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Sportfishing Industry
and Partners Call on Administration to Make Major Marine Fisheries
Management Changes - Immediate administrative action needed to
avoid significant problems with fisheries management
WASHINGTON, D.C. – February 23, 2010 – Today, a
coalition of marine recreational fishing, boating, and conservation
organizations and businesses called on the Obama administration to
take immediate action to address a crisis within the federal
fisheries management system. In a letter to National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Administrator Dr. Jane Lubchenco,
the American Sportfishing Association (ASA), The Billfish Foundation
(TBF), the Center for Coastal Conservation (CCC), the Coastal
Conservation Association (CCA), the International Game Fish
Association (IGFA), and the National Marine Manufacturers
Association (NMMA) laid out an initial framework to immediately
address serious and escalating problems resulting from inadequate
implementation of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and the chronic problems that exist within the
federal marine fisheries management system.
The coalition emphasizes that there are available administrative
actions that can be taken right away to address the concerns of the
sportfishing and boating industries and the nation’s 13 million
saltwater anglers who depend on well-managed, healthy marine
fisheries. Read the full letter sent to Dr. Lubchenco here.
Given NOAA’s recent ban on recreational fishing for red
snapper from North Carolina through Florida and the potential for
additional bans on key recreational saltwater fisheries, much of the
frustration that exists in the grassroots recreational fishing
community over these management decisions has boiled over into
organized protests including, one being held Wednesday, February 24,
in Washington, D.C.
With today’s letter, the coalition called upon the
administration to:
• Take decisive, immediate action to improve recreational fisheries
data by redirecting existing funds and personnel to focus on
real-time management data.
• Collect socio-economic data on recreational fishing in the
communities most likely to be impacted by near-term or expected
fisheries closures.
• Provide federal level direction to the fishery management councils
to use common-sense in their management approaches while the
administration collects the requisite data to make sound management
decisions.
• Develop a recreational fishing program and staff within NMFS
commensurate with the national economic contribution of recreational
saltwater fishing.
The coalition’s groups look forward to working closely
with the Obama administration and NOAA to implement solutions to
effectively deal with our nation’s marine fisheries resources.
Below are comments made today by the coalition’s group leaders:
American Sportfishing Association
Mike Nussman, President and CEO
“We support healthy fisheries and good fishery management. It's good
for anglers, our business and our economy. We’ve developed
common-sense administrative and appropriations proposals that
address the need for timely, accurate data while preserving efforts
to rebuild our marine fisheries. We see these as a starting point
for actions that must be implemented to address the short and long
term problems.”
“Unfortunately, what we are seeing now is crisis management rather
than fisheries management and this must stop before more jobs are
lost and more of the nation’s recreational anglers are unnecessarily
shut out.”
The Billfish Foundation
Ellen Peel, President
“Stock assessments for recreationally important species have been a
lower priority for NMFS than is justified by the economic
contribution of the recreational fishing community. Recreational
fishing accounts for only three percent of the marine finfish
harvested by weight, yet it produces 56 percent of the jobs from all
saltwater fisheries.”
The Center for Coastal Conservation
Jeff Angers, President
“The groups represented in this effort are demanding
conservation-oriented measures that deliver the best possible
opportunity not only for America’s anglers and the businesses that
depend on them, but also for America’s marine resources to achieve
their fullest potential. We expect to see the same commitment from
NMFS. Their failure to do so has led to the current crisis of
confidence and is threatening to bring the entire system to a
standstill.”
The Coastal Conservation Association
Pat Murray, President
"There is a great deal of frustration among recreational anglers,
much of it attributable to an agency that doesn't have the data, the
science or the will to properly manage us. Recreational anglers have
always been willing to do what is right to maintain healthy marine
resources, but it is hard to have faith in many of the management
measures we are seeing out of NMFS right now. There is a better path
than the one they are on."
International Game Fish Association
Rob Kramer, President
“We must deal with the unintended consequences of the 2006
Magnuson-Stevens Act reauthorization. We hope that our
recommendations will help to get this agency, on which 13 million
recreational saltwater anglers depend, back on track.”
National Marine Manufacturers Association
Thomas J. Dammrich, President
“NOAA Fisheries’ severe restrictions on recreational fishing are a
direct result of the agency’s failure to collect important data on
these fisheries, including the impacts of recreational fishing and
boating. Unless NOAA takes quick and decisive action to improve its
data and management of recreational fisheries, these large-scale
closures will drive down boat sales and negatively impact U.S.
marine industry jobs.”
American Sportfishing Association
asacomm@asafishing.org
Marine recreational
fisheries on-line survey needs public input
The S.C. Department of Natural Resources is working to
produce an educational tool to help everyone better understand the
state's marine fishery resources, and to help that along, the public
is being asked to take an on-line survey.
The survey can be found at:
www.surveymonkey.com/s/KZQ85R5
The S.C. Department of Natural Resources (DNR) envisions a concise
simple format combining information from anglers, scientific
literature, and work conducted by DNR. For this effort to be a
success, the DNR needs help in defining products that best serve the
public's needs and interests.
Please take a few minutes on the survey to tell the DNR a little
about how you interact with natural resources and your specific
interests related to inshore marine recreational fisheries, which
are the focus of the first phase of the effort. Information
collected in the survey will be used to help direct the DNR's
efforts toward the species and topics most important to the public. |