Date: Wed, 03 Jul 1996 11:43:01 -0500 From: Gene Buck <[log in to unmask]> Info Summary for U.S. Congress and Staff -- Part 1 Fisheries Groups: I'm appending part of a regular update I prepare for congressional staff on fisheries and marine mammal public policy issues as I see them -- a selection of issues which I view as having potential public policy implications for the U.S. Congress. My role is to provide objective, non-partisan, unbiased public policy analysis for Congress. Thus, it is useful weekly to pass this summary by those subscribing to this list to solicit input about areas where my objectivity could be improved, where someone's bias shows through and should be adjusted, and where there are simply other issues of which I am unaware. Anyway, what follows is today's summary. Generally I add new items every morning, and remove items after they have been on the summary for about a month. Items in the summary are modified as I receive new information. In deference to those who have to pay for communications time, I post the entire summary once each month on the first Friday of the month, for those who do not monitor the group each week or wish the more complete format. This is longer the first Friday posting for July 1996 (posted July 3, 1996). NOTE: Archived copies of "first Friday" longer summaries for February 1994 through the present are now available at: "http://www.lsu.edu/guests/sglegal/public_html/" I would appreciate your feedback on this summary. Comments should be directed to me ([log in to unmask]). I will post this summary each Friday on this list as long as I continue to receive helpful feedback on issues. To further assist me in providing a broad scope of information resources to Congress, I would appreciate being added to any mailing lists of publications, news releases, newsletters, etc. relevant to marine mammals and fisheries. Where there is a subscription cost, a sample copy would provide a basis for deciding whether or not a subscription could be justified. Thanks for your assistance in this matter. Gene Buck Congressional Research Service - ENR Library of Congress Washington, DC 20540-7450 e-mail: <[log in to unmask]> Summary follows: New info and changes since 06/28/96 are bracketed {...}. Marine Fisheries {New England Groundfish. On July 1, 1996, the Associated Fisheries of Maine filed an amended complaint in U.S. District Court, challenging the legality of Magnuson Act regulations aimed at restoring depleted haddock, cod, and yellowtail flounder. The group claims the regulations seriously disadvantage the industry while providing little conservation benefit.} [Assoc Press] {Italian Driftnets. On July 1, 1996, EU Fisheries Commissioner Emma Bonino told Italy to respect international regulations on large-scale driftnets or face possible U.S. trade sanctions on Italian fishery products. Bonino reported that EU fishery enforcement patrols during June found that 15 of 16 Italian vessels inspected were using driftnets averaging twice the allowable length.} [Reuters] {Atlantic Salmon Treaty Quotas. In late June 1996, Denmark was the only nation opposed to stringent limits on Greenland's harvest of Atlantic salmon at the annual meeting of the North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization, thus allowing Greenland to establish a potentially higher quota. The International Council for the Exploration of the Sea had recommended a complete moratorium on harvest, based on improved stock assessment calculations that formerly may have grossly inflated fish abundance.} [Bangor Daily News via Greenwire] Fishing Moratorium. On June 27, 1996, Chinese Ministry of Agriculture officials announced that all offshore fishing will be prohibited for the months of July and August in areas of the southern Yellow and northern East China Seas to protect fish stocks, especially hairtail. A similar ban was imposed in 1995. [Assoc Press, Reuters] Seafood Deception Lawsuit. On June 27, 1996, the South Dakota Supreme Court affirmed a lower court decision and unanimously ruled that a seafood salesperson could legally sue their employer for deceit and deceptive trade practices. The seafood dealer had been found guilty of mislabeling by substituting cheaper grades of fish and overstating the weight of lobster. The salesperson claimed that their reputation had been marred by the employer's dishonest actions. [Assoc Press] Straddling Stocks Agreement. On June 26, 1996, the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations approved and ordered favorably reported the Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 Relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks, with one declaration, for Senate floor action on advice and consent concerning ratification. [Congr. Rec.] Mercury in Fish. In mid-June 1996, Thai government officials announced that elevated levels of mercury had been detected in fish sampled near natural gas platforms in the Gulf of Thailand. [Jour. of Commerce via