
Supreme Court Reject State’s Attempt To Alter Subsistence Fishing Management Process
A case involving subsistence fishing rights that went to the United States Supreme Court was rejected despite the State of Alaska’s attempts to alter the rules of how the rules are enforced. Here’s the Alaska Beacon with more details:
The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected the state of Alaska’s latest attempt to alter Alaska’s decades-old system of subsistence fishing management.
In a one-sentence order Monday, the court said it will not review a decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which ruled in August that Alaska cannot manage fishing on a stretch of the Kuskokwim River that flows through the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge.
If the Supreme Court had taken up the case, it could have redefined Alaska’s unique system of hunting and fishing management, which allows the federal government to restrict subsistence hunting and fishing on federal land to rural Alaskans. The state is forbidden by the Alaska Constitution from offering the same preference.
Alaska Native organizations, including the Alaska Federation of Natives, praised the court’s decision, but the commissioner of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game said by email that it would continue to work with the federal government on the issue.
Among those supporting the decision was Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski (R).
