In the News

November 22, 2019

MONTI: Chair of House committee reaches out to fishermen

by Dave Monti

A panel of scientists and fishing industry leaders met with Rep. Jared Huffman (D-CA) on Nov. 15 at his third listening session on the Magnusson-Stevens Act, the nation's federal fishing law. Huffman, who is chair of the Water, Oceans, and Wildlife Subcommittee of the House Natural Resources Committee, held the session at the National Aquarium Animal Care and Rescue Center in Baltimore. The panel of fisheries experts and stakeholders had a detailed, technical discussion of current …  Continue Reading


November 21, 2019

Bristol Bay advocates push for new Pebble Mine assessment

by Kirk Moore

Advocates for the Bristol Bay said they need to keep pressure on federal agencies for an environmental reassessment of the Pebble Mine proposal - and on ways to keep the world's greatest salmon fishery in the national eye. At the keynote event for the Pacific Marine Expo in Seattle, a packed audience heard updates from longtime participants in the fight to protect the Bristol Bay watershed from a proposed gold and copper mine. In Washington, D.C., Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., chairman of the …  Continue Reading


November 20, 2019

Bill to rename Homestead advances

by Monica Brich

After roughly a decade since it was first discussed, United States Representatives considered changing the name of the Homestead National Monument of America to the Homestead National Historical Park. The bill, officially referred to as H.R. 1472, was discussed by the House of Representatives on Wednesday. Congressman Jared Huffman of California gave a brief history of the monument and the Homestead Act, which was signed by President Lincoln in 1862 and enabled citizens to settle roughly 10 …  Continue Reading


November 19, 2019

Bill would require descending devices or venting tools for Gulf reef fishing

A coalition of recreational fishing and boating groups is praising a bipartisan bill that would require commercial and recreational anglers to possess a descending device or venting tool when going after reef fish in Gulf of Mexico federal waters. The Descend Act, which was introduced by Reps. Garrett Graves, R-La., and Jared Huffman, D-Calif., would help mortality rates in reef fish caught and released in deep Gulf water by using descending devices, according to the American Sportfishing …  Continue Reading


November 18, 2019

Bipartisan Effort Drops a Lifeline to Fish Reeled Up from the Deep

by Keith Worrall

Alexandria, Va. - November 18, 2019 - A coalition of recreational fishing and boating organizations is lauding the introduction of the DESCEND Act by Congressmen Garret Graves (R-La.) and Jared Huffman (D-Calif.). The DESCEND Act of 2019, or the "Direct Enhancement of Snapper Conservation and the Economy through Novel Devices Act of 2019," would require commercial and recreational fishermen to possess a descending device rigged and ready for use or venting tool when fishing for reef fish in …  Continue Reading


November 18, 2019

Committee sets vote on wilderness bills

by Kellie Lunney

The House Natural Resources Committee on Wednesday will vote on eight bills, including legislation that would designate swaths of land in California, Colorado and Washington as wilderness. H.R. 2546, sponsored by Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), would designate 33 areas - spanning 740,000 acres - as wilderness, many of them containing "midelevation ecosystems" that are used for outdoor recreation and provide habitat for several plant and animal species. The DeGette proposal is the second major …  Continue Reading


November 17, 2019

Illegal pot farms on public land create environmental hazard

by Christopher Weber

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two months after two men were arrested at an illicit marijuana farm on public land deep in the Northern California wilderness, authorities are assessing the environmental impact and cleanup costs at the site where trees were clear-cut, waterways were diverted, and the ground was littered with open containers of fertilizer and rodenticide. A group including U.S. Forest Service rangers, local law enforcement, scientists and conservationists hiked into the so-called trespass …  Continue Reading


November 16, 2019

Rep. Huffman Introduces Bill to Help Communities Prepare for Wildfire Threats

WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 -- Rep. Jared Huffman, D-California, issued the following news release: Yesterday, Representative Huffman (D-San Rafael) introduced the Wildfire Defense Act to help local communities defend themselves from the growing danger of wildfires. This bill will empower communities to implement science-based methods for mitigating wildfire damage, and provide funding to design and implement new Community Wildfire Defense Plans with community members, first responders, and relevant …  Continue Reading


November 15, 2019

Huffman leads call for crackdown on illegal fishing

by Rob Hotakainen

Dubbing oceans "the wild west of our planet," Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) yesterday called on NOAA to step up its attack on illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing around the globe. "The remoteness of the open ocean, combined with limited data and monitoring of fishing vessels, and a lack of law enforcement capabilities, create a perfect storm for illegal activity," said Huffman, chairman of the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Oceans and Wildlife. At a hearing before the …  Continue Reading


November 15, 2019

Column: Interior Secretary Bernhardt’s previous job raises questions about a deal for his ex-client

by Michael Hiltzik

The Department of the Interior wants us to know that Interior Secretary David Bernhardt has had nothing to do with a contract that will give one of his former lobbying clients, the giant Westlands Water District, permanent access to lucrative federal irrigation water supplies. Westlands wants us to know the same thing. "Mr. Bernhardt was not involved in any of the discussions" over the contract, Westlands General Manager Tom Birmingham told me. "This has nothing to do with David …  Continue Reading