Greenwire] Fishery Issues Stall EU-Canada Cooperation Accord. On June 26, 1996, Canada and the European Union were unable to conclude a broad cooperation accord due to difficulties with provisions condemning extra-territorialism, which Canada perceives as admitting its action during a 1995 dispute over turbot was illegal. Later this year, the International Court of Justice is to rule on the legality of Canada's actions during the turbot dispute. [Dow Jones News, Reuters] Seabird Deaths. In mid-June 1996, mortalities of as many as 10,000 seabirds (e.g., common murres) offshore of the central Oregon coast raised concerns about changing oceanic conditions. Warmer ocean conditions are believed to have depressed normal upwelling and changed nearshore production patterns, resulting in starvation of the seabirds. Murres have also abandoned usual nesting colonies. [Assoc Press] MA Fish Promotion. On June 25, 1996, the MA Governor's Seafood Task Force in cooperation with 125 MA retailers and restauranteurs began their "Making a Splash" promotion featuring mackerel, dogfish (cape shark), whiting, red hake, and herring to encourage development and use of less utilized species. [Assoc Press] Kodiak Cold Storage. In mid-June 1996, the Kodiak Chamber of Commerce's Economic Development Committee received an optimistic consultant's report on the feasibility of constructing a cold storage facility in Kodiak, AK, to mitigate problems of large fluctuations in seasonal unemployment. [Assoc Press] Rhode Island Oil Spill. On June 25, 1996, NMFS approved the reopening for lobstering of a 15-square mile area off southern Rhode Island, the last remaining area closed after the Jan. 19, 1996 North Cape oil spill. An adjacent area had been opened to lobstering on June 19, 1996. Organoleptic tests completed on June 18 found no traces of oil in 101 lobsters. [Assoc Press] Greenpeace Industrial Fishing Protest. On June 23-24, 1996, the Greenpeace vessel MV Sirius confronted 10 Danish and one Scottish vessel seeking industrial fish, such as sand eels and other small fish, off the east coast of Scotland at a fishing area known as the Wee Bankie. Greenpeace seeks to have industrial fishing banned in areas that they consider ecologically sensitive fish feeding grounds, such as the Wee Bankie, to promote fish stock recovery in the North Sea. The British Navy's armed fishery cruiser, Shetland, was dispatched to monitor the area. [Assoc Press, Reuters] Coral Reef Damage. On June 20, 1996, a Cypriot cargo ship, Million Hope, carrying 26,000 tons of potassium and phosphate, hit Red Sea coral reefs in a protected area south of Sharm el-Sheikh and spilled a small quantity of engine oil. The ship remains partially submerged in the reef area. [Reuters] Florida Net Ban. On June 19, 1996, Franklin County (FL) Judge Van Russell ruled that FL Marine Patrol officers can only measure the perimeter of a shrimp net opening, and not its length (unless the perimeter exceeds 66 feet), to determine whether the net violates the FL constitutional amendment banning use of large nets. Judge Van Russell issued an injunction to implement his ruling. Shrimpers had brought legal action contending the Marine Patrol had illegally changed its policy on net measurement. The FL Marine Fisheries Commission is appealing the Judge Van Russell's ruling, which only applies to Franklin County, and the Judge's injunction is stayed pending action on the appeal. On June 25, 1996, FL Governor Lawton Chile's Cabinet voted to prohibit shrimping in certain waters of Franklin, Wakulla, and Gulf Counties to better protect juvenile shrimp production areas. [Assoc Press] Coral Reef Symposium. On June 23-28, 1996, more than 1,000 scientists, legislators, and environmentalists from 90 nations are meeting in Panama for the 8th annual International Coral Reef Symposium. [Reuters] Sport Fishing Penalty. On June 21, 1996, two South Carolina sport anglers pleaded guilty to taking five times their limit in spottail bass and were each sentenced to $2,500 fines, loss of fishing licenses for a year, and 50 hours of community service. This was noted as the first time restitution had been ordered in a SC criminal case involving marine sport fishing. [Assoc Press] Coast Guard Boarding Refused. On June 20, 1996, the CA fisherman who denied a Coast Guard request for boarding in mid-May 1996 appeared in court to face criminal charges on resisting Coast Guard officers and refusing to permit them to inspect his vessel. A preliminary hearing has been set for July 11, 1996, in San Jose, CA. [Assoc Press] 1995 Beach Cleanup Report. On June 20, 1996, the Center for Marine Conservation reported that 135,000 volunteers in the annual beach cleanup held September 1995 removed 2.5 million pounds of trash from U.S. shores and beaches. This amount was 300,000 pounds less than in 1994 due to more hurricanes and fewer volunteers in the Caribbean. [Reuters] Distinctive Crab Labeling. On June 19, 1996, Maryland state officials unveiled