From: Kate Wing <[log in to unmask]>
Fisheries and Marine Mammals: Most Recent Developments Environment and Natural Resources Policy Division Congressional Research Service
New info and changes since 5/15/97 are bracketed {...}. New info and changes since 5/21/97 are in CAPITAL LETTERS.
Marine Fisheries
{Van Camp Seafood Sale. A June 25, 1997, hearing on the proposed sale of Van Camp Seafood Co., Inc. to Tri-Union Seafoods LLC for approx. $90 million has been set by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, San Diego, CA. The Van Camp sale motion states that Tri-Union will pay $8.5 million if, within 3 years of sale closing, Tri-Union merges with more than 50% of the securities or assets of Bumble Bee Seafoods Inc.} [Dow Jones News]
AK Tax Loan Program Terminating. On May 25, 1997, AK's state loan program to assist commercial fishermen in paying off debts to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service will terminate, having not been extended by the State Legislature. Under this 3-year program, about 220 fishermen obtained loans for IRS debts. [Assoc Press]
{PANELISTS NAMED FOR NAS ITQ STUDY. ON MAY 22, 1997, NOAA ANNOUNCED THE NAMES OF APPOINTEES TO TWO 15-MEMBER PANELS (EAST COAST AND WEST COAST) TO PROVIDE GUIDANCE TO NMFS ON PUBLIC INPUT FOR THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES (NAS) STUDY ON INDIVIDUAL FISHING QUOTAS (ITQs). THE PANELS WILL ASSIST NMFS IN EVALUATING THE NAS STUDY AND IN PREPARING AN NMFS RESPONSE TO THAT STUDY.} [NOAA PRESS RELEASE]
{Striped Bass. On May 22, 1997, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has tentatively scheduled a markup on H.R. 1658, reauthorization and amendment of the Atlantic Striped Bass Conservation Act.} [personal communication]
{ALASKA SEAFOOD CENTER. ON MAY 20, 1997, THE AK INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND EXPORT AUTHORITY APPROVED $10 MILLION IN INITIAL FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FOR TAIWANESE DEVELOPMENT OF A $120 MILLION, 184,000 SQ. FOOT AK SEAFOOD CENTER IN ANCHORAGE, TO PRODUCE 100 MILLION POUNDS OF PREPARED SEAFOOD PRODUCT ANNUALLY FROM RAW POLLOCK, COD, SALMON, HALIBUT, AND FLATFISH.} [REUTERS]
{Whiting Harvest Agreement. On May 20, 1997, the U.S. Dept. of Justice announced its approval for the Whiting Conservation Cooperative (Alaska Ocean Seafood, American Seafoods, Glacier Fish Co., and Tyson Seafood Group) to divide among themselves the 34% of the annual Pacific whiting harvest allocated to the catcher-processor fleet as a group rather than compete in harvesting this quota.} [Assoc Press]
{Quota Hopping. On May 20, 1997, British and EU officials began discussions on how to address concerns for controlling "quota hopping" wherein Spanish, Dutch, and other foreign fishermen have legally obtained British commercial fishing licenses and thus gained shares of British fish quotas.} [Reuters]
{SHARK CARTILAGE INEFFECTIVE AS CANCER TREATMENT. ON MAY 19, 1997, RESULTS OF A STUDY PRESENTED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY IN DENVER, CO, CONCLUDED THAT SHARK CARTILAGE WAS INACTIVE IN PATIENTS WITH ADVANCED STAGES OF BREAST, COLON, LUNG, AND PROSTATE CANCER.} [MIDWESTERN REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER PRESS RELEASE]
{Chilean Trawler Denial. On May 19, 1997, a Chilean court revoked the license of the $65 million, 311-foot, Norwegian supertrawler, American Monarch, that had sought access to hoki and blue whiting stocks in waters off Chile. The vessel remains idle in Seattle, WA.} [Dow Jones News, Assoc Press]
{Carbon Monoxide in Tuna? On May 19, 1997, Japanese Health and Welfare Ministry officials announced that they had begun an inquiry into the alleged injection of carbon monoxide into frozen imported raw tuna to redden its flesh, thus potentially deceiving consumers as to its freshness.} [Dow Jones News]
{Canadian Atlantic Groundfish. On May 19, 1997, Canada opened the season for a limited cod fishery off Newfoundland. This is the first commercial cod fishery in 4 years in this region. About 5,500 fishermen will harvest a 16,000 ton quota.} [Assoc Press]
