Long Range Fish Report
From Sportfishing
From Sportfishing
Fish Report for 2-25-2008
Back One Outdoors Bill, Help Kill Another
2-25-2008
Recreational Fishing Alliance
By: Ken Moran -- New York Post
February 17, 2008 -- LEGISLATION that could help save the summer flounder sea son along the Atlantic Coast has been introduced in Congress.
Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) introduced legislation this past week that will amend the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act of 2007 (MSA) and include limited flexibility in rebuilding healthy fisheries.
HR 5425 has gained bipartisan support from 11 coastal legislators along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, illustrating that many believe limited flexibility is needed in the management of rebuilding fish stocks.
The MSA contains arbitrary and rigid rebuilding requirements, which have unnecessarily restricted recreational anglers and have not been adaptive to the marine environment. Top fisheries scientists and the Recreational Fishing Alliance made this point during testimony at a congressional hearing last December. Pallone's language would give the Secretary of Commerce the discretion to adjust rebuilding timeframes only if specific criteria are present to ensure that the conservation of such stocks continues to advance. Limited flexibility would allow fishermen to retain access to important fisheries such as summer flounder, red snapper, gag grouper, vermillion snapper, yellow-eye rockfish and canary rockfish, while continuing to achieve management goals.
This legislation needs to be passed and will be passed with the support of the entire recreational fishing community. It is critical that all recreational anglers and marine businesses get behind this bill, reach out to their legislators and ask them to support HR 5425.
February 17, 2008 -- LEGISLATION that could help save the summer flounder sea son along the Atlantic Coast has been introduced in Congress.
Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) introduced legislation this past week that will amend the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Reauthorization Act of 2007 (MSA) and include limited flexibility in rebuilding healthy fisheries.
HR 5425 has gained bipartisan support from 11 coastal legislators along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, illustrating that many believe limited flexibility is needed in the management of rebuilding fish stocks.
The MSA contains arbitrary and rigid rebuilding requirements, which have unnecessarily restricted recreational anglers and have not been adaptive to the marine environment. Top fisheries scientists and the Recreational Fishing Alliance made this point during testimony at a congressional hearing last December. Pallone's language would give the Secretary of Commerce the discretion to adjust rebuilding timeframes only if specific criteria are present to ensure that the conservation of such stocks continues to advance. Limited flexibility would allow fishermen to retain access to important fisheries such as summer flounder, red snapper, gag grouper, vermillion snapper, yellow-eye rockfish and canary rockfish, while continuing to achieve management goals.
This legislation needs to be passed and will be passed with the support of the entire recreational fishing community. It is critical that all recreational anglers and marine businesses get behind this bill, reach out to their legislators and ask them to support HR 5425.
< Previous Report Next Report >
More Reports
2-25-2008BY BILL STERLING WACHAPREAGUE -- Saying anglers are facing a "critical and defining point," Jim Donofrio of the Recreational Fishing Alliance spoke to a capacity crowd at the Island House Restaurant on Tuesday concerning legislation that would address new limits for flounder fishing. A bill introduced by U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone Jr., a New Jersey Democrat, last week would allow for limited flexibility in setting fishing limits where stocks have increased substantially. That bill and House Bill H.R. 4087 introduced by U.S. Rep....... Read More
2-22-2008
Jeff Deem, Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council member, has a good opinion piece in this week's edition of The Fisherman. If you fished for flounder in Virginia last season, chances are you tossed back a bunch of fish for every one that met the demanding 18.5-inch minimum-size limit, especially if your launch site was Chincoteague, Watchapreague, Oyster or Cape Charles. You could be saying goodbye to even more of the flounder you catch this season. Virginia has been ordered to reduce...... Read More
Jeff Deem, Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council member, has a good opinion piece in this week's edition of The Fisherman. If you fished for flounder in Virginia last season, chances are you tossed back a bunch of fish for every one that met the demanding 18.5-inch minimum-size limit, especially if your launch site was Chincoteague, Watchapreague, Oyster or Cape Charles. You could be saying goodbye to even more of the flounder you catch this season. Virginia has been ordered to reduce...... Read More
LongRangeSportfishing.net © 2024. All Rights Reserved.
Website Hosting and Design provided by TECK.net
Website Hosting and Design provided by TECK.net