distinctively labeled containers to be used to identify blue crabs processed in Maryland. [Assoc Press] EASTFISH. On June 14, 1996, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization announced that it had signed an agreement with Denmark to create a fish marketing and information service -- EASTFISH -- to assist in the transition to competitiveness for fishing industries of central and eastern European nations. [Reuters] Arrowtooth Flounder Processing. In mid-June 1996, a Univ. of Alaska scientist at the Kodiak Fishery Industry Technology Center announced development of a new non-chemical process to neutralize an enzyme that rapidly degrades myosin, making arrowtooth flounder turn mushy and difficult to process or market. [Assoc Press] Dairy Use of Fish Oils. On June 14, 1996, U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Tauro issued a temporary restraining order requiring a Boston area dairy to cease television ads implying a rival dairy's milk smells and tastes fishy because that dairy uses shark and halibut oil as vitamin supplements. [Assoc Press] Sea of Okhotsk Agreement. On June 13, 1996, the United States and Russia signed a bilateral agreement recognizing that all fishing within the international waters (peanut hole) in the central Sea of Okhotsk completely surrounded by the Russian economic zone should be conducted in line with Russian Federation rights, duties, and interests. In addition, the United States agreed to observe all Russian efforts to preserve fishery resources in the Sea of Okhotsk and cooperate with Russia in actions against fishing vessels of third countries. [Interfax] FL Approves Fishing Pier. On June 13, 1996, FL Governor Lawton Chiles and his Cabinet voted 5-2 to approve a controversial 900-foot fishing pier south of Jupiter Inlet, near Juno Beach. Controversy developed because three species of endangered or threatened sea turtles dig more than 1,400 nests within a half-mile of the pier site, making this an increasingly concentrated sea turtle nesting beach. The pier will be minimally lighted and closed at night during sea turtle nesting season. [Assoc Press] Exxon Agreement with Seattle Fish Processors. On June 11, 1996, U.S. District Judge H. Russel Holland released his opinion overturning a secret 1991 agreement whereby Exxon Corp. would have recovered about $730 million in punitive damages from the Exxon Valdez settlement awarded seven Seattle, WA fish processors. Judge Holland ruled that the processors had settled with Exxon and were due nothing further. Exxon is likely to appeal Judge Holland's decision. [Assoc Press] NTSB Concern for Older Fishing Vessels. On June 11, 1996, National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) officials reported that lax fire safety standards endanger an estimated 230,000 people working on fishing vessels built prior to 1991 and not currently required to meet more recent safety requirements. The NTSB recommended that the Coast Guard and other regulators require older fishing vessels to phase-in new safety requirements including smoke detectors and water sprinkler systems. [Assoc Press] Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Regulations. On June 10, 1996, NMFS announced regulations, effective June 18, 1996, increasing the allocation of 1996 Atlantic bluefin tuna quota to the Angling category and reopening the large school/small medium category for additional harvest. [NMFS press release] Weakfish Appeal Withdrawn. On June 10, 1996, the U.S. Dept. of Justice filed a notice of withdrawal on its appeal of a Feb. 1996 U.S. District Court order overturning a U.S. Commerce Dept. ban on East Coast weakfish (gray trout) harvest. The lower court held that Secretary of Commerce Brown exceeded his authority by closing the weakfish fishery. [Assoc Press] NMFS Violator's Vessel Purchased. On June 10, 1996, the Boston Herald reported that NOAA's New England Fishing Vessel Buyback Program paid $300,000 for the vessel of an individual facing criminal charges on a federal fisheries violation for landing scrubbed female lobsters. However, $100,000 of the $400,000 purchase price was withheld by NOAA to ensure than any penalties resulting from the violation are paid. [Reuters] Chesapeake Bay. On June 10, 1996, the Chesapeake Bay Program released a study reporting that underwater grasses in the Bay declined 8% (5,500 acres) in the past year. This was the second year of decreasing habitat cover following five years of increasing abundance of these grasses. Overall, grass acreage has increased almost 60% since 1984. On June 19, 1996, Virginia Institute of Marine Science officials announced that field survival tests of sterilized Asian oysters would begin in Chesapeake Bay by the end of 1996, a year earlier than previously anticipated. [Assoc Press] Oceans Day. June 8, 1996 was the annual celebration of World Oceans Day, first declared during the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. [Dow Jones News] Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone. In early June 1996, LA scientists detected the reappearance of the low-oxygen "dead zone" that can extend from the mouth of the Mississippi River to Texas. Development of the dead zone was delayed this year due to lower runoff. In 1995, the dead zone grew to an estimated 7,000 square miles off the LA coast. [Assoc Press] Tributyltin Enforcement. On June 5, 1996, VA Attorney General James Gilmore threatened to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over failure to regulate tributyltin (TBT). VA enacted a law to restrict TBT use. However, VA officials assert that this disadvantaged VA shipyards since EPA has never established a national TBT standard as directed by federal law in 1988. [Richmond Times-Dispatch via Greenwire] Driftnet Patrol. In early June 1996, the European Commission announced that it had chartered a patrol vessel for four and a half months to monitor driftnet fishing in the Mediterranean Sea and Northeast Atlantic. [Agence Europe via Reuters] Treaty Whiting Allocation. On June 5, 1996, NMFS announced that the Makah tribe of Washington State had been allocated 15,000 metric tons of Pacific whiting (hake) under historic Treaty rights. This is the first year for this Treaty allocation. Three other coastal tribes are entitled to similar rights but have not expressed an interest in receiving an allocation. On June 26, 1996, the West Coast Seafood Processors Assoc., the Midwater Trawlers Cooperative (Newport, OR), and the Fishermen's Marketing Assoc. (Eureka, CA) filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court (Portland, OR) seeking to void the allocation of whiting to the Makah tribe. The groups contend the allocation was arbitrary for a tribe having no treaty rights to the fish and violated the Magnuson Act. [Assoc Press] WWF Action Plan and Status Report. On June 6, 1996, the World Wide Fund for Nature published a status report entitled "Marine Fishes in the Wild," including a 10-point action plan to deal with concerns related to the condition of marine fisheries. [personal communication, Reuters] Brunswick Brand Sale. On June 5, 1996, Brunswick Corp. (Lake Forest, IL) announced that it had agreed to sell assets related to its Starcraft and MonArk fishing boat brands to Starcraft Marine LLC (New Paris, IN). [Dow Jones News] Mercury Warning for King Mackerel. On June 4, 1996, the State of Florida issued a warning against consumption of king mackerel larger than 39 inches from the Gulf of Mexico due to elevated levels of mercury. Consumption should be limited for king mackerel between 33 and 39 inches, with no restrictions on smaller king mackerel. [Assoc Press] Southeast Sea Turtle Mortalities. By mid-June 1996, the NC Wildlife Resources Commission and NMFS had counted 229 sea turtle strandings along NC beaches, only 118 less than the total for all 1995. {Between Apr. 28 and June 15, 1996, a total of 102 turtles stranded on SC beaches, more than twice the number recorded for the same period in 1995.} Primarily {juvenile} loggerhead turtles appear to be suffering from an undetermined illness, appearing to waste away with flippers and shells decomposing while the turtles remain alive less than 48 hours. In late June, 1996, NMFS imposed special restrictions on shrimp trawlers along the Georgia coast for 30-days (June 24 through July 24, 1996) in response to high levels of sea turtle stranding and mortality. Shrimp trawlers are prohibited from using soft turtle excluder devices (TEDs) and required to use hard TEDs in large try nets. {In late June 1996, increased numbers of dead turtles began to wash ashore along the FL panhandle.} [Assoc Press] European Fishing Fleet Restructuring. On June 4, 1996, United Kingdom officials announced that Britain would not comply with EU fleet reduction efforts until Spanish and Dutch quota hopping concerns were addressed. At a June 10, 1996 EU Fisheries Council meeting, British Fisheries Minister Tony Baldry called the European Commission proposal to reduce fishing fleets by as much as 40% unacceptable until the concern for quota hoppers is addressed. Currently Spanish vessels take 46% of the British hake quota, while Dutch vessels take 44% of Britain's North Sea plaice quota. [Reuters, Agence Europe via Reuters, Financial Times via Greenwire] Bluefin Tuna Oversight Hearing. On June 13, 1996, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife, and Oceans held an oversight hearing on management of bluefin tuna. [Congr. Record] Japan Considers Fishery Trade-Environment Legislation. On June 14, 1996, the proposed legislation that would impose restrictions on tuna imports from nations who fish Atlantic tuna indiscriminately was to have been introduced at a meeting of the House of Representatives' Committee on Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries. This measure seeks to balance trade with needed environmental protection, with consideration for possible World Trade Organization concerns. In addition, the bill urges the Japanese Government to work to establish an international regime to manage tuna resources worldwide. [Dow Jones News] Marine Fish Kills and Red Tide. On June 5, 1996, FL Dept. of Environmental Protection officials announced that Apalachicola Bay was being closed to oyster harvesting due to red tide. About 15% of the total U.S. oyster harvest comes from this area. [Assoc Press] Petition to Close MA Striped Bass Fishery. On June 6, 1996, the MA Marine Fisheries Commission and the Director of the Division of Marine Fisheries rejected a Coastal Conservation Association of MA petition to ban the commercial harvest and sale of wild striped bass. [MA Division of Marine Fisheries press release] Shark Evaluation Workshop. On June 4-6, 1996, NMFS's Southeast Fisheries Center was to have convened a scientific meeting to review the status of coastal and pelagic shark resources along the Atlantic coast. The meeting will evaluate the likelihood of stock rebuilding under current and alternative quota levels, and will provide the scientific basis for setting 1997 quotas and bag limits. [NMFS letter] North Pacific Council. In June 1996, the NPFMC will meet jointly with the International Pacific Halibut Commission to discuss halibut bycatch reduction. [Canadian Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans press release] Salmon Along the Pacific Coast {Mitchell Act Hearing. The House Resource Committee's Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife, and Oceans has indefinitely postponed an oversight hearing on Mitchell Act hatcheries in the Columbia River basin, which had been tentatively scheduled for July 16, 1996.} [personal communication] Plum Creek Habitat Conservation Plan. On June 27, 1996, the Plum Creek Timber Co. signed a 50-year habitat conservation plan with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service, for management of 170,000 acres of timber in Washington State's Cascade Mountains. In exchange for new management initiatives (e.g., large buffer areas along streams and wetlands protection), Plum Creek will be able to log areas previously restricted for endangered species protection. However, environmental groups have voiced concerns about the inability to respond to changing conditions under this plan. [Assoc Press, Plum Creek Timber Co. press release] Salmon Price-Fixing Suit. On July 12, 1996, Alaska Superior Court Judge John Reese has scheduled a hearing on whether to certify as a class action the $720 million lawsuit alleging 26 seafood processors and 10 Japanese trading companies with conspiring since 1989 to fix the price of Bristol Bay sockeye salmon. [Assoc Press] Nez Perce Logging OK. On June 24, 1996, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld Dec. 1994 lower court ruling that logging on three large U.S. Forest Service timber sales in the Cove and Mallard drainages in Idaho's Nez Perce National Forest would not harm salmon, saying the Forest Service adequately studied possible effects on Snake River chinook salmon. [Assoc Press] Klamath Salmon Case. On June 24, 1996, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court decision that offshore commercial and sport salmon fishing had to be limited to protect the fishing rights of Yurok and Hoopa Valley Tribes to Klamath River salmon in California. The challenge was based on the contention that the tribes lacked fishing rights since their reservations were created by executive order, rather than by treaty. [Assoc Press] Supplementation Hatchery Groundbreaking. On June 19, 1996, ground-breaking ceremonies were held for the first large-scale supplementation hatchery for spring chinook salmon on the Yakima River near Cle Elum, WA. Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) provided $14 million for hatchery construction. The hatchery is expected to be operating by April 1997. [Dow Jones News, BPA press release] Sport Canning of Salmon. In mid-June 1996, Alaska's Attorney General issued an opinion that barter of sport-caught salmon is illegal. The opinion outlined three criteria for identifying illegal barter, which can occur when sport fish are canned by non-professional processors. [Assoc Press] Outfitters' Appeal. On June 17, 1996, four Salmon River, ID, outfitters were to have filed an appeal of U.S. Forest Service restrictions limiting rafting on sections of the Salmon River during salmon spawning season. [Assoc Press] Sacramento River Spring Chinook Lawsuit. On June 17, 1996, CA State Senator Tom Hayden announced that he had joined the Natural Resources Defense Council and Environmental Protection Information Center in filing a lawsuit on June 12th in San Francisco Superior Court seeking a court order to compel the CA Fish and Game Commission to begin the process of placing the Sacramento/San Joaquin River spring chinook salmon on the CA state endangered species list. The lawsuit seeks a reduction in pumping of water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and other protective measures during the time the spring chinook are migrating through these waters. [Assoc Press, Sacramento Bee via Greenwire] Oregon Budget Cuts. On June 12, 1996, officials of the Oregon Dept.of Fish and Wildlife announced a 4% budget cut in response to a projected $6.8 million shortfall in revenues, primarily due to severely reduced salmon sport fishing license revenues. About 40 employees will be released in addition to 11 OR State Police fish and game officers. [Assoc Press] Salmon Recovery Plan Injunction. On June 12, 1996, a coalition of 10 fishing and environmental groups filed a motion for preliminary injunction in U.S. District Court, Portland, OR, accusing NMFS, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the Bureau of Reclamation of failing to implement water flow guidelines detailed in the March 1994 biological opinion on Snake River salmon. In mid-June 1996, the State of Oregon joined this lawsuit as a friend of the court. [Assoc Press] Salmon and Steelhead Recovery Hearing. On June 11, 1996, the Senate Environment and Public Works' Subcommittee on Drinking Water, Fisheries, and Wildlife held a hearing on implementation of Pacific Northwest salmon and recovery measures, including installation of the surface collector at Lower Granite Dam. [Congr. Record, Assoc Press] ESA Salmon and Steelhead Listings. On June 7, 1996, a coalition of 20 conservation and fishing groups filed a challenge in U.S. District Court in San Francisco to NMFS's court-ordered timetable for listing steelhead trout submitted on May 28. The coalition seeks to minimize any further delay in listing. On June 14, 1996, NMFS announced the following schedule for ESA listing decisions on additional species: chum salmon (Feb. 1997), sockeye salmon (Sept. 1997), chinook salmon (Dec. 1997), and cutthroat trout (Jan. 1998). On June 26, 1996, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston made public an order, {in response to the June 7, 1996 lawsuit, that NMFS decide by July 31, 1996,} whether it will list Pacific coast steelhead trout under the Endangered Species Act. [Seattle Post-Intelligencer via Greenwire, Assoc Press] Pacific Salmon Treaty. On June 13, 1996, AK Dept. of Fish and Game announced that sport catch of chinook salmon in southeast Alaska would be reduced on June 15 to one fish 28 inches or longer per day to better conserve chinook salmon spawning in BC waters. On June 20, 1996, Canadian DFO officials announced an estimated BC harvest of 7.325 million salmon, with no fishing on the Fraser River except for a possible October chum salmon opening. The anticipated 1996 harvest is about one-quarter of the average annual catch of 27 million salmon. On June 24, 1996, the three U.S. Commissioners to the Pacific Salmon Commission representing the States of Alaska, Washington and Oregon, and the Northwest Tribes signed a multi-year agreement on chinook salmon harvest quotas and restoration of damaged salmon habitat. The 1996 Southeast Alaska troll chinook salmon catch will be set between 140,000 and 155,000 fish, excluding Alaska hatchery production. The 1995 limit was 230,000 fish, but the fishery was halted by court action after a catch of about 175,000 chinook. The agreement among U.S. parties relies on in-season salmon abundance (Alaska's method) rather than preseason forecasts (the method used by Canada, Washington, and Oregon) as the basis for determining harvest quotas, and will be reviewed in 2003 to determine if renegotiation is necessary. Canadian officials have requested that the 1996 Southeast Alaska chinook harvest be limited to 60,000 fish. [Assoc Press, Reuters] Aquaculture Largemouth Bass Culture. On June 19, 1996, the Aquaculture Committee of the Mississippi AgriBusiness Council met to consider the merits of allowing the commercial sale of largemouth black bass produced by aquaculture operations. [Assoc Press] Catfish Loan Fraud. In mid-June 1996, a federal grand jury in Oxford, MS, indicted a farm loan bank and two of its officers for allegedly lying to the Farmers Home Administration to recover proceeds from a $975,000 catfish grower loan. [Assoc Press] MN Underwater World Opening. On June 14, 1996, the second Underwater World aquarium in the United States will open at the Mall of America in Bloomington, MN. [Assoc Press] First Aquaculture in the EEZ Approved. On June 6, 1996, the New England Fishery Management Council voted unanimously to approve an alternate site location for the Westport Sea Scallop Project, a Saltonstall-Kennedy Act funded project of the MA Institute of Technology Sea Grant Program and others, to accommodate user conflicts at the originally proposed site. Final regulations on the 9 sq. mile site in the offshore exclusive economic zone are anticipated to be published in the Federal Register in early fall 1996. The approval process for the project spanned more than two years. [personal communication] .... end of Part 1
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