Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 08:39:52 -0400 From: Kate Wing <[log in to unmask]>
Fishing Access. On Apr. 4, 1997, the Madison County (MT) Board of Commissioners {held a two-hour hearing and unanimously voted to repeal a September} 1995 ordinance prohibiting landowners from constructing fences designed to hinder fisherman access on county rights-of-way easements near bridges. After the ordinance was originally enacted, five landowners filed suit against the County, claiming the ordinance condemned a portion of their property without providing compensation. These landowners said they would drop their lawsuit if the ordinance was repealed. [Assoc Press]
Fishing Access Purchase. On Mar. 31, 1997, NY Governor George Pataki announced that NY will purchase $1 million worth of public fishing access rights during the next fiscal year. The purchase would be funded by money approved by voters in the 1996 Clean Water-Clean Air Bond Act. [Assoc Press]
Chippewa Treaty Fishing. On Apr. 2, 1997, the MN Dept. of Natural Resources held the first of 7 public information meetings scheduled to explain Treaty fishing rights before the 8 Chippewa bands begin spearfishing and gillnetting on Lake Mille Lacs and 28 other central MN lakes. {On Apr. 7, 1997, MN Governor Arne Carlson gave a statewide televised address during evening news broadcasts to stress the importance of avoiding tension and preventing violence in implementing treaty fishing rights. Both the MN House and Senate have approved spending $6.5 million to help with Treaty enforcement, but differ on from what account these funds are to be taken. On Apr. 9, 1997, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a stay on the exercise of Treaty fishing rights by 8 Chippewa bands in east-central MN until the Court had the opportunity to rule on the state of MN's appeal. Arguments on the appeal are scheduled for June 1997.} [Assoc Press]
Barton Springs Salamander Protection. On Mar. 26, 1997, U.S. District Judge Lucius Bunton ruled that Interior Secretary Babbitt violated the Endangered Species Act in 1996 when he withdrew the proposed listing of Texas' Barton Springs salamander after state agencies agreed with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on a cooperative conservation plan for the species. [Assoc Press]
Bull Trout. On Mar. 25, 1997, 2 MT conservation groups asked U.S. District Judge Robert Jones to order the Fish and Wildlife Service to immediately list bull trout as a threatened or endangered species. {On Apr. 7, 1997, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service filed a brief informing Judge Jones that it will propose listing Klamath River and Columbia River bull trout populations as endangered or threatened species.} [Assoc Press, NW Fishletter No. 30]
Eurasian Ruffe Symposium. On Mar. 21, 1997, the National Sea Grant College Program is sponsoring an international symposium in Ann Arbor, MI, on eurasian ruffe, an unintentionally introduced species in the Great Lakes. [Sea Grant press release]
Uncollected Fishing License Fees. On Mar. 18, 1997, state examiners released an audit of the WA Dept. of Fish and Wildlife indicating as much as $730,000 is owed the Dept., mostly from 1994 hunting and fishing license sales at retail outlets. At least 155 outlets failed to submit license revenues. [Assoc Press]
Marine Mammals
Polar Bear Hearing. The House Resources Committee has tentatively scheduled a hearing for Apr. 30, 1997, on H.J.Res. 59, a joint resolution to disapprove a rule affecting polar bear trophies from Canada issued by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. [personal communication]
{DOLPHIN INTERACTION. ON APR. 10, 1997, SEA WORLD OF FLORIDA BEGAN A DOLPHIN INTERACTION PROGRAM, WHEREIN EIGHT PARTICIPANTS PAY FOR A DAY OF EDUCATION ABOUT AND INTERACTION WITH DOLPHINS.} [SEA WORLD OF FLORIDA PRESS RELEASE]
Tuna-Dolphin Hearing. On Apr. 9, 1997, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans held a hearing on H.R. 408, amendments to the Marine Mammal Protection Act to support the International Dolphin Conservation Program. [personal communication]
{Mexican Whale and Dolphin Emergency. On Apr. 7, 1997, Mexican environmental authorities reported that 162 dolphins found dead on Gulf of California beaches earlier this year probably had been killed by red tide toxins, discounting earlier reports that a toxic spill or cyanide chemicals used by drug traffickers had caused these deaths.} [Assoc Press]
Atlantic Large Whale Protection. On {Apr. 7, 1997, NMFS published a proposed take reduction plan and implementing regulations for northern right whales, humpback whales, fin whales, and minke whales in the Federal Register that would restrict fishing times in whale habitat off New England and the mid-Atlantic} in Cape Cod Bay, the Great South Channel, and several other areas. In addition, fishing gear modification would be required to allow whales to break free of gear in case of incidental entanglement, and response and assistance for entangled whales would be improved. {Maine officials contend the required gear modification will cost the lobster industry between $40 million and $70 million.} Public comments will be received until May 15, 1997. [Assoc Press, Federal Register]
