Officers and Directors elected to lead fast-growing
Pacific Northwest CCA chapters
Local Leaders Set to Guide Conservation Efforts
WOODLAND, WA - Not
long ago, a group of concerned anglers from Oregon and Washington with
an urgent need to take a more active role in the management of their
marine resources contacted Coastal Conservation Association. Just six
months later, CCA Washington and CCA Oregon are officially open for
business and proud to announce the election of officers and directors
to lead the attack on a variety of conservation issues in the region,
particularly salmon.
“In just a few months,
our membership grew from a handful of concerned folks to more than
1,300 in these two chapters,” said Matt Olson, president of CCA
Washington. “This is largely attributable to the frustration of sports
anglers throughout Oregon and Washington. They are refusing to let
wild salmon populations disappear forever at the hands of commercial
gillnetters.”
With the clock ticking
for wild salmon in the Pacific Northwest, the two newest CCA state
chapters wasted no time organizing boards and launching three local
chapters in each state. The pace of membership growth in the region
has exceeded expectations and reflects the urgency anglers feel
towards a resource that is a historic symbol of the region.
“Gary Loomis deserves
much of the credit for bringing CCA to Washington and Oregon. He has
been tireless in spreading the message and he has the visibility and
charisma to draw attention to this issue,” said David Cummins, CCA
president. “The plight of salmon is really motivating people by the
hundreds to get involved in CCA. We have rarely seen this degree of
frustration with a fishery and its management. People here know what
is at stake and they are ready to do whatever they have to do to fix
the situation.”
In addition to
officers and directors, committee chairmen were also appointed in both
chapters who will begin the grassroots process of determining goals
and developing strategy to address the region’s complex conservation
issues. The first CCA Washington chapters will be based around Central
Puget Sound, the Lower Columbia River Valley and the Chehalis River
Valley. CCA Oregon will also begin with three chapters centered around
the Mid-Willamette Valley, Portland Metro and Columbia County.
“CCA is a grassroots
advocacy organization, not a fishing club, and that makes it different
from most groups in the country. We are going to be looking at these
issues in a new way,” said Mads Ledet, vice chairman of CCA Oregon.
“Local anglers and conservationists have to get involved to change the
future of salmon in the Northwest. That is the strength of CCA.”
CCA is the largest
marine resource conservation group in the country, with more than
94,000 members in 17 state chapters along the Gulf, Atlantic and
Pacific coasts.
CCA Oregon Officers
Gary
Loomis
Chairman
Mads
Ledet
Vice Chairman
Jon
Bial
President
Ivy
Schlegel
Treasurer
Stan
Steele
Vice President
Rollin Beauchane
Vice President
CCA
Washington Officers
Gary Loomis
Chairman
Jim
Maxwell
Vice Chairman
Matt
Olson
President
Lynne Fletcher
Treasurer
Cindy Stecher
Secretary
Glen
Johnston
Vice President
Bryan Irwin
Vice President
For further information or to
arrange interviews with representatives of the new
CCA chapters in the Pacific Northwest, contact Ted Venker,
1800-201-FISH.