November 14, 2019

Huffman talks disaster readiness and fisheries

by Chris Calder and Mary Benjamin

Congressman Jared Huffman suggested that the federal government may take a strong hand in helping California address environmental and disaster preparedness, possibly using FEMA and other disaster and national security authorities to get the attention of corporations like PG&E, AT&T and Comcast that are seeming to have a hard time understanding their public responsibilities in times of emergency. Huffman also described revamping fisheries disaster relief to make it more like crop …  Continue Reading


November 14, 2019

Climate Advocates Blast Missed Opportunity in Ex-Im Bank Renewal

by Brian Dabbs

House Democrats are readying to sign off on big-ticket trade legislation that climate hawks say squanders a key opportunity to pare down international greenhouse-gas emissions. And it's not the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement. The lower chamber is set to narrowly pass legislation Friday to reauthorize the beleaguered Export-Import Bank, a federal agency that steps in to finance U.S. goods and services exports when private banks refuse loans and other financing tools. Supporters, including …  Continue Reading


November 14, 2019

Congressman chats Crescent Elk students

by Staff Report

U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman answered Crescent Elk Middle School students' questions on politics, his job and issues facing Del Norte County on Wednesday, then encouraged the students to be active members of our democracy. A massive piece of construction paper reading "Welcome Congressman Huffman" graced the front of Sarah Elston's classroom, where she has been teaching about U.S. government. Before Huffman arrived, she had her students take turns reading aloud the questions they had …  Continue Reading


November 11, 2019

Marin Voice: Huffman’s interest in fisheries act is commendable

by Richard Slusher

A once-in-a-decade opportunity for everyone to weigh in on the management of our fisheries has been put into motion. The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act is the primary federal law that governs all management of marine fisheries in federal waters of the United States. The act governs both commercial and recreational fishing sectors. First enacted by bi-partisan legislation in 1976, it has been reauthorized and amended by Congress in 1996 and 2006. The intent was to …  Continue Reading


November 08, 2019

Interior proposes coveted deal to ex-client of agency head

by Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Interior Department is proposing to award one of the first contracts for federal water in perpetuity to a powerful rural California water district that had long employed Secretary David Bernhardt as a lobbyist. Conservation groups are demanding fuller disclosure of financial terms and an environmental review of the proposed deal for the California's Westlands Water District, the nation's largest agricultural water supplier. The water district serves some of country's …  Continue Reading


November 05, 2019

Trump's Reckless Push to Drill the Arctic is Meeting Fierce Opposition

by Adam Kolton

As the sun shimmers across a tundra covered with wildflowers and lichen, as many as 80,000 or more caribou calves take their first steps on wobbly legs, many across the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. For a brief moment, these 1.5 million acres—habitat for polar bears, wolves, muskoxen, arctic foxes and nearly 200 species of migratory birds—are the center of their nomadic lives. It is the place they will return to when it’s time to have their own young, …  Continue Reading


November 04, 2019

Why cell phones failed in PG&E outages, and how to prevent a repeat

by Melissa Moench

As the lights flickered out and wildfires flared, PG&E's blackouts also cut off thousands of Californians from cell phone service, leaving them unable to get emergency alerts or call 911. It exposed a troubling gap in the state's readiness for mass outages that could, according to PG&E, keep happening for a decade. And it's left regulators scrambling to find a fix - though it will be difficult. Neither California nor the federal government requires cell phone towers to have backup …  Continue Reading


November 04, 2019

Last Chance Grade enters next phase of study

by Staff Report

The California Transportation Commission will visit this region Nov. 6 to tour and discuss the biggest long-term infrastructure project in Del Norte County. The commissioners will receive a guided tour of the Last Chance Grade, then host a meeting at 2 p.m. in the Del Norte County Board of Supervisors chambers in the Flynn Administrative Center, 981 H St. in Crescent City. The Last Chance Grade is a three-mile segment of U.S. Highway 101 just north of Wilson Creek, between Klamath …  Continue Reading


November 03, 2019

My Word: Mr. Foster goes to Washington

by Gregg Foster

I recently went to Washington, D.C., to meet members of Congress and their staff about House Resolution 2250, the Northwest California Wilderness, Recreation, and Working Forests Act. This bill, introduced by North Coast Congressman Jared Huffman, is a wide-ranging piece of legislation that accomplishes many good things for Northwest California. Normally, you'd not find me talking about a public lands bill. This is not because I don't believe in preserving and restoring our public lands. It's …  Continue Reading


October 30, 2019

Huffman, McGuire, Wood Meeting To Coincide With State Transportation Commission Visit Next Week

by Jessica Cejnar

Local elected officials plan to show California Transportation Commissioners the most important infrastructure issue facing Del Norte County when it visits the area next week. State transportation commissioners will tour Last Chance Grade as well as host a town hall meeting in Crescent City on Wednesday, according to Crescent City Mayor Blake Inscore. At the CTC's town hall meeting, commissioners will hear from U.S. Congressman Jared Huffman, city and county staff and the Yurok Tribe. …  Continue Reading

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