Title 16 › Chapter 1— NATIONAL PARKS, MILITARY PARKS, MONUMENTS, AND SEASHORES › Subchapter CIV— KLAMATH RIVER CONSERVATION AREA › § 460ss
Congress calls for stronger, joined-up management to protect and restore the Klamath and Trinity Rivers’ migratory fish. The rivers are already in the California and National Wild and Scenic Rivers systems. The fish are important for Indian subsistence and ceremonies, ocean commercial fishing, recreation, and local economies. Floods, dams, water diversions, hydro projects, past mining, logging, and roadbuilding have caused sediment, lower flows, and worse water quality, which badly damaged fish habitat. Confused federal, state, and local control and weak enforcement have made recovery harder. Klamath-Trinity fall chinook are down 80 percent from historic levels and steelhead have also dropped. The Secretary, through the Bureau of Indian Affairs, made a basin fisheries plan. The Klamath Salmon Management Group has set a cooperative framework. A new basin authority made up of that group and fish users is needed to coordinate long-term conservation and ensure enough fish escape to spawn. The Secretary now has restoration authority only in the Trinity Basin and needs more authority to work with state and local governments to restore fish to optimum levels in both basins.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 460ss
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60