Billy Frank, Jr. |
Aloha Boldt Decision Friday!
On February 12, 1974, Federal Judge George Boldt issues an historic ruling reaffirming the rights of Washington's
Indian tribes to fish in accustomed places. The "Boldt Decision"
allocates 50 percent of the annual catch to treaty tribes, which
enrages other fishermen. At the same time Judge Boldt denies
landless tribes -- among them the Samish, Snoqualmie,
Steilacoom, and Duwamish -- federal recognition and treaty
rights. Western Washington tribes had been assured the right to
fish at "usual and accustomed grounds and stations" by Federal
treaties signed in 1854 and 1855, but during the next 50 years
Euro-American immigrants -- armed with larger boats, modern
technology, and the regulatory muscle of the state -- gradually
displaced them. The campaign to reassert Native American fishing
rights began in 1964 with "fish-ins" on the Puyallup River led
by Robert Satiacum (1929-1991) and Billy Frank Jr. (1931-2014),
who defied Washington state attempts to regulate their fishing.
(History Link)
Small
fish, big barriers: A county confronts climate change
Island County doesn’t need a canary in the coal mine to warn of
advancing climate change. It already has sea lance and surf
smelt.
Whale
watch companies say licensing system should be voluntary
because of COVID-19
New licensing requirements for whale watch boats working in
Washington waters take effect March 1... But this week, state
lawmakers began considering changes that would weaken those
rules.
B.C.’s
‘dirty secret’: more than 100 contaminated mine sites threaten
water, wildlife and communities
New research finds lax provincial regulations allow companies to
discharge toxic wastewater with metal concentrations hundreds of
times higher than what’s considered safe for aquatic life.
DNA
analysis being used to identify sources of bacterial pollution
in area watersheds
The continued search for where the bacterial pollution found in
the Samish and Padilla Bay watersheds comes from has turned to
DNA analysis for help.
GOP
congressman pitches $34 billion plan to breach Lower Snake
River dams in new vision for Northwest
For nearly three decades, the region has been stuck in unending
litigation and spiraling costs as salmon in the Columbia and
Snake rivers decline toward extinction. But in a sweeping $34
billion proposal from an unlikely source, at an auspicious
moment, comes a chance for a fresh start.
Putting
the Pebble Mine to Rest
Weary Alaska communities are seeking permanent protections for
the Bristol Bay watershed.
Meet
the frackers: B.C.’s top 10 fracking companies, their
subsidies, profits and taxes, revealed
They industrialize farmland. They pump out greenhouse gas
emissions. They permanently contaminate water. They benefit from
millions in taxpayer-funded subsidies and pay a lot less in
royalties than they used to. So who are B.C.’s biggest frackers?
B.C.’s
old-growth forest nearly eliminated, new province-wide mapping
reveals
As old-growth logging continues unabated in most unprotected
areas of B.C., one conservation organization decided to spend a
year creating a detailed map that shows the province’s original
forests have all but disappeared under pressure from
industrialization.
Vancouver
Island First Nations leaders want freighter anchorages lifted
in the Salish Sea
A number of south Island First Nations have made a joint request
aimed at ending the current practice of freighter anchorages in
the southern Salish Sea.
Shell
pays $191,000 fine for 2015 refinery incident
Shell Oil Products U.S. has paid a $191,000 fine for the release
of pollutants from its Shell Puget Sound Refinery in Skagit
County nearly six years ago.
Rayonier
site cleanup plan upgraded
The Rayonier pulp mill property, zoned for multiple uses, will be
cleaned of pollutants to an unrestricted-use standard with
contaminants capped but remaining on the property, according to the
Department of Ecology. However, cleanup of the 75-acre parcel east
of downtown, owned by Rayonier Advanced Materials, could take an
estimated seven to 10 years.
Seattle
Public Schools commits to weaning off fossil fuels over next 20
years
Nearly two years after scores of its students missed class to demand
action on climate change, Washington state’s largest school district
now has a 2040 deadline to run on 100% clean and renewable energy.
These news clips are a selection of weekday clips collected in
Salish Sea News and
Weather which is compiled as a community service by Mike
Sato. To subscribe, send your name and email to msato (@)
salishseacom.com. Your email information is never shared and you
can unsubscribe at any time.
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