07-27-2010, 01:32 PM | #1 |
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F.U. M.L.P.A.
On July 21st, 2010, a massive rally was held in Downtown Fort Bragg, California to show public support for the fishing communities of the north coast along with the tribes that are being affected by MLPA regulations (Marine Life Protection Act). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSjEU...&feature=email •
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07-27-2010, 02:01 PM | #2 |
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http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/201...3/18654602.php
More than 50 tribal nations peacefully took control of the Marine Life Protection Act’s Blue Ribbon Task Force meeting in California on July 21. Among those gathered were members of the Yurok, Tolowa, Cahto, Pomo, Karuk, Hoopa Valley, Maidu, Hopi, Navajo, and other tribes. Their message to the task force: the state will no longer impose its will on indigenous people. The group of more than 300 met on Main Street in Fort Bragg, CA, and marched a half-mile to the C.V. Star Community Center, chanting, "MLPA, taking tribal rights away!" and, “No Way MLPA!” “This is about more than a fouled-up process that attempts to prohibit tribes from doing something they have done sustainably for thousands of years,” said Frankie Joe Myers, a Yurok tribal citizen and organizer for the Coastal Justice Coalition. “It is about respect, acknowledgment and recognition of indigenous peoples’ rights. Whether it is their intention or not, what the Marine Life Protection Act does to tribes is it systematically decimates our ability to be who we are. That is the definition of cultural genocide.” The Marine Life Protection Act Initiative is a publicly and privately funded partnership between the State of California and a few deep-pocketed foundations — chiefly the Resources Legacy Fund — to implement the Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA), which was signed into law in 1999. The MLPA calls for the creation of marine protected areas along the California coastline. The Blue Ribbon Task Force is charged with making recommendations to the California Fish and Game Commission for placement of the protected areas. The task force has stated that it will view traditional tribal coastal gathers on the coast the same way it does recreational fishing. Indigenous people have gathered resources from the coast for thousands of years, making this a valuable tradition to their communities. Coastal indigenous people collect mussels, seaweed and other ocean resources for sustenance and ceremonial regalia. Citizens from tribal nations as distant as the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma attended the meeting to stand in solidarity with northern California tribes. Dania Rose Colegrove, a Hoopa tribal citizen, states, “The Blue Ribbon Task Force had given us no indication that they were listening to North Coast Tribes’ call to respect our sovereignty. We felt that we needed show them a small symbol of what we are willing to do to pass on our culture to future generations. “ This is the second time indigenous Californians have disrupted a Marine Life Protection Act Initiative meeting. On June 29, a smaller group interrupted the MLPAI’s Science Advisory Team, which was meeting in Eureka. Members of the Coastal Justice Coalition pointed out that there is no scientific data that says tribal gathering has any negative impact on the coastal ecosystem and the act does nothing to stop pollution and off-shore drilling — the real threats to the health of the ocean and coast. The Coastal Justice Coalition is a group of concerned tribal citizens and community members who came together to defend indigenous peoples’ right to gather on the coast. http://www.youtube.com/user/NoyoConf.../0/inpAE-rOkXc •
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Last edited by wade; 07-27-2010 at 11:33 PM. Reason: add link |
07-28-2010, 12:59 AM | #3 |
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bullsh*t
what exactly is the logic of mlpa....what is their drive? are they benefitting in this in any way? i just hate it when people see in black and white...amazing how kayakers arent gonna be able to fish waters that they have been fishing in for decades...and oil rigs get set up in a matter of days without any penalty....anybody hear of the gulf oil spill? where was "mlpa" on that one? i cant necessarily speak for myself solely...but i've done a fair share of different fishing and kayakers seem to be the most respectful to the environment....where is our pat on the back? money is driving this somewhere...i just cant figure it out....
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