From: Kate Wing <[log in to unmask]>
Fisheries and Marine Mammals: Most Recent Developments Congressional Research Service
New info and changes since 5/01/97 are bracketed {...}. New info and changes since 5/8/97 are in CAPITAL LETTERS.
Marine Fisheries
NOAA Environmental Valuation Workshop. On May 14-15, 1997, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has scheduled a free workshop on environmental valuation for coastal and marine resource managers, planners, and decision makers, to be held in Orlando, FL. The workshop will focus on modern economic methods and tools to address problems of valuing environmental amenities, such as wetlands, beaches, and recreational activities. [NOAA announcement]
{Abalone Harvesting Ban. On May 6, 1997, the CA Fish and Game Commission approved a four-month moratorium on sport and commercial harvesting of red abalone from San Francisco to the Mexican border. Biologists report the population has declined 75% in the last two decades. Red abalone retail for as much as $85 per pound in southern CA.} [Assoc Press]
Coral Reef Hearing. On May 6, 1997, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans {held a hearing} on H.Res. 87, expressing the sense of Congress that the United States and the United Nations condemn harmful coral reef fisheries and promote sustainable coral reef fishery practices. [Federal Register]
{Shells Seafood Restaurant Expansion. On May 5, 1997, Shells Seafood Restaurants, Inc. opened its first Shells restaurant outside FL, in Florence, KY, a Cincinnati, OH, suburb.} [Shells Seafood Restaurants press release]
{Tribal Shellfish Harvesting. On May 5, 1997, three U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges heard 3 1/2 hours of arguments wherein the state of WA, coastal property owners, and shellfish growers are challenging Tribes and the U.S. government, in hopes of modifying portions of a 1994 ruling by U.S. District Judge Edward Rafeedie giving 16 Tribes the right to harvest half the shellfish on Puget Sound, WA, beaches.} [Assoc Press]
{Vibrio Vulnificus. On May 5, 1997, LA State Univ. researchers reported, at a meeting of the American Society of Microbiology in Miami Beach, FL, the discovery of a new cold and low salinity treatment that kills Vibrio vulnificus bacteria.} [Assoc Press]
{Summer Flounder. In early May 1997, the state of CT filed notice of intent to sue with the Dept. of Commerce over perceived inequities in the state-by-state commercial harvest quotas for summer flounder (fluke).} [Assoc Press]
{Bumble Bee Seafoods Sale. On May 2, 1997, officials of Bumble Bee Seafoods Inc. announced that the firm had been purchased from its parent Thai corporation, Unicord PLC, by Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst Inc. (Dallas, TX) through its subsidiary, International Home Foods Inc. for $163 million plus assumption of liabilities. Bumble Bee filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to allow operation while the transaction is completed.} [Assoc Press, Reuters]
Non-Profit Fishermen's Associations. On Apr. 30, 1997, the AK House voted 36-3 to approve a bill allowing dive fishermen to form non-profit associations that could tax themselves to provide funds for state management of the fishery. [Assoc Press]
Toothfish Overfishing. On Apr. 29, 1997, S. African officials reported that enforcement would be increased to better control the Patagonia toothfish fishery around Prince Edward Islands, between S. Africa and the Antarctic. The fishery, initiated in 1995, is thought to be rapidly overfishing this species for Asian and American markets. {THIS SPECIES IS REPORTED TO SELL IN JAPAN AS "MERO" FOR $7,000 PER METRIC TON.} In April 1997, French naval forces intercepted 3 vessels suspected of poaching toothfish in the vicinity of Crozet Island. Britain was reported to have sent naval ships to the Antarctic to control overfishing for this species, and New Zealand has increased aerial surveillance flights. Reflagged vessels from Spain, Norway, and the United States, {BASED IN MADAGASCAR, MAURITIUS, AND NAMIBIA,} are thought to be among vessels participating in this fishery. {ON MAY 8, 1997, NEW ZEALAND OFFICIALS ANNOUNCED THAT THEY WOULD QUERY CHINESE OFFICIALS ON A REPORT BY THE CONSERVATION GROUP TRAFFIC THAT CHINA WAS PREPARING A 200-VESSEL FLEET TO HARVEST TOOTHFISH IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN. TOOTHFISH OVERFISHING IS SCHEDULED TO BE DISCUSSED AT AN ANTARCTIC TREATY CONSULTATIVE MEETING IN CHRISTCHURCH, NZ, IN LATE MAY 1997.} [Reuters, Assoc Press]
