Guest guest Posted January 13, 2001 Report Share Posted January 13, 2001 This list is strictly for swimming, swigging, and researching environmental assessments. Agency to evaluate impact of Makah whaling January 13, 2001 by Peggy Andersen The Associated Press SEATTLE -- The federal government issued a draft environmental assessment yesterday for the Makah Indians' gray-whale hunt, renewing controversy over the tribe's attempt to revive a centuries-old tradition. The evaluation - the second one the National Marine Fisheries Service has prepared for the hunt - was ordered by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. A three-judge panel ruled last summer the agency had violated the National Environmental Policy Act by approving a hunt-management plan before completing its study of the hunt's impact. The draft of this second study concludes that the Pacific gray-whale population, estimated at 26,600, is " more than likely larger than before commercial exploitation in the 1840s, and may be at the carrying capacity of the ecosystem, " said fisheries-service spokesman Brian Gorman in Seattle. The assessment also outlines four whale-hunt alternatives - including no whaling at all. The agency suspended the hunts last summer after the appeals-court ruling. There were two unsuccessful family hunts last spring, Tribal Chairman Greig Arnold said. So far, just one whale has been killed - in May 1999 - after furious protests by anti-whaling activists at the tribe's remote reservation in Neah Bay, Clallam County. The environmental assessment " just tries to look at everything, even if it's not politically, financially or socially possible, " Gorman said. It " looks at all reasonable alternatives and then assesses their environmental impact. " Public comment will be taken Feb. 1 in Seattle as part of the agency evaluation. Agency officials hope to complete the final document by March, Gorman said. " We expect a lot of people, none of whom will be remotely shy about telling us what they think, " Gorman said. He's correct, a Sea Shepherd Conservation Society spokesman said. " We will certainly hold their feet to the fire (to ensure) ... an unbiased environmental assessment, " Andrew Christie said. The tribe is happy that the draft is ready, tribal attorney Jon Arum said. " We're hoping that we can get through the public comment period and ... get a new cooperative agreement and get back on track, " Arum said. The draft outlines four hunt scenarios: -Allow whaling to proceed as before, with a maximum annual quota of five whales and with hunts allowed only during the whales' migrations between summer feeding grounds in Alaska and winter breeding grounds in Mexico. -Same as the first, but with some hunting allowed outside the migration periods and inside the Strait of Juan de Fuca. This option would allow hunting of so-called " resident whales. " -No restrictions on when and where the tribe could hunt, but a five-a-year quantity limit. -No whaling quota for the Makah. None of these options is a " preferred alternative, " a NMFS news release said. The tribe would clearly prefer the third alternative, Arum said. Activists prefer the fourth, Christie said. The Makah hunted whales for generations until the 1920s, when commercial whaling had decimated the whale population. The tribe - the only U.S. tribe whose treaty specifically allows whaling - moved to resume the hunts in 1994, after gray whales were removed from the Endangered Species List. With federal government backing, the tribe received a five-whale annual quota from the International Whaling Commission in 1997. ***** OPTIONS: Sign up at TOPICA to get a DIGEST or Web-only version. http://www.topica.com You have permission to view the entire list of rs on this list. __________ T O P I C A -- Learn More. Surf Less. Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Topics You Choose. http://www.topica.com/partner/tag01 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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