{WHALING PROTESTER. ON APR. 3, 1997, DUTCH POLICE ARRESTED PAUL WATSON ON A NORWEGIAN WARRANT ISSUED BY INTERPOL. WATSON WAS CONVICTED IN ABSENTIA IN MAY 1994 FOR PARTICIPATING IN SINKING A NORWEGIAN WHALING VESSEL. WATSON IS BEING HELD BY DUTCH AUTHORITIES WHILE A DUTCH COURT DECIDES WHETHER TO EXTRADITE HIM TO NORWAY.} [ASSOC PRESS]
Canadian Sealing. On Mar. 29, 1997, the International Fund for Animal Welfare released a video claiming to show illegal hunting of young, whitecoat seals by sealers in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in mid-March 1997. Federal authorities reported that some white-looking seals can be older and technically not the younger, whitecoat seals. [Assoc Press]
West Coast Pinniped Draft Report. On Mar. 27, 1997, NMFS released a 17-page draft report to Congress on west coast pinnipeds (seals and sea lions). The report recommends, under certain situations, killing some particularly voracious Pacific harbor seals and California sea lions to protect endangered salmon. In addition, the report suggests that fishermen be allowed to kill sea lions and seals as a last resort to protect gear and catch. West coast seal and sea lion populations are reported to consume 217,000 metric tons of fish and shellfish annually. [Assoc Press]
NZ Sea Lion Protection. On Mar. 25, 1997, New Zealand officials closed a squid fishery in the Southern Ocean for the remainder of 1997 to protect a population of Hooker's sea lions. In balancing economic interests against ecological damage, fishing industry representatives claimed early closure of the fishery would result in a $13.9 million loss in export income to protect the rare sea lions after an estimated 100 animals were drowned in squid nets. [Reuters]
Japanese Coastal Whaling. On Mar. 19-21, 1997, an international workshop convened in Sendai, Japan, to consider Japan's request to the International Whaling Commission (IWC) for permission to conduct a limited coastal hunt to kill 50 minke whales. Recommendations from the workshop will be presented at the annual IWC meeting in October 1997 in Monaco. [Dow Jones News]
Gully Protection. On Mar. 19, 1997, World Wildlife Fund Canada launched a campaign to obtain federal government commitment to protect The Gully, an underwater canyon near Sable Island off Nova Scotia, said to be deeper and wider than the Grand Canyon. The Gully is habitat for a population of northern bottlenose whales, a species added to Canada's List of Species at Risk in 1996. Concerns include petroleum exploration and development near The Gully. [World Wildlife Fund Canada press release via Dow Jones News]
Ballard Locks Sea Lions. On Mar. 17, 1997, NMFS officials reported a dramatic decline in the amount of time sea lions have spent around Ballard Locks, WA, feeding on migration steelhead trout and salmon -- from 91 hours in the first 2 months of 1996 to only 16 minutes during the same period in 1997. NMFS believes that capturing and retaining 3 sea lions in captivity in May 1996 is responsible for the difference. [Assoc Press]
Greenland Minke Whale Quota. On Mar. 14, 1997, the Greenland newspaper Sermitsiak reported that Greenland officials had announced the 1997 aboriginal minke whale quota, with 148 minke whales for western Greenland communities (99 of which are to be taken by fishing boats equipped with harpoon guns) and 12 whales for eastern Greenland communities. Since 1997 is the final year of Greenland's 3-year aboriginal quota from the International Whaling Commission (IWC), the IWC will consider new quotas at its October 1997 meeting. [High North Alliance News]
NAMMCO Scientific Committee Meeting. On Mar. 10-14, 1997, the Scientific Committee of the North Atlantic Marine Mammal Commission (NAMMCO) met in Tromso, Norway. Discussion focused on the role of whales and seals in the marine ecosystem. New information on the abundance of several whale stocks was reviewed -- 72,000 for the central North Atlantic stock of minke whales; 22,800 for fin whales in the North Atlantic east of Greenland; and 9,250 for sei whales in the North Atlantic east of Greenland. New survey data were reported to have confirmed earlier estimates of northeast Atlantic pilot whale abundance as stable at 778,000. In reviewing ecological studies, the Scientific Committee concluded that minke whales, harp seals, and hooded seals may have substantial direct and/or indirect effects on commercial fish stocks, but recommended that knowledge be improved. The annual meeting of NAMMCO's Council will be held on May 27-30, 1997, in the Faroe Islands. [High North Alliance News] .... end of Part 3/3 eof
|