SRES-683-119
Referred to the Committee on Environment and Public Works. (text: CR S1937-1938)
Sponsored by Peter Welch (D-VT)
What it does
This resolution would express the Senate's encouragement of ongoing efforts to protect and restore lake sturgeon populations. It would call for continued collaboration among federal, state, tribal, and Canadian partners on sturgeon management, habitat protection, invasive species control, and public education — including guidance for anglers on how to handle lake sturgeon if caught. The resolution carries no legal force, creates no new programs, and appropriates no funds.
Who benefits
Indigenous communities for whom lake sturgeon hold cultural and traditional food significance. State and tribal wildlife agencies whose existing management programs receive symbolic congressional endorsement. Conservation organizations focused on Great Lakes and freshwater ecosystems. Anglers and recreational users of Great Lakes and Northeastern waterways who benefit from healthier fish populations. Researchers and scientists studying freshwater biodiversity. Communities in the Great Lakes region whose economies and ecosystems depend on healthy waterways.
Who is hurt
No group faces a direct material harm from this resolution, as it is purely advisory and creates no mandates, restrictions, or spending. Commercial or recreational interests that might oppose future sturgeon protections could view the resolution as building political momentum for binding regulations, though the resolution itself imposes nothing.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that lake sturgeon — a species that survived since the age of dinosaurs — have been reduced to a fraction of their historical population by overfishing, habitat loss, and invasive species, and that congressional attention can help sustain the multi-agency recovery efforts already showing results. They contend that raising public awareness and encouraging angler education are low-cost, high-value steps that complement existing federal, state, and tribal programs working to reestablish healthy populations across the Great Lakes and Northeastern waterways.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a non-binding Senate resolution consumes limited legislative time and resources without producing any enforceable conservation outcome, and that species awareness is better addressed through existing agency programs and state wildlife management rather than congressional statements. They contend that if lake sturgeon populations genuinely require federal attention, Congress should act through binding legislation — such as Endangered Species Act listings or targeted appropriations — rather than symbolic resolutions that create no legal obligations.