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California AB 376 shark fin ban Mid-August update and action alert
Written by Kevin Sullivan   
Friday, 19 August 2011 09:57
Shark Day in Sacramento. Photo: Kevin Sullivan

Monday, August 15th was an exciting day in Sacramento. Conservation organizations, including Shark Savers, from around California and the nation rallied for “Shark Day” on the capitol north lawn to support the proposed legislation to ban the possession, sale, and trade of shark fins in California.

The experience both celebratory, with so many advocates for sharks gathering and expressing themselves, as well as urgent and serious. Personal statements of support were given by all the Shark Day attendees young and old, from all walks of life, some in ties and some in shark suits!!

Shark Savers Director Sue Chen and Bo Derek providing testimony. Photo: Deb Castellana
Click here to view gallery
The occasion also marked the public hearing held by the Senate Appropriations Committee. Powerful witness testimony to the Committee was provided by actress and conservation activist Bo Derek, Shark Savers' Board Director Sue Chen, and Wild Aid Executive Director Peter Knights.

But the opposition was in attendance and in force that day as well, even disrupting the committee meeting with a chant of “No on AB 376!”. The vociferous oppostion drove home the point that we are still very much in need of public support for the bill.

AB 376 is now in a 10 day "suspension period". During the suspension period, the authors are expected to be pressured by the opposition to add amendments to the bill. Opposition lobbyists are hard at work trying to influence not just committee members, but all the Senators and their staffs with misleading information and unworkable alternatives in preparation for the full Senate debate.

And our advocates are working just as hard to counter this assault with both facts and the persuasive efforts of thousands of consitituents. We will be urging the authors and other senators to preserve the bill without amendments, which would only weaken the bill.

During this time it is important that we maintain pressure on the Appropriations committee Senators and tell them to support AB 376 and release it from suspension for debate on the main Senate floor without amendments.

Here's what you can do, California residents:

Call the Senators of the Appropriations Committee to affirm your support of AB 376 without amendments. A list of the Appropriations committee Senators may be found here: Aug. 8 Action Alert. These three senators especially need to hear from you:

Elaine Alquist
Bill Emmerson
Mimi Walters

Call your senator. The time is now to call your California Senator and tell them that you want them to support AB 376! Click here to identify your Senator through your zip code.

Call all the senators. If you really want to do all you can to pass this bill, please call each and every one of the 40 Senators. We know this may be a lot to ask, but it's going to take as many of us calling as many of these senators as we can to get this bill passed. Even if you can only call a handful, please do it. Here is a list of all of the California senators: http://senate.ca.gov/senators

Use Shark Saver's new online letter to send your sentator a letter. http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/banthefin-AB376/ It will take just a minute to send this letter to your senator, if you prefer that to a phone call. This online letter can easily be shared with your California friends, so please use this to broadcast this out to your personal network and ask them to sign.

We continue to be thankful for the support Californians have shown for this important legislation, and your patience with the e-mails you receive from us asking for your help. This fight is now in the 12th round, and it is critical that your Senators know that what they do in office matters to the people of California.

Not a California resident?

Sign our Ban the Fin petition. Shark fin bans, similar to the one we are fighting for in California, will be initiated in communities everywhere. We have launched our Ban the Fin campaign to enable individuals to effectively work towards these bans. The petitions will create a signature bank that can be used in each and every one of these efforts to Ban the Fin.

US residents petition click here.
Canadian residents petition click here.
Other countries: more petitions are on the way, but feel free to sign the existing petitions for now.

Comments (5)

Darris said:

...
I've sent my letters, made my phone calls and posted a plea for other to do the same on Facebook. Thank you for the update. Bobby C. would be so very, very happy to see this progress.
xxoo
 
September 01, 2011
Votes: +0

Kylie Mosbacher said:

33 Minutes
I managed to get a hold of every Senator's office aside from the three specified above, whose answering machines picked up my call. This only took a total of 33 minutes for forty Senators. So if anybody finds themselves with a spare half an hour, this is a grand pursuit to occupy that time with Though I will recommend that you sit down for it; standing makes the blood settle rather painfully in the feet.

Mrs. Chu- thank you very much for the link! I'll study it thoroughly. Is there anything further we can do to show our support? Will there be another rallying time at the capitol where we can face the opposition's support? I've also notified all friends on Facebook of this bill and the petition.
 
August 24, 2011
Votes: +0

Yvonne Chu said:

It is not discriminatory to ban shark fin
Kylie, the opposition is led by people who sell shark fin. The opposition claims that it is discriminatory to 1. ban shark fin and not other shark products, 2. ban shark fin and not all shark fishing, 3. not allow the sale of the fin of a shark that has been fished legally.

It is NOT discriminatory because the demand for shark fin is by far the largest cause for the fishing of sharks (~400x more sharks caught for their fins then for the whole shark). We can't ban the importation of shark fin from illegally-finned sharks because of international laws. This means that we can't prevent illegal fins from entering the country. It is very difficult and expensive to distinguish between legal and illegal fins. Thus the only way to stop illegal fins from entering the market is to ban all fins, both legal and illegal.

References and more details at: http://posthumananimal.blogspot.com
 
August 23, 2011
Votes: +0

Chris Mowry said:

...
Kylie, off the top of my head, I believe most of the opposition's issues deal with cultural reasons (targeting the Asian communities specifically) and the fact that some sharks are not shown as being endangered. If that's not accurate, I apologize. But I do believe that's all that I've heard of in regards to arguing against the bill. The fact that some are resorting to calling the bill racist is mind-boggling.

Good job showing your support. Let's hope this bill passes!

-Chris
 
August 20, 2011
Votes: +0

Kylie Mosbacher said:

That Does It.
I'm calling them all. I don't care who brushes me off.

May I ask, though, what the opposition's argument is? Who even is the opposition? I must admit I was surprised to learn that there even WAS anybody who could vie for the, and there's no other word for it, slaughter of an animal who is harvested chiefly for a small percentage of their bodies, a percentage that is not even properly fit for human consumption.

Anyway, I'd love any further information.
 
August 20, 2011
Votes: +0

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