{LA Oil Pipeline Spill. On May 16, 1997, an oil pipeline ruptured near Lake Barre southwest of New Orleans, LA, spilling between 10,500 gallons and 16,800 gallons of medium-weight oil. LA authorities will decide whether or not to permit shrimp trawling in the area, depend upon how spill cleanup progresses. On May 19, 1997, Texaco officials increased the estimate of oil spilled to as much as 210,000 gallons. Although no areas have been closed to shrimp trawling, shrimpers were advised to avoid the area near the spill. On May 19, 1997, LA health officials closed the area to oyster harvesting. Consumers have been warned by LA health officials not to eat seafood with a noticeable petroleum odor or flavor.} [Dow Jones News, Reuters, Assoc Press]
Developing El Nino. On May 15, 1997, NOAA announced that early indications had been detected of, and models appeared to confirm, a developing el nino condition in the tropical Pacific Ocean. [NOAA press release]
NC Commercial Fishery Moratorium. On May 15, 1997, the NC House Judiciary Committee approved the 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 package moves next to the House's Finance Committee. [Assoc Press]
{RUSSIAN FISHERY ENFORCEMENT. IN MID-MAY 1997, RUSSIAN INTERIOR MINISTER ANATOLY KULIKOV ANNOUNCED HIS INTENTION TO CREATE A REGIONAL COORDINATION CENTER FOR FISHERIES ENFORCEMENT IN THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST, UNITING EFFORTS OF LAW ENFORCEMENT BODIES, BORDER GUARDS, FISHERY PROTECTION SERVICES, REGULAR ARMY UNITS, AND VARIOUS INFORMATION AND INTELLIGENCE SERVICES.} [INTERFAX]
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]
Menhaden Restrictions. On May 14, 1997, the NY State Assembly and Senate approved legislation to restrict menhaden harvesting in Long Island Sound, due to increasing conflicts with sport fishing. The measure postpones the annual opening of menhaden season from May to July 4, and prohibits menhaden fishing on weekends and holidays. [Assoc Press]
U.S.-Russia Maritime Boundary. In mid-May 1997, U.S. and Russian negotiators decided to postpone further talks until late summer or early fall on resolving continuing questions that are stalling Russian ratification of a 1990 Treaty between the United States and the former Soviet Union establishing a maritime boundary in the Arctic Ocean and Bering and Chukchi Seas. [Assoc Press]
Fine for Untreated Sewage. On May 12, 1997, AK Superior Court Judge Fred Torrisi fined a Seattle-based seafood processing company for discharging untreated sewage into Bristol Bay, AK, waters, and using unsanitary water to process fish. [Assoc Press]
EU Fishing Fleet Restructuring. On May 12, 1997, new British Agriculture Minister Jack Cunningham announced that, while Britain will continue work to eliminate "quota hoppers," it will not veto a June 1997 review of the EU treaty by an inter-governmental conference in Amsterdam. [Reuters]
Rotten Shrimp Fine. On May 12, 1997, U.S. District Judge Susan C. Bucklew fined a St. Petersburg, FL, company $1 million and sentenced two of its executives to prison sentences for treating imported rotting shrimp with chemicals and distributing it to U.S. markets. [Assoc Press, Reuters]
Seafood Inspection. On May 12, 1997, officials of the Clinton Administration proposed that more seafood inspectors be hired, as part of a broad plan to increase surveillance of imported foods and improve U.S. food safety. [Reuters]
Oil Terminal Blockade. On May 12, 1997, fourteen fishing vessels began a blockade of the Sullom Voe loading port for Brent crude oil in the UK's Shetland Islands in protest of a dispute with the International Oil Pollution Compensation Fund over suspension of compensation payments for the 1993 Braer tanker spill. Compensation payments ceased in October 1995 when the compensation limit for a single claim was reached. Late on May 12, the Shetland Islands Council issued a special directive ordering the protesters to leave the harbor or be charged with a criminal offense. On May 13, 1997, the 14 protesting fishing vessels dispersed after being informed that they would be charged by police and could be liable for demurrage costs. [Dow Jones News, Reuters]
EU Troops Clash with Puerto Rican Fishermen. On May 11, 1997, about 35 Puerto Rican fishermen from the island of Vieques were reported to have clashed with troops aboard 6 naval vessels from Belgium and the Netherlands anchored in a popular fishing area which the fishermen claimed was reserved for civilian activities. The U.S. Navy owns portions of Vieques and allows other nations to conduct exercises there. [Dow Jones News]
Subsistence Halibut Fishery. On May 8, 1997, 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 was approved by the AK Senate. [Assoc Press]
