We’ve got great news for Wild Trout from the Underground’s Secret California State Political Contact (we call him “Deep Trout):

The Assembly just passed SB 384 (Senator Dave Cogdill, R-Modesto), which alters the Trout and Steelhead Conservation and Management Planning Act of 1979. The declares that it is the policy of the state to establish and maintain wild trout stocks in suitable waters of the state and establish angling regulations designed to maintain the wild trout fishery in those waters by natural reproduction.

In non-legalese, this bill signals a policy shift from state endorsement of put-and-take fisheries, to placing an emphasis on developing and sustaining wild trout rivers. It also indicates that if hatchery fish are propagated, they could likely be derived from local wild/native fish.

Yoo-hoo! Anyone want odds as to whether Dave Cogdill (R-Modesto) is a fly fishermen? Ding! Ding! Turns out he is, and this bill is apparently his baby.

It makes it state policy to focus on wild trout stocks over hatchery fish where natural reproduction takes place. Yes, my friends, the sun is shining all over Tommy Land.

What’s this really mean?

In Brief:

1. Declares the policy of the state to discourage artificial planting of hatchery-raised fish species in wild trout waters.

2. Requires Department of Fish and Game (DFG) to determine for each stream or lake whether it should be managed as a wild trout fishery or should involve planting of native trout.

3. Requires DFG to complete and implement management plans for new waters within three years, and revise existing management plans every five years.

4. Renames ?Catch and Release Waters? as ?Wild Trout Waters.?

5. Requires that if the Fish and Game Commission/DFG remove any Wild Trout waters, they be replaced in the program with at least an equal number of stream miles/lakes elsewhere.

It hardly cures all the ills facing California’s wild trout, but it does force Fish & Game to take a hard look at where it plants trout, and the effect of doing so on wild trout populations.

Hatchery trout have their place in our sport, but wantonly stocking them in streams and rivers capable of supporting wild trout populations is damned expensive, and bad for the existing wild trout populations.

Let’s spend some of that money putting hatchery fish where they’ll help recruit new fishers instead of in sustainable streams.

Thanks to Deep Trout for this one, and more as it happens.

[tags]fly fishing, fishing, wild trout, hatchery trout, hatcheries, sb 384, cogdill[/tags]