeting when directly questioned, " The chance of an alternative system to the dual conveyance is less than 5%" Proposals such as the BDCP must consider viable alternatives or else it is not a proposal, simply a pre-conceived plan looking for a rubber stamp.
We acknowledge that our Delta, one of the world's greatest resources, is in a critical state. To do nothing is not an option, but the "dual conveyance" plan offered as a solution to our water problems, is not a viable solution. The Department of Water Resources is highly encouraged to develop and present viable alternatives that answer the three questions previously listed:
How much water does the estuary require to maintain ecosystem integrity?
How much surplus water is available for export?
What are the economic and environmental consequences of various reduced export scenarios?

Without answers to these questions, there is no plan.

Respectfully submitted,
 
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