Advocacy

Throughout our first 50 years, CalTrout has grown from a handful of activist volunteers to a $15M organization leading major conservation projects all across California. In the process, we’ve developed a working model that uniquely positions us to take on these challenges, and succeed.

 

Our regionally based structure means we’re embedded in communities where native fish are critical to the region, investing significant time cultivating relationships.​ Our work is rooted in science and hard data that drives our decision-making and measures our efficacy.​ Together, this formula builds trust among those with whom we work, and allows us to bring diverse interests together with a shared goal in mind.​ The Cal Trout Ethos combines this model with a bold and competent attitude – it’s a belief that no project is too big, no task too daunting.

 

Leading the Way Forward

 

Our plans for the next 50 years are even bolder, and are built up on our understanding that–as conservationists, as scientists, as humans–we must work with and integrate landscape-level processes into our way of life, rather than attempting to dominate them. And as we respond to the impact felt by a growing population, climate change, and an altered water system, we must move from treating symptoms to treating the causes.

 

Not only will we continue to implement our projects at scale, we will do so in a way that policy and projects work together with nature to achieve results that benefit people and the environment. We must reconcile a knowledge of nature into our management of nature, across all of our disciplines. That means partnering with foresters, ranchers, farmers and urban city planners in developing urban infrastructure. It means removing barriers to free-flowing waterways while delivering water where it’s needed. It means working across the entire California landscape–from ridge top to river mouth–from the Oregon border to San Diego.

 

In the era of climate change, we have the capacity to demonstrate to the world what solutions look like by continuing to scale our proven model, and by continuing to integrate the concepts by which people manage diverse landscapes – be they farms, ranches, cities, or forests.

 

Our Future Vision

 

At CalTrout, we envision a California where waters flow free, clean and cold from headwaters to the ocean: a water system in perfect balance, serving the needs of all who depend on it.

 

With your support, we will build on what we have accomplished–ensuring clean, cold waters run free throughout California as we save our native wild fish from extinction. Because a healthy fish population signifies a healthy and sustainable water system. And that means a healthy, sustainable future for California that we can hand off to our children, our grandchildren, and all future generations of Californians.

 

 

 
Top photo credit: Hot Creek, Sarah Bettelheim
January 14, 2021

Stewarding California into the Future

January 14, 2021
Throughout our first 50 years, CalTrout has grown from a handful of activist volunteers to a $15M organization leading major conservation projects all across California. In…
January 11, 2021

First Wild Trout Lake Leads to Huge Success for Cutthroat

January 11, 2021
Martis Creek Reservoir (Martis Lake) was selected as the first designated Wild Trout lake by the CA Department of Fish and Game in 1974, after CalTrout…
January 11, 2021

Shasta Dam Raise Blocked

January 11, 2021
In 2013, the Bureau of Reclamation shared its proposal to raise Shasta Dam, a plan adamantly opposed by CalTrout. Such an increase to the size of…
January 10, 2021

A Call to Arms to Save California’s Rivers

January 10, 2021
In 1967, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed to build an enormous dam just above the confluence of the Eel River and the Middle Fork…
January 8, 2021

CalTrout Weighs in on Updated Fishing Regulations

January 8, 2021
When the California Department of Fish & Wildlife (CDFW) proposed a simplification process to inland trout fishing regulations  in 2019, California Trout engaged with members, lodges,…
January 8, 2021

Billions of Public Dollars Raised for Restoration Work

January 8, 2021
In 2014, California voters approved a $7.5 billion bond, popularly known as The Water Bond. The ongoing severe drought in the state underscored the need to…
January 8, 2021

Coho Bill Provides Much Needed Support

January 8, 2021
In 2012, a coalition of conservation organizations, including California Trout, sponsored The Coho Bill, AB1961, to ensure timely approval and implementation of Coho Salmon restoration projects.…
January 8, 2021

More Federal Dollars for Protecting Fish

January 8, 2021
CalTrout lobbied for the renewal of the Fish and Game Commission’s Wild Trout Program and the Heritage Trout Program to provide additional funding for California’s native…
January 7, 2021

Protecting Source Waters Forever

January 7, 2021
One of CalTrout’s landmark achievements thus far in its 50-year history is the creation of the California Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. This Act provides protection…
January 7, 2021

Fish in Hot Water

January 7, 2021
After rigorous scientific research and peer review, CalTrout and UC Davis Center for Watershed Sciences published State of the Salmonids II: Fish in Hot Water, an…
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