ICC Alaska invites Inuit to share their thoughts and feedback on the Circumpolar Inuit Protocols on Equitable and Ethical Engagement.
Job Opening: Seasonal Fish Technician
DOI/USDA Announce Consultation on Subsistence in January 2022
Alaska Congressional Delegation Salmon Roundtable
From KYUK: On Dec. 8 and 9, U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan and Rep. Don Young held a Zoom meeting between salmon researchers, tribes, and managers. Their goal was to unite these groups’ efforts to determine the cause of the ongoing Chinook declines and the sudden chum crash in Western Alaska. After two days of meetings, the groups are still at odds over what’s causing the declines, and what the best way to move forward is.
2021 Kuskokwim River Subsistence Harvest and Effort Estimates
In 2021, KRITFC and Orutsararmiut Native Council Fisheries, in collaboration with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and independent contractors, collected and processed data to produce in-season subsistence salmon harvest and effort estimates from a lower river portion of the mainstem Kuskokwim River.
NMFS Alaska Native Tribal Engagement Sessions on Bycatch
The National Marine Fisheries Service with NOAA Alaska Region is hosting two engagement sessions with Alaska Native Tribal governments, organizations, and corporations regarding halibut (November 29) and salmon bycatch (January 11) in Alaska marine fisheries. These engagement sessions are NMFS’s response to dozens of public testimonies about bycatch during the North Pacific Fishery Management Council meeting in October 2021. Any Alaska Native entity is invited to call in.
Preliminary 2021 Salmon Harvests, Escapements, & Run Reconstructions
KRITFC Testifies at Natural Resources Subcommittee Hearing on Magnuson Stevens Act Reauthorization
On Tuesday, November 16, KRITFC Executive Director Mary Sattler Peltola testified before the U.S. House Subcommittee on Waters, Oceans, and Wildlife about proposed reauthorizations to the Magnuson Stevens Act (MSA). In her witness statement, Mary emphasized the need to address climate change, add Tribal seats to the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, and further minimize bycatch in the reauthorized MSA.
As tribal leaders, we urge collective action for Western Alaska salmon now
Our fish racks, smokehouses and fish camps remain empty. The trawl fleet continues catching and wasting salmon. The North Pacific Fishery Management Council may not have acted, but our work to restore abundant salmon populations and continue practicing our ways of life is far from over. The well-being of our descendants rests on our collective action now.
Testify at the NPFMC Meeting
The North Pacific Fishery Management Council, along with its Advisory Panel (AP) and Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC), are currently holding their October meetings to discuss federal fishery management in Alaska. We urge every subsistence fisherman and woman on our river to provide a testify to them.