Pfiesteria in NC. On Apr. 28, 1997, researchers at East Carolina Univ. released preliminary findings in a study of more than 250 crab fishermen and more than 490 coastal residents, concluding that Pfiesteria piscicida poses no serious threat to humans. On Apr. 30, 1997, the NC Dept. of Environment, Health, and Natural Resources issued guidelines and instructions for local health officials warning of possible dangers to swimmers and fishermen associated with Pfiesteria piscicida, a toxic dinoflagellate linked to heavy fish kills in eastern NC waters. However, officials acknowledged the absence of scientific proof that exposure to Pfiesteria poses any serious public health threat. [Assoc Press]
VA Oyster Lawsuit. In late April 1997, a group of Chesapeake Bay watermen filed suit in Richmond Circuit Court against the VA Marine Resources Commission (VMRC), seeking to halt an oyster growing experiment that would close 3 acres of public oyster beds. The group charges that VMRC is using state funds from oyster taxes to illegally benefit a few select individuals and is closing public oyster beds without a required public hearing. [Assoc Press]
Russia Ratifies Straddling Stocks Agreement. On Apr. 25, 1997, the Russian press reported that President Boris Yeltsin had signed a federal law on ratification of the Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea Relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks. [ITAR-TASS via Foreign Broadcast Information Service]
Italian Driftnet Reconversion. On Apr. 25, 1997, the European Parliament approved, with amendments, proposed funding for reconversion of the Italian swordfish driftnet fleet to alternative gear. Italy and the EU will co-fund the reconversion, together contributing as much as 100 million ECUs during a 3-year period. The Parliament stressed that the problem is not resolved as certain other countries continue to use drift nets in the Mediterranean. {On May 2, 1997, the EU Council approved the financing of the Italian plan to reconvert their swordfish fleet to eliminate driftnet use. However, Greenpeace is concerned that Italy may simply sell driftnets to other Mediterranean countries where they would still be used.} [Agence Europe via Reuters]
Herring Roe Price Protest. On Apr. 25, 1997, fishermen decided not to harvest herring in a 30-minute Lower Cook Inlet sac roe fishery opening in Kamishak Bay, AK, after Japanese buyers quoted prices of $300 or less per ton. In 1996, sac roe herring from this fishery reportedly were sold for $1,800 to $2,000 per ton. [Assoc Press]
Essential Fish Habitat. On Apr. 23, 1997, NMFS published proposed regulations for describing and identifying essential fish habitat in fishery management plans, adverse impacts on essential fish habitat, and actions to conserve and enhance essential fish habitat. Proposed regulations also provide a process for coordination and consultation with federal and state agencies on activities that may adversely affect essential fish habitat. Public comment is being accepted through May 23, 1997. {Four public meetings on the proposed regulations are scheduled in NJ (May 12), LA (May 13), WA (May 20), and AK (May 21).} [Federal Register]
NC Commercial Fishery Moratorium. On Apr. 23, 1997, the NC House Committee on Environment unanimously passed a package of fishery reform measures, including a cap on the number of commercial fishing licenses, increased commercial fishing license fees, a reduction in membership of the Marine Fisheries Commission from 17 to 9, strengthened fishery law enforcement, restrictions on the type of net that could be fished, and a mechanism for involving various environmental commissions in drafting plans to improve fish habitat. The proposal does not include license fees for saltwater sport anglers. This measure moves next to the House's Judiciary and Finance Committees. [Assoc Press]
AK Halibut Charter Boat Fishery. On Apr. 23, 1997, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council voted to release for public review a condensed version of a 900-page report on proposals to regulate the AK halibut charter boat fishery. The proposals will be discussed at the Council's Sept. 1997 meeting. [Assoc Press]
ICCAT Advisory Meeting. On Apr. 22-24, 1997, the advisory committee to the U.S. section to the International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) will meet in Silver Spring, MD, to discuss 1996 ICCAT accomplishments, 1997 management and research activities, trade and compliance issues, implementation of Sustainable Fisheries Act provisions, and results of species working group meetings. [Federal Register]
Sharks. On Apr. 22, 1997, the VA Marine Resources Commission voted to prohibit the commercial landing of sharks less than 58 inches in length. {On May 2, 1997, a coalition of commercial fishermen filed suit against the U.S. Dept. of Commerce in federal District Court, arguing that catch limits for Atlantic sharks are arbitrary and capricious and contending that NMFS violated its regulatory procedures.} [Assoc Press]
