In the news (F.Y.I.)

M
moon
Bill would limit suction dredge mining on waterways


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Published: 12:00 a.m., March 4

Nearly a quarter century has passed since Oregon last updated the State Scenic Waterways Program, which increases protection for the state’s most treasured rivers and limits destructive activities such as suction-dredge mining.

The program, overwhelmingly approved by state voters in 1970, is long overdue for an update — especially in light of a recent surge in suction dredge mining on the state’s waterways, including the Rogue, Chetco and Illinois rivers.

State Sen. Alan Bates, D-Ashland, has introduced a bill that would expand the inventory of rivers in the scenic system to 30 from the current 19. It’s a modest yet strategically important proposal that would provide protection for one-half of 1 percent of the state’s rivers and streams, up from a current one-third of 1 percent. That’s hardly a conservation overreach, especially given the threat posed by suction-dredge mining.

Protected by a ludicrously outdated and environmentally indifferent 1872 federal mining law, miners have descended on some of Oregon’s wildest rivers with motorized suction dredges to search for gold and other minerals. The dredges suck up rocks and gravel from stream bottoms and dump them in a floating sluice. The gold sinks and is trapped, while the remainder is returned to the river or its banks.

Suction-dredge miners insist they’re merely rearranging the river bottom and are improving fish habitat. The opposite is true. Dredging fills spaces that oxygenate the water and provide habitat for insects that fish eat. Mining clouds normally clear rivers with fine sediment and unearths mercury deposits buried on the river bottom.

Several years ago the California Legislature wisely imposed a moratorium on suction dredging to give state fish and wildlife officials time to study the effects of mining on fish habitat and to devise new regulations.

Oregon lawmakers should have done the same to protect the state’s rivers and fish stocks. They failed to do so despite the urging of lawmakers such as then-state Sen. Jason Atkinson, a Central Point Republican and avid outdoorsman who minced no words in describing the damage caused by suction dredge prospectors: “They ruin — destroy — spawning habitat,” he said.

With California’s rivers off-limits to suction dredging until 2016, miners have turned to the rivers of Southwest Oregon, which feature some of the finest runs of salmon and steelhead in the lower 48 states. Miners have staked out claims along the Chetco, South Kalmiopsis, Illinois and Rogue rivers. A few have ventured as far north as the Metolius and John Day, as well as Quartz Creek, a tributary of the McKenzie River.

Bates’ bill would protect the Chetco, Rogue, Illinois and other Southern Oregon rivers that have been at the center of the dredge mining debate. It would also protect other waterways, including the Metolius, John Day, Grand Ronde, Sandy, Middle Fork Willamette and Yachats rivers, as well a portion of the upper McKenzie that is not already listed as an Oregon Scenic Waterway.

If these and other rivers proposed by Bates are added to the scenic waterways system, protection would extend to land a quarter mile on each side. Mining, logging, road building, construction of new buildings and other activities in those corridors would be subject to review by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department (existing development would not be affected and property owners would retain the right to use land outside the corridor).

Suction dredge mining has no place in Oregon waterways, and Bates’ bill is on target. The Legislature should give it careful consideration, reviewing the rivers proposed for protection and considering additions, and then take the necessary action to protect the state’s rivers.



Moon
 
E
eggs
Sounds like a good piece of legislation. I think I will email my rep to let him know!
 
B
bigsteel
thanks for the heads up Moon
 
J
Jay Herb
eggs said:
Sounds like a good piece of legislation. I think I will email my rep to let him know!

X2
I know Sen. Alan Bates, D-Ashland personally and he loves to fish when he gets time witch is not very much as he is a Dr. too, I will also E-mail other Rep. and let them know that this need to be done.
 
Irishrover
Irishrover
The bill is SB 401 it is now in the Natural Resource committee. It has a very good chance of passing both the senate and the house. There is no doubt that the Gov will sign it into law if passed out of the legislature. Here is a link to the bill.

I think the bill has a flaw in that it does not mention anything about the Hood River. My eyes are not what they used to be so if anyone can spot the hood River in the bill let me know. If not guess its time to contact the folks down there as ask them to put one more river on thier list.




http://www.leg.state.or.us/13reg/measures/sb0400.dir/sb0401.intro.html
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

Raincatcher
Replies
1
Views
989
troutdude
troutdude
troutdude
Replies
2
Views
897
pcstock
P
rogerdodger
Replies
13
Views
3K
Modest_Man
M
troutdude
Replies
16
Views
3K
18406ej
18406ej
troutdude
Replies
11
Views
2K
rippin fish lips
R
Top Bottom