Here is the new material from the latest set of three CRS summaries.
Suchman, Cynthia wrote:
SECTION: MARINE FISHERIES
Coast Guard Inquiry into Clam Vessel Sinkings. On Mar. 19, 1999, the Coast Guard panel investigating the December 1998-January 1999 sinkings of 5 mid-Atlantic clam vessels is scheduled to release its recommendations. The Associated Press reports the panel is expected to recommend licensing of fishing vessel skippers and request mandatory inspections for fishing vessels. If adopted by the panel, the Coast Guard commandant could present the recommendations to Congress.[Bergan (NJ) Record, Assoc Press]
NMFS FY2000 Budget. On Mar. 18, 1999, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the FY 2000 budget request of NMFS.[personal communication]
House Resources Fishery Hearing. On Mar. 11, 1999, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled a hearing on reauthorization of the Fishermen's Protective Act of 1967, and the Intergovernmental Consultative Committee Agreement Between the Government of the United States and the Government of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on Mutual Fisheries Relations of May 31, 1988, as amended (the United States-Soviet Comprehensive Fisheries Agreement -- obligations of the former Soviet Union under this agreement have devolved on the Russian Federation).[personal communication]
U.S.-Canada Lobster Summit. On Mar. 3-4, 1999, more than 200 lobster fishermen, marketers, management biologists, and other scientists gathered in Rockport, ME for the U.S.-Canada Lobster Summit III. Sponsored by the New England Aquarium, the Summit focused on reaching a consensus on methods of lobster stock assessment and efforts to improve data collection.[Bangor Daily News]
Toothfish. On Mar. 2, 1999, the Greenpeace vessel Arctic Sunrise discovered an unmarkeded vessel, likely fishing illegally for toothfish, 45 miles northeast of Kerguelen Island in France?s sub-Antarctic territory. Greenpeace officials believe the vessel is the Belize-registered Salvora, previously found guilty by Australian authorities of poaching toothfish in October 1997. On, Mar. 5, 1999, the Greenpeace vessel was continuing to shadow the Salvora.[CNN]
SAFMC Grouper Ban. On Mar. 1, 1999, the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council?s two-month ban on harvest and sale of black grouper, gag grouper, and red porgy went into effect to protect spawning aggregations of these species. This ban is scheduled annually for the next 10 years to allow overfished stocks to recover.[Carteret News-Times]
Coral Protection. On Mar. 2, 1999, NOAA?s National Ocean Service completed installation of the next-to-last Racon navigation beacon in an 8-beacon radar navigation system stretching from Miami, FL, to Loggerhead Key in the Dry Tortugas, designed to prevent ship groundings on coral reefs. Beacons were purchased as part of a settlement for natural resources damages with the owners of the container ship Houston that went aground in the FL Keys in 1997. On Mar. 5-6, 1999, the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force was scheduled to hod its second meeting in Maui, HI. At this meeting, the Task Force will review initial plans and products developed by 5 Working Groups, receive input on the plans from government and NGO partners, and determine the optimal strategies and options for action.[personal communication, Naples Daily News]
Glacier Bay Fisheries. In late February 1999, armed National Park Service (NPS) rangers boarded 11 crab vessels in Glacier Bay National Park to inform fishermen that park waters would soon be closed to commercial fishing, as provided for in provisions of P.L. 105-277. Concerns arose that NPS had begun enforcing new regulations earlier than anticipated and with little notice. On Mar. 4, 1999, AK Governor Tony Knowles announced that AK intended to sue the federal government to protect commercial and subsistence fishing within Glacier National Park.[Anchorage Daily News, MSNBC]
ESA Petition for Puget Sound Fish. In late February 1999, NMFS received a petition to list as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act 18 species/populations of marine fishes in Puget Sound and to designate critical habitat for each. Petitioned species include Pacific herring, Pacific cod, walleye pollock, Pacific hake, and rockfishes.[personal communication]
