Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon Tribal fishery There is a tribal fishery through 6 p.m. this Thurs- day, August 27; and second fishery starting at 6 a.m. on Monday, August 31 through 6 p.m., Thursday, September 3. Gear includes set and drift gillnets with 8-inch minimum mesh size restriction. Allowable sales: Salmon (any species), steelhead, shad, yellow perch, bass, walleye, catfish and carp may be sold or re- tained for subsistence. Fish landed during the open periods are allowed to be sold after the period concludes. Sturgeon may not be sold. Sturgeon from 38 to 54 inches fork length in the Bonneville pool, and sturgeon from 43 to 54 inches fork length in The Dalles and John Day pools may be kept for subsistence purposes. Closed areas: River mouth and dam are closed areas applicable to gillnets. The Standard Spring Creek Hatchery Sanctuary is in effect. Covid guidelines: Please review the Safe Fishers guidelines to help pre- vent the spread of Covid-19, and protect the vulner- able members of the tribal community. See: Critfc.org/safe-fishers-safe-fishers/ There will be a Compact hearing at 10 a.m. on September 3 to consider additional fishing. The zone 6 platform and hook and line fishery regulations re- main unchanged. If you have any fishery enforcement problems or need assistance or information, day or night, contact the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fisheries Enforce- ment Office, 541-386-6363; or toll free 800-487- FISH (3474). Show pride in your tribes’ treaty rights by carry- ing your tribal ID. Please consult your tribal Fish- eries Department for additional details or tribal regulations. August 26, 2020 Page 7 More flexible sea lion removal policy Sea lions can consume up to 44 percent of the Colum- bia River’s spring Chinook salmon run, and 25 percent of the Willamette winter steelhead run each year. Federal officials last week approved the killing of hundreds of sea lions on and near the Columbia River to help protect endangered salmon. This marks the biggest expansion of this program, as supported by the Confed- erated Tribes. Steller sea lions for the first time join California sea lions as targets of ‘lethal con- trol.’ Another new aspect of the program: Individual sea lions will not need to be documented as salmon predators before they can be killed. Instead, the animal just needs to be in the nearly 200-mile stretch of the Columbia and its tributaries covered under the program. These are policies of the National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration policy. Courtesy ODFW Problem sea lion at the Columbia Increasing problem The targeted area runs up the Columbia River from the Interstate 205 bridge to the McNary Dam, as well as any tributaries. The permit also includes any area with spawning habi- tats of threatened or endan- gered salmon. The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs—joined by the Umatilla and Yakama nations, plus the states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho—last year filed the permit application. The latest changes to the policy allow for more flex- A salmon physiologist in science policy Zach Penney is half Nez Perce and half Polish-Swed- ish. He has a Ph.D. in fish- eries from the University of Idaho. He now works as the Fishery Science Depart- ment manager for the Co- lumbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. In spite of going to school in a predominantly white town, his father—also Nez Perce—made sure Penney always had a strong connection with his tribe. His family used to go fishing, and he could tell from an early age that salmon fishing was cultur- ally very significant. “You could just kind of sense it by the way that my family treated steelhead and salmon,” Penney said. “There was a totally dif- ferent, I would say ceremo- nial, feeling about those fish.” Dr. Zach Penney It was during those fish- ing trips that Penney realized he wanted to work in fish- eries. “It’s just in our DNA to be fishermen,” he re- flected. He wanted to dedi- cate his life to do something that he enjoyed and could make an impact on the Nimiipuu people. His job bridges together the interests of the Native American tribes the com- mission ser ves—War m Springs, Yakama, Umatilla and Nez Perce—and the other economic interests for preserving the fish. “The science I do is for both the fish and the treaty tribes. The fish are central to who the tribes are, so the science is rooted in our very own identity. We are part of the same ecosystem and co- evolved together. “A good chunk of what I do is related to policy and the historical context about why some of the things are the way they are,” Penney said about his work. “The states have made decisions over the last 150 years that have not neces- sarily chosen a good future for salmon. They’ve made choices based on capitalis- tic needs. But treaty rights are not just about catching fish, it’s about the right that there’s actually fish to catch.” He thinks that one of the biggest obstacles for Native Americans to get into sci- ence careers is a misperception—that those who leave tribal land will never come back. “Of course you do come back,” he said. “Get- ting a degree is going to change you. It makes you a much more effective war- rior to learn this Western science perspective, but it doesn’t change your memo- ries. I mean, you’re still who you are, you can always come home.” Regarding his own expe- rience, Penney sees it as if he unintentionally followed the path of the salmon. He went to the Pacific follow- ing them, and then came back home to work for their preservation. This article is courtesy of the Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. Around Indian Country Alaska communities already claim fishery disasters Unless you fished for salmon this summer at Bristol Bay, it’s been slim pickings for fishermen in other Alaska regions. Salmon returns have been so poor that commu- nities already are claiming fishery disasters. This month Cordova’s City Council unanimously passed a resolution asking the state to declare disasters for both the 2018 Copper River sockeye and chinook salmon runs and the 2020 sockeye, chum and chinook runs at the Copper River and Prince William Sound. The resolution also urges the state and federal govern- ments to declare a “condition of economic disaster in Cordova as a result.” The town of 2,500 is now the first of what will likely be at least one or two others to ask for a fisheries and eco- nomic disaster declaration in 2020. “It’s looking like one of the worst years in Chignik history,” said Ross Renick, area manager for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Salmon catches through- out Cook Inlet are bleak again this year with a total take barely topping 2.7 mil- lion, mostly pinks. Only 748,000 sockeyes have come out of the Inlet so far this season. Southeast Alaska com- munities also are being hit hard by weak returns; by Aug. 8 the total catch for the region had yet to reach six million salmon. For pinks, the catch was nearing 4 mil- lion out of an already low forecast of 12 million fish, one-third of the 10-year average of 35 million humpies. Also low were pink prices: A nickel a pound compares to a regionwide average of 33 cents in 2019. COCC joins initiative for teachiong drone technology Central Oregon Commu- nity College’s unmanned aerial systems program is now part of a new federal initiative designed to train students seeking a career in drone technology. COCC recently signed an agreement with the Federal Aviation Administration to provide students the most up-to-date curriculum and practices. The Unmanned Aircraft Systems Collegiate Training Initiative is the FAA’s recently unveiled program that part- ners with higher education institutions to best prepare students seeking careers in the rapidly developing field of drones, while ensuring that the training meets the require- ments of the National Air- space System. “Our participation in this national unmanned aircraft education program will help support the continuing effort to offer our students training that is most relevant to the industr y,” said Karl Baldessari, director of COCC’s aviation program. “For our students, this means achieving the skills and stan- dards that will allow them to stand out in the workforce.” For more information, contact COCC’s Director of Communications Jenn Kovitz at 206-227-9991 or jkovitz@cocc.edu. As part of the agree- ment, COCC will meet all program standards, and maintain a current knowledge of UAS laws and regulations. ibility in taking the sea lions. Scientists have been studying this problem for two decades now. Accord- ing to the 2020 policy: Eligible entities or permit applicants may not remove more than 540 California sea lions, and no more than 176 Steller sea lions during this five-year period. Combining all sea lion permit removals, it may not exceed 10 percent of the potential biological removal or population of the species. Columbia River Inter- Tribal Fish Commission’s Se- nior Fisheries Scientist Doug Hatch said many different methods have been used in the past to remove sea li- ons in the area. These include capturing the mammals and transport- ing them to other locations or hazing them. However, the marine mammals often come back within a matter of days. In recent years more Steller sea lions have been showing up and staying for longer periods of time. Meanwhile, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has applied for a permit to kill sea lions at Willamette Falls to protect a threatened run of winter steelhead. The Oregon De- partment of Fish and Wild- life has tried to prevent sea lions from eating winter steelhead at Willamette Falls by capturing them and driv- ing them to the Oregon Coast. The strategy has not been successful. The permit for removal took effect earlier this month, nad runs through the summer of 2025.