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Alaska tribal group sues over commercial fishing system

An Alaska tribal group has filed a lawsuit against state officials claiming the commercial fishing permit system unfairly prevents local anglers from fishing on their traditional grounds.

Tribal members should be exempt from needing commercial fishing permit, says Metlakatla Indian Community

Chinook salmon at the Whitehorse fish ladder in August 2019. A lawsuit filed by the Metlakatla Indian Community asks a federal judge to prevent the state of Alaska from requiring commercial fishing permits for tribal members. (Claudiane Samson/Radio-Canada)

An Alaska tribal group has filed a lawsuit against state officials claiming the commercial fishing permit system unfairly prevents local anglers from fishing on their traditional grounds.

The lawsuit filed by the Metlakatla Indian Community asks a federal judge to prevent the state from requiring commercial fishing permits for tribal members, Alaska's Energy Desk reported Monday.

The tribe named Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy and other administration officials in the lawsuit that says the tribe's fishing rights are guaranteed by Congress.

The Metlakatla people have lived on Annette Island in southeast Alaska since the late 19th century when about 820 Tsimshian people migrated with an Anglican missionary from coastal British Columbia to the uninhabited islands south of Ketchikan.

Congress established the Annette Islands Reserve as a permanent, self-sustaining home for the tribe in 1891. Federal authorities set aside waters within 3,000 feet (914 metres) of shore exclusively for the people of Metlakatla in 1916.

"The Annette Islands would have been worthless without access to fish and its adjacent fisheries," attorneys for the tribe wrote earlier this month.

State 'ignored' group's rights: lawyer

State authorities issue a limited number of commercial fishing permits to prevent overfishing in Alaska's fisheries. Metlakatla community members also fish in state waters generally within a day's travel to compensate for low salmon catches within their boundary.

If Metlakatla's tribal members want to fish in state waters, the state says they need a permit.

The U.S. Congress, not the state of Alaska, granted the Annette Islands Reserve and an integral part of the reserve is access to traditional fisheries, the lawsuit argues.

"Those rights were not taken away from us," Metlakatla Mayor Reginald Atkinson said. "They were basically ignored or set aside by the state of Alaska."

The Alaska Department of Law said state attorneys had not yet been served with the lawsuit by Friday, but the department plans to review the matter and respond.