South Korean Fishery Agreements. On Feb. 6, 1999, the renegotiated agreement between South Korea and Japan went into effect, with 957 South Korean fishing vessels resuming operations in the Japanese EEZ on Feb. 22, 1999. However, the South Korean Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries announced that it will seek to remedy the omission of the 250 pair trawlers who were not considered among the 14 fishing categories negotiated by South Korea. The South Korean pair trawlers claim they stand to lost about $24.5 million a year in lost harvest from the Japanese EEZ and are seeking government compensation for such loss. On Mar. 1, 1999, South Korean officials announced that South Korea will sign a fishery agreement with the Peoples Republic of China late in March 1999 to establish orderly fisheries in waters between the two countries. Fisheries will be divided into 3 zones -- exclusive management, joint management, and transitory, with the 20-mile wide transitory zones to become each country?s exclusive fishing zones after a 4-year joint management period.[Korean Herald]
On Feb. 26, 1999, the Sea Victory began towing the bow section seaward across nearshore sandbars. Late on Mar. 2, 1999, the towline between the Sea Victory and the bow section of the New Carissa parted, in storm conditions about 50 miles west of Coos Bay, OR. The Unified Command estimated the New Carissa bow section would be several miles west of Newport, OR, early on Mar. 3, 1999. On Mar. 3, 1999, the bow section of the New Carissa ran aground off the mouth of Alsea Bay, OR. A small quantity of fuel oil was released on impact. The OR Dept. of Agriculture alerted the public that mussel and clam harvesting were not advised on beaches and in bays of Lane and Lincoln Counties.[ABC release]
The public comment period has been extended to Mar. 12, 1999.[NOAA press release, Fed. Register]
On Feb. 24, 1999, the NC Marine Fisheries Commission selected 2 options that would establish a limited entry system and 2 options that would allow relatively unlimited entry to send to public hearings.[Carteret News-Times]
SECTION: SALMON ALONG THE PACIFIC COAST
Yukon River Salmon Act Reauthorization. On Mar. 11, 1999, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled a hearing on reauthorization of the Yukon River Salmon Act.[personal communication]
Gasoline Spill. On Mar. 4, 1999, an overturned tanker truck spilled about 5,000 gallons of gasoline into Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Warm Springs River, OR. In addition to being a major spawning ground for wild chinook salmon, the spill occurred about 25 miles upstream of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Warm Springs Hatchery. To avoid a fish kill at the hatchery, FWS officials released 750,000 yearling chinook to swim downstream, and transferred another 830,000 sub-yearling spring chinook to a state hatchery. Effects of the spill on wild spring chinook and bull trout are unknown.[Portland Oregonian]
Steelhead Lawsuit. On Mar. 3, 1999, a coalition of sport anglers and environmentalists filed suit in U.S. District Court (San Francisco, CA), seeking to force the federal government to list southern OR and northern CA steelhead trout as a threatened species.[Contra Costa Times]
Atlantic Salmon Threat? On Mar. 1, 1999, the AK Dept. of Fish and Game (ADF&G) released a 9-page white paper on Atlantic salmon outlining concerns over the potential harmful effects of non-native Atlantic salmon on wild salmon stocks. AK officials expressed concern over the possible lifting of the moratorium on expanding salmon farms into northern British Columbia. ADF&G's white paper includes several recommendations for reducing the threat to wild salmon from Atlantic salmon farming.[ADF&G press release]
Battle Creek Dam Decommissioning. In late February 1999, the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, NMFS, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, and CA Dept. of Fish and Game agreed in principle to pursue a project in the Battle Creek watershed in Shasta and Tehama Counties, CA. The proposed project includes decommissioning 5 diversion dams and transferring their water rights to instream use as well as screenign and enlarging ladders at 3 other diversion dams. This project anticipates restoring 42 miles of chinook salmon and steelhead trout habitat.[Environment News Service]
Grand Coulee Dam Study. In late February 1999, the World Commission on Dams, meeting in Capetown, South Africa, decided to include Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in an independent study, due to be completed in June 2000, of 10 major world dams for impacts on people, the environment, and economies as well as impacts on sustainable development.[Environment News Service]
Canadian Export of Salmon to Australia. On Feb. 23, 1999, the World Trade Organization's appointed Arbitrator reported a decision that the reasonable period of time for implementing Dispute Settlement Board recