******* Note to list members: These reports from the U.S. Congressional Research Service, are generally posted once a week and are made available by way of friendly staff in congress.
This posting consists of new material from these summaries, obtained by extracting only the material in {curly brackets}. In some cases, when new material is inserted into an existing paragraph, the new material may not make much sense by itself. Hint: if the lines in a paragraph are very uneven, it is probably because the new material was added to an existing paragraph, and the old stuff was cut out. *******
MARINE FISHERIES
Striped Bass Hearing. On April 28, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight field hearing in Toms River, NJ, on reauthorization of the Atlantic Striped Bass Conservation Act. [personal communication]
Bering Sea Maritime Boundary. On Mar. 29-30, 2000, U.S. and Russian officials are scheduled to hold an Inter-governmental Consultative Committee meeting in Moscow, during which better means to prevent Russian fishing vessel incursions in to U.S. waters along the Maritime Boundary in the Bering Sea will be discussed. [personal communication]
Adak Small Vessel Fishery? In late-March 2000, the AK Board of Fisheries is scheduled to consider a request to close state inshore waters in the vicinity of Adak Island to fishing vessels longer than 60 feet in length to foster development of a small-vessel fishery and a community to replace the abandoned Adak Naval Air Station. Large trawler operators oppose this closure as a speculative move that deprives them of access to prime fishing waters. [Anchorage Daily News]
Horseshoe Crabs. On Mar. 22, 2000, a biomedical company (Associates of Cape Cod) and a MA horseshoe crab harvester filed suit in U.S. District Court against the Dept. of the Interior, National Park Service, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, challenging a ban on horseshoe crab harvesting at Cape Cod National Seashore and Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge. The lawsuit is based on the absence of a distinction between those who take horseshoe crabs for medical purposes without harming them and those who kill horseshoe crabs for use as bait. [Boston Globe, Assoc Press]
Swordfish. On Mar. 22, 2000, NMFS officials announced the swordfish directed category quota for the Dec. 1, 1999 through May 31, 2000 semiannual fishing period was being increased from 1,016.6 metric tons dressed weight (mt dw) to 1,213.7 mt dw, to account for underharvest during the previous fishing year. With the increased quota, NMFS projects that no closure of the fishery will be necessary prior to May 31, 2000. [personal communication]
Seabird Bycatch. On Mar. 17, 2000, officials of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission signed an agreement providing $400,000 to assist longline fishing vessels install seabird deterrent devices to reduce seabird, especially endangered short-tailed albatross, mortality in the Bering Sea and North Pacific off the Alaskan coast. The longline industry will contribute more than $600,000 in cost-sharing toward this effort, resulting in installation of deterrent devices on 36 large freezer longline vessels as well as on half of about 2,000 smaller longline vessels. [FWS press release]
Tonga Tuna. On Mar. 17, 2000, the Pacific island nation of Tonga announced that it would open its Exclusive Economic Zone for the first time to a limited number of foreign tuna fishermen. First to take advantage of this opportunity was a Fiji-based Korean company. Permits for Chinese, Canadian, and Italian operations were rejected due to a fear of possible damage by large trawlers. [Assoc Press]
Iceland ITQ Case. On Mar. 15, 2000, the full 7-judge panel of Iceland's Supreme Court heard 5 hours of oral arguments in the Vatneyri case wherein the lower court ruled that Iceland's individual transferable quota (ITQ) system fails to provide equal access to a public resource. A ruling is expected within 4 weeks. [Iceland Review, personal communication]
On Mar. 14-16, 2000, the Mid-Atlantic Council approved a restrictive limit of 2.9 million pounds (300 pounds per trip) while the New England Council, on Mar. 22, 2000, approved a limit of 12 million to 15 million pounds (7,000 pounds per trip). Secretary Daley will decided how to treat the differing recommendations. [Assoc Press]
On Mar. 23, 2000, Canadian federal fisheries officers seized a scallop dragger on Browns Bank attempting to exercise Native fishing rights. Of the 19 people onboard, one was Native. [Canadian Press, National Post, Halifax Herald]
On Mar. 22, 2000, NMFS announced that the year 2000's first semiannual commercial fishing season for large coastal sharks in the western Atlantic would close Mar. 31, 2000, to assure that the quota of 642.5 metric tons was not exceeded. On April 13, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled a hearing on H.R. 3535, proposing to ban shark finning in the Pacific. [personal communication, Center for Marine Conservation press release, Fed. Register, Assoc Press]
The new proposal would create 2 classes of permits for charterboats, with Class II permits being non-transferable. In addition, permits would be renewed only if holders could prove they met certain income requirements annually. [Assoc Press, GMFMC press release]
SALMON ALONG THE PACIFIC COAST
Salmon Field Hearing. On April 27, 2000, the House Resources Committee has scheduled an oversight field hearing in Pasco, WA, on hydropower, river management, and salmon recovery issues on the Columbia and Snake Rivers. [personal communication]
WTO Dispute Regarding Canadian Salmon. On Mar. 21, 2000, Australia's Minister of Trade Mark Vaile announced that Australia would not appeal a World Trade Organization (WTO) decision allowing Canada to export uncooked salmon to Australia since strict quarantine provisions would be applicable to these imports. However, Tasmanian state officials remain adamant about defying the WTO by retaining a ban on importing Canadian salmon, opening the possibility that WTO could permit Canada to impose retaliatory sanctions on Australian imports. The Australian Workers Union called for rolling bans on the handling of Canadian products. [Australian Assoc Press, Australian Broadcasting Company]
NAFTA Complaint. On Mar. 15, 2000, a coalition of 5 environmental groups filed a complaint with the North American Free Trade Agreement's (NAFTA's) Commission for Environmental Cooperation, charging Canada with failing to enforce its laws to adequately protect fish habitat from logging. Particular concern was expressed with British Columbia's logging regulations that allow timber companies to clearcut areas adjacent to streams and drag logs through streambeds. [Natural Resources Defense Council press release]
In late March 2000, Corps of Engineers officials reported that, at recent hearings in 4 Pacific Northwest states, supporters of dam breaching outnumbered opponents by a ratio of 3-to-1. Additional public comment is being accepted by the Corps through Mar. 31, 2000. [Assoc Press, Portland Oregonian, MSNBC, American Rivers press release]
Organic Handling and Production. Between Apr. 10 and May 3, 2000, the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture has scheduled 3 public meetings in AL, AK, and RI to discuss production and handling of aquatic animals to be labeled as "organic." This is part of an effort to establish national standards governing the marketing of products as organically produced. [USDA press release]
New Carissa Lawsuit. In mid-March 2000, Clausen Oyster Co. filed a $3 million lawsuit in U.S. District Court (Eugene, OR) against the New Carissa, its Japanese owners, its captain, and a Portland salvage operator, charging that fuel oil spilled when the ship ran aground in Coo Bay, OR, in February 1999, destroyed half of Clausen's 700 acres of oysters. Three claims (together totaling almost $325,000) have been settled with other Coos Bay oyster growers. Representatives of the ship owners claim the observed oyster mortality was due to natural causes. [Assoc Press]
FRESHWATER FISHERIES
MARINE MAMMALS
MMPA Hearing. On April 6, 2000, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the Marine Mammal Protection Act. [personal communication]
HABs and Marine Mammals. On Mar. 29, 2000, NMFS and National Ocean Service staff are scheduled to brief congressional staff in Dirksen Senate Office Bldg., Washington, DC, on the existing collaborative response network to respond to harmful algal blooms (HABs) and marine mammal mortality problems associated with these HABs. [personal communication]
Canadian Sealing. In late March 2000, the Canadian harp seal hunt off Prince Edward Island was scheduled to begin. However, seals are scarce and not concentrated due to the lack of pack ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. [Canadian Press]
On Mar. 23, 2000, the Japan Whaling Association and Japanese government officials questioned the validity of the IFAW survey, citing previous surveys taken in 1992-1995 indicating strong public support in Japan for whaling. [IFAW press release, Japan Whaling Association press release, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries (Japan) press release]
Bahamas Whale/Dolphin Standings. On Mar. 15, 2000, seventeen whales and dolphins of at least four species in three families (dense-beaked whales, goose-beaked whales, spotted dolphin, minke whales, rorqual) beached and 9 died in various locations around the Bahamas, coincidental to U.S. Navy antisubmarine exercises off the northern Bahamas on Mar. 15. The Navy denies any evidence linking the unusual whale beachings and the Naval exercises, which did not involve low-frequency active sonar. However, some biologists consider the large number of coincident strandings as well as the involvement of several species highly unusual and probably related in some way. [Assoc Press, Washington Post, personal communication]
On Mar. 22, 2000, Mexican officials announced that the San Ignacio lagoon area would be preserved and developed in a manner beneficial to local residents, emphasizing eco-tourism and nature-friendly businesses. [Embassy of Mexico press release, Reuters, International Fund for Animal Welfare press release, Assoc Press]
Sonar Lawsuit. On Feb. 29, 2000, a coalition of 10 national and Hawaiian organizations and Hawai'i County Council member Julie Jacobson filed suit in federal court (Honolulu) seeking to halt the U.S. Navy from deploying their Surveillance Towed Array Sonar System (SURTASS) low frequency active (LFA) sonar system. The plaintiffs claim the Navy is violating environmental law by developing this system before completing an analysis of the system's environmental effects and that the sonar system poses a threat to marine life and to human swimmers and divers. The lawsuit also seeks an injunction to prevent NMFS from processing the Navy's application for a deployment permit for the system. [Environment News Service]
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