Gov. Mark Dayton said Wednesday he expects to call a special legislative session for lawmakers to help businesses on Lake Mille Lacs that are struggling due to the decline of walleye fishing.
The lake's walleye season could come to an abrupt halt in early August — months before the traditional close.
The Department of Natural Resources likely will be forced to act because the limit on the sport fishing harvest could be reached at the end of this month, just as resort owners enter their equivalent of the Christmas shopping season.
The special session could be called possibly by the end of next week. Dayton said not acting would devastate the industry and the region as a whole.
"Government exists to serve the people and when people are, through no fault of their own especially, put in dire straits, that's when our government needs to be as responsive as it can be," Dayton said at a news conference Wednesday.
The walleye harvest quota, as high as 500,000 pounds in some recent years, but has dwindled to 40,000 pounds this year due to population decline.
Dayton and legislators are considering an aid package that would include property tax abatements, refinancing of existing loans carried by the resorts and more money to promote and advertise the region. He said that a majority of the roughly 100 tourism-related businesses in the Mille Lacs area are earning less than $500,000. Dayton estimated the potential relief package at $10 million, though that figure could change.
State officials were quick to emphasize that while walleye season may be ending, the lake still offers good fishing of northern pike, smallmouth bass and muskie.