Last year’s performance reviews were shining, so the letter did not make any sense. “This is not a real explanation,” he said.
USFWS holidays will not affect the C -Lampy Control Program in Canada, McClchhi said. “The Canadian government has assured us that money will continue from Canada and we are on the way to providing a full program in Canadian waters,” he said. “It’s great, but this program works because it is blind.”
In other words: Lampery control in American waters is a threat to fish and fishermen everywhere on the great lakes.
Just a week ago, the Great Lakes Fisheries Commission faced a more serious staff situation, as the USFWS informed the directors that they would also be unable to hire climate workers to spread lamps price in April. In a few days, his services were frozen, McClchhi said.
This reversal gives him a little hope. “It at least tells us that no lamp is the root of the lamp,” he said.
MacClinchie is currently in the DC for the customization season, which the commission presents to the members of the Congress and defends the agency’s budget. This is an annual journey, but this year he is also advocating for the restoration of lamps control employees.
He hopes. “It seems clear to me that it is important for me to keep the program safe, and so far everyone who has faced it thinks like this and are working for this purpose,” he said.
Cutting the program is not really on the table for commission. He said that even the slightest deduction in the scope would be disastrous for fishing.
Even the former USFWS employee is expected. “I still think they are going to make a riot to perform it,” he said. “Because it’s not really an option to stop treatment throughout the season.”
This story originally appeared Within the news of the climate.