French Port Blockade. On Apr. 22, 1997, French fishing vessels blockaded the French ports of Calais, Boulogne, and Dunkirk, in a protest of EU regulations increasing mesh size for fixed sole nets from 80 mm to 120 mm in Jan. 1998. On Apr. 23, 1997, a French court ordered the fishermen to lift the blockade. The fishermen complied on Apr. 24, after French officials promised to raise fishermen's concerns at a June 17 EU ministers' meeting and negotiated for shipping companies to drop claims for compensation from the fishermen for losses during the blockade. [Dow Jones News, Reuters]
Navy Pays for Coral Reef Damage. On Apr. 22, 1997, the FL Dept. of Environmental Protection signed a settlement agreement with the U.S. Navy, whereby the Navy will pay FL $750,000 to settle a $2 million lawsuit over coral reef damage by a nuclear submarine on Feb. 25, 1993, near Hollywood, FL. [Assoc Press]
Japan-China Fishery Agreement. On Apr. 21-22, 1997, Japanese and Chinese negotiators conducted working-level discussions on a new provisional bilateral fishery agreement. Negotiators agreed to consider a fishery agreement separately from territorial disputes. Negotiators will resume discussions in May 1997 in Beijing, with the objective of concluding an agreement by summer 1997. [Dow Jones News]
New England Groundfish. On Apr. 21, 1997, the U.S. Dept. of Commerce/NOAA charged 2 New Bedford, MA, seafood companies with 113 violations for illegally buying and selling groundfish and scallops over an 18-month period. NOAA alleges that false reporting permitted vessels to fish longer than allowed and to land more fish than permitted. NOAA is seeking $4.7 million in civil penalties and revocation of dealer permits held by the 2 companies. {On May 3, 1997, the U.S. Coast Guard seized the catch from 2 vessels found fishing in closed waters off Cape Cod, MA.} [Assoc Press, NOAA press release]
AK IFQ Case. On Apr. 21, 1997, the U.S. Supreme Court denied a hearing on the lawsuit of the Alliance Against IFQs (individual fishing quotas) against the U.S. Dept. of Commerce and the North Pacific Fishery Management Council, wherein the Alliance argued that the federal quota system unfairly eliminated fishermen from AK's halibut and blackcod fisheries. [Assoc Press]
Japanese Fisheries White Paper. On Apr. 18, 1997, Japan's Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries released a white paper on fisheries, calling for international cooperation in fishery management and enhanced measures to protect fisheries from oil spill damage. [Dow Jones News]
Tri-Tech Fishing Services Sale. On Apr. 17, 1997, Smith International, Inc. announced that it had completed acquisition of Tri-Tech Fishing Services, LLC (Lafayette, LA). Tri-Tech is a supplier of fishing services in the Gulf of Mexico, TX, and LA, and had 1996 revenues of about $13 million. [Dow Jones News]
Servac Sale. On Apr. 17, 1997, Dow Jones reported that Ira Food Brokers Inc. had agreed to acquire Servac Inc. and Servac International Inc.; Servac is a commercial fishing business with assets of about $14 million and 1996 sales of about $2.2 million. [Dow Jones News]
Mississippi Floodwaters. On Apr. 17, 1997, the last 18 bays of the Bonnet Carre Spillway were scheduled to be closed, terminating a one-month release of Mississippi River floodwater into Lake Pontchartrain, LA. [Assoc Press]
CITES Proposal - Sharks. On Apr. 16, 1997, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) announced that it would not submit a proposal to list western Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico populations of requiem sharks and spiny dogfish on CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wildlife Fauna and Flora) Appendix II, although FWS believes these species meet the requirements for inclusion on this Appendix. As an alternative, the United States is submitting a draft resolution proposing establishment of a Marine Fishes Working Group to address implementation issues associated with placing marine fish on Appendix II. The United States anticipates proposing shark species for Appendix II at the 1999 CITES meeting. On Apr. 25, 1997, Japanese officials were reported to be opposed to this proposal on the grounds that it would cause undue pressure on Japan's fishing industry, and that CITES was an inappropriate forum for discussion of fishery management. [Federal Register, Tokyo Kyodo via Foreign Broadcast Information Service]
CITES Proposal - Sawfishes. On Apr. 16, 1997, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that it had submitted a proposal to list all sawfishes on CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wildlife Fauna and Flora) Appendix I. [Federal Register]
Subsistence Halibut Fishery. On Apr. 16, 1997, the AK House voted 24-13 to approve a resolution calling on the North Pacific Fishery Management Council to reject a proposal to create a subsistence fishery for halibut in state and federal waters off AK. {ON MAY 8, 1997, THIS RESOLUTION WAS APPROVED BY THE AK SENATE.} [Assoc Press] .... End of Part 1/3
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