ME Herring. In early May 1997, ME Governor Angus King announced that 6,000 metric tons of herring could be caught by ME fishermen in the Gulf of Maine and delivered to offshore foreign "internal-waters" processors, beginning in July 1997. [Assoc Press]
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. On May 15, 1997, the CA State Senate voted 25-6 to approve a bill imposing an indefinite moratorium on harvesting red abalone south of San Francisco. [Assoc Press]
Coral Reefs. 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. {The Subcommittee has tentatively scheduled a markup on this measure for May 22, 1997.} [Federal Register, personal communication]
Chesapeake Bay. On May 5, 1997, NOAA released the results of the first Bay-wide blue crab stock assessment by 9 state and federal scientists, concluding that Chesapeake Bay's blue crab population has remained stable since the 1950s, despite increasing harvest. While the blue crab stock is providing near maximum sustainable yield, the fishery is severely overcapitalized and operates at extremely low levels of economic efficiency. Since 1945, fishing effort has increased five-fold. On May 7, 1997, VA Institute of Marine Science biologists began an experiment transplanting sterile Japanese oysters at 9 sites (600 oysters per site) to test their ability to survive and grow in Chesapeake Bay. [Assoc Press, NOAA press release]
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]
{Glacier Bay Commercial Fishing. In early May 1997, the AK State Legislature appropriated $100,000 to the AK Dept. of Fish and Game for assisting AK commercial fishermen faced with proposed regulations by the National Park Service that would phase-out commercial fishing from Glacier Bay National Park waters.} [Assoc Press]
Kodiak Seafood Plant Fire. In early May 1997, Tyson Seafoods officials canceled their plans to relocate a floating processor vessel to Kodiak for the June pollock season, saying their 15 Kodiak-based vessels had found other temporary markets. [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]
New England Groundfish. 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]
Sharks. 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. On May 14, 1997, NMFS announced that the commercial quota for large coastal Atlantic sharks for the season beginning July 1, 1997, was being reduced from 642 metric tons to 326 metric tons to compensate for overharvesting by 316 metric tons during the first six months of the year. [NMFS press release, Assoc Press]
Italian Driftnet Reconversion. On May 2, 1997, the EU Council approved 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]
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 {certain liabilities and contracts.} Bumble Bee filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to allow operation while the transaction is completed. {A June 19, 1997, hearing on the proposed sale has been set by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, San Diego, CA.} [Assoc Press, Reuters, Dow Jones News]
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. This measure was approved by the AK Senate on May 11, 1997. [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, {ARGENTINA, Norway, PORTUGAL,} and the United States, based in Madagascar, Mauritius, and Namibia, are thought to be among THE 70 vessels participating in this fishery, {ALLEGED TO BE CONTRARY TO THE 1982 CONVENTION ON THE CONSERVATION OF ANTARCTIC MARINE LIVING RESOURCES.} 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 was scheduled to be discussed at an Antarctic Treaty consultative meeting in Christchurch, NZ, in late May 1997. {IN MID-MAY 1997, JOINT ACTION TO HALT TOOTHFISH OVERFISHING WAS ANNOUNCED BY FRANCE, SOUTH AFRICA, NORWAY, AUSTRALIA, AND NEW ZEALAND AT THE CONCLUSION OF INFORMAL TALKS IN CHRISTCHURCH, NZ.} [Reuters, Assoc Press, DOW JONES NEWS]
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]
Dump Site Cleanup. In late April and early May 1997, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers paid six shrimp trawlers to trawl near Oak Island and Bald Head Island, NC, to recover and remove underwater debris originating from a dump site for a Corps dredging project after shrimpers complained that debris was damaging their nets. In two weeks' work, the 6 trawlers removed more than 600 tons of wood and debris. [Assoc Press] .... End of Part 3/4
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