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Unprecedented salmon declines force fish donations to Alaskaโ€™s Yukon River villages

August 3, 2021 โ€” For 47 years, Jack Schultheis has spent fishing season around the mouth of Yukon River.

โ€œIโ€™ve never seen anything like this,โ€ Schultheis said from Emmonak, where he is general manager of Kwikโ€™Pak Fisheries, a commercial enterprise set up to help the regional economy in the Lower Yukon. In a regular season, the operation would be involved in commercial fishing, buying fish, and processing.

But this year, returns of staple salmon species are abysmal, prompting the state, regional non-profits, and processors to coordinate deliveries of fish from other parts of the state. Kwikโ€™Pak isnโ€™t fishing at all. Which means local residents arenโ€™t earning cash to put towards essential needs, including gas and supplies for their own subsistence activities.

Communities up and down the Yukon are coming to terms with a collapse in key stocks, and now confronting the prospect of a winter without enough food. Tribal groups working in the region say the situation is dire, and are scrambling to find alternative ways to get protein and assistance to some of the most rural households in the state.

Runs of kings and chum salmon on the Yukon have been so low that subsistence fishing for both have remained closed. In the case of kings, the number of fish in the river has been in decline for decades, along with the average size of fish harvested, according to decades of data compiled by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

Read the full story at the Anchorage Daily News

ALASKA: Fearing dismal salmon runs, Kwikโ€™Pak fisheries pivots to gardening

June 21, 2021 โ€” In recent years, the chum salmon runs on the Yukon River have been low. This year, it is too early to tell how the run will be. But with commercial fishing becoming a less reliable venture, one fishing enterprise is hoping to find stability by turning to veggies.

The goal is to keep the business operating and workers employed, so Kwikโ€™Pak Fisheries in Emmonak is diversifying its business by building greenhouses right next to its fish processing plant.

Traditionally, Kwikโ€™Pak is the only fish buyer in the lower Yukon and one of the regionโ€™s main employers during the summer. During good chum and coho salmon runs, Kwikโ€™Pak can employ between 100 and 300 workers on a given day. A number of those employees are teenagers from villages all over the lower Yukon.

โ€œItโ€™s great seeing these kids, โ€˜cause their self-esteem and well-being, they just glow because they have work,โ€ said Jack Schultheis, who manages Kwikโ€™Pak Fisheries. โ€œThey have their own money. And not just menial work, but when they can use the imagination and their intellect.โ€

Read the full story at KTOO

Alaska seafood marketing arm hopes to finally benefit from federal pandemic relief dollars

May 18, 2021 โ€” Alaskaโ€™s lone seafood marketing arm gets zero budget from the state and to date has received no pandemic funds.

The Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute is hoping to get a breather from the more than $1 billion coming to Alaska in the latest round of federal relief dollars under the American Rescue Plan (ARP).

The influx also provides $518 million of nondiscretionary funds to Alaska and $220 million for public health and safety, workforce development, education, transportation and emergency management.

ASMI put in a $20 million request two months ago, but Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy made no mention of it in mid-April when he released his proposals for the ARP money nor anything since.

Dunleavy did include $150 million for Alaska Tourism Revitalization, citing the need for โ€œindustry relief to promote tourism and adapt services for potential loss of cruise ship season.โ€

Read the full story at the Anchorage Daily News

ALASKA: Kwikโ€™pak Fisheries To Require Employees To Be Vaccinated Against COVID-19

May 6, 2021 โ€” Kwikโ€™pak Fisheries in Emmonak, the only fish buyer on the Yukon River mouth, is requiring its employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19.

General Manager Jack Schultheis said that Kwikโ€™pak Fisheries employs up to 400 workers each day, all of whom will have to show their COVID-19 vaccination cards before beginning work this season.

โ€œCustomers are extremely concerned over who is manufacturing the food theyโ€™re buying from us,โ€ Schultheis said. โ€œSo weโ€™re trying to protect our workers, the community, and the people who eat the food we produce.โ€

Read the full story at KYUK

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