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- Title
Democratizing Treaty Fishing Rights: Denying Fossil-Fuel Exports in the Pacific Northwest.
- Authors
Blumm, Michael C.; Litwak, Jeffrey B.
- Abstract
Indian treaty fishing rights scored an important judicial victory recently when an equally divided U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the Ninth Circuit's decision in the so-called "culverts case," which decided that the Stevens Treaties of the 1850s give the tribes a right to protect salmon migration obstructed by barrier road culverts. The implications of that decision on other habitat-damaging activities have yet to be ascertained, but even prior to the resolution of the culverts case there were significant indications that federal, state, and local administrative agencies were acting to protect treaty fishing rights from the adverse effects of large fossil-fuel export projects proposed throughout the Pacific Northwest. After briefly explaining the culverts decision, this Article examines five recent examples of agencies denying permits for fossil-fuel developments at least in part on treaty rights grounds. We draw some lessons from these examples concerning the importance of tribal participation in administrative processes and explore some knotty evidentiary issues that tribal efforts to protect their historic fishing sites raise. We conclude that safeguarding their treaty rights in the twenty-first century will require tribes to be as vigilant about the administrative process as they have been about seeking judicial protection.
- Subjects
UNITED States; NATIVE American hunting &; fishing rights; NATIVE American treaties; NATIVE Americans -- Fishing -- Law &; legislation; FISHERY laws; UNITED States. Supreme Court; UNITED States. Court of Appeals (9th Circuit); TREATY interpretation &; construction
- Publication
Colorado Natural Resources, Energy & Environmental Law Review, 2019, Vol 30, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2327-0683
- Publication type
Article