Or. Admin. R. 635-001-0105 - Bass and Walleye Fishing Tournaments
Black bass or walleye fishing tournaments are subject to provisions of ORS 498.279 and the following rules:
(1) Permit Application and
Processing; General Provisions.
(a) The
Department will accept applications for bass tournaments beginning November 1
of the year preceding the year in which the proposed tournament will be held.
Requests will be processed and permits issued in order of time of receipt at
the Bend ODFW office beginning December 15 of the year preceding the year in
which the proposed tournament will be held.
(b) Parties requesting conflicting
tournaments are encouraged to resolve the conflict among themselves. Parties
may submit an amended tournament request that resolves conflicts among
competing applicants that reserves the priority date of the original
requests.
(c) At the request of the
Commission, the sponsor of the event shall report the results of the event to
the Commission, on a form provided by the Commission not later than 30 days
after the end of the event.
(d) The
Commission may order closure of any waters to competitions or contests when the
Commission considers such action necessary to protect wildlife
resources.
(e) Live fish must be
released in scattered locations at least one mile from the weigh-in site or at
locations designated by ODFW. The tournament director or a designee may exceed
possession limits for the purpose of transporting fish from the weigh-in site
to release sites on the same water.
(f) No bass or walleye may be retained by
tournament sponsors or participants after a tournament ends except as specified
in subsection (1)(g).
(g) The
tournament director may dispose of fish that die during or as a result of
tournament activities in the following manner:
(A) donated in accordance with local bag and
possession limits to individuals at the weigh-in site not participating in or
with the tournament. The tournament sponsor must issue a receipt for donated
fish that must stay with the fish. The receipt must include the name of the
recipient and the species and number of fish donated;
(B) the tournament director may exceed the
bag or possession limit in order to transport the fish to donate them in a
manner detailed in OAR 635-002-0005.
(2) Large Tournaments.
(a) Large tournaments are those with more
than 24 boats or 49 individuals participating.
(b) A permit from ODFW is required. Sponsors
must apply for permits at least 30 days prior to the event. Permit applications
must include a written description of the manner in which the competition or
contest is to be conducted. Such description shall include the location, dates
and times of the event, the maximum number of boats participating, the amounts
of prizes, and the equipment and methods to be used by contestants to keep fish
taken in a live and healthy condition. Permits must be in possession of the
sponsor or a designated representative at the tournament location, and must be
shown to OSP or ODFW employees on request.
(c) The frequency of bass tournaments and
number of participants is limited. Surface areas of tournament waters will be
based on Atlas of Oregon Lakes (OSU Press, 1985) (See Table 1). No more large
competitions or contests for bass may be held on any particular body of water
than provided by table 1, and no more often than once in any 13-day period
except on the Columbia River downstream from Bonneville Dam, including the
Willamette River upstream to Willamette Falls, and on Columbia River
impoundments, where a competition or contest may not be held at launch sites
less than 10 river miles apart more often than once in any 13-day period.
Distance between launch sites will be determined from the River Mile Index for
the Main Stem Columbia River (Hydrology Subcommittee of the Columbia Basin
Inter-Agency Committee, 1962) and the Willamette River Recreation Guide (Oregon
State Marine Board and Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, 1998).
(d) If an organization has applied for and
received a tournament permit for a particular lake continuously for the past 25
years, that organization will receive "grandfather" rights to a permit on that
lake. That organization will retain "grandfather" rights as long as it:
(A) continuously reapplies for a permit every
year; and
(B) draws a minimum of 50
participants for two years in a 3-year period. If an organization with
"grandfather" rights to a certain waterbody fails to meet the above criteria,
ODFW shall rescind that organization's grandfather rights but may permit the
organization to retain its grandfather rights if it failed to meet these
criteria due to circumstances beyond its control. Once organizations with
grandfather rights are allotted permits (which includes preference for
selecting a date for a particular lake) the remaining permits will be awarded
to competing organizations through a point system as described below:
(i) Every year that an organization applies
for one of the remaining permits and does not draw one, that organization
receives a "point." An organization can only receive a maximum of one point per
year per waterbody. An organization must apply every year to retain their
points, otherwise their points go to zero;
(ii) If the number of organizations competing
for the remaining permits after the grandfather allocation on a waterbody is
less than the number of permits available, all organizations receive a permit
and lose all of their points;
(iii)
If the number of organizations competing for the remaining permits on a
waterbody is more than the number of permits available after the grandfather
allocation, permits are allocated by lottery among the permit applicants with
the most points. If permits are still available after this allocation, they are
allocated by lottery among the remaining organizations with the next most
points, and so on until all authorized permits are allocated;
(iv) If an organization with a permit applies
for an additional permit, it will only be considered after all organizations
without permits have been granted one.
(e) Not withstanding restrictions set forth
in the Oregon Sport Fishing regulations published annually, the following catch
and possession restrictions apply to participants in bass fishing tournaments.
Participants competing as individuals may continue to fish while holding five
bass of any size in the livewell, as long as one bass is released immediately
upon catching a bass. Two person teams may continue to fish while holding 10
bass of any size in the livewell, regardless of the number of bass caught by
each angler, as long as one bass is released immediately when either team
member catches a bass. The released bass may be either the bass just caught, or
from the livewell. However, if the number of participants on any single boat is
three or more anglers, the possession limit per boat is limited to 10 bass of
any size.
(f) Frequency of walleye
tournaments is limited to one in each 13-day period, and the total number of
tournaments is further limited as provided in Table 2, however, a competition
or contest for walleye on the Columbia River downstream from Bonneville Dam,
including the Willamette River upstream to Willamette Falls, and on Columbia
River impoundments, may not be held at launch sites less than 10 river miles
apart more often than once in any 13-day period. Distance between launch sites
will be determined from the River Mile Index for the Main Stem Columbia River
(Hydrology Subcommittee, 1962) and the Willamette River Recreation Guide
(Oregon State Marine Board and Oregon Parks and Recreation Department,
1998).
(g) There is no limit on the
number of participants in a walleye tournament.
(3) Small Bass or Walleye Tournaments.
(a) Small black bass or walleye fishing
tournaments are those which have fewer than 50 participants and 25
participating boats.
(b) Sponsors
must notify the local ODFW District fish biologist and OSP office of the
location, date and time of the event at least 10 days prior to the commencement
of the event.
(c) Tournament
participant boats must be clearly marked as "Contestant" or "Tournament" in a
manner visible without magnification from a minimum distance of 50
yards.
(d) Notwithstanding
restrictions set forth in the Oregon Sport Fishing regulations published
annually, the catch and possession restrictions in subsection (2)(e)of these
rules apply to participants in small bass fishing tournaments.
Notes
Tables and publications referenced are available from the agency.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 498.118, 496.138 & 496.146
Stats. Implemented: ORS 498.279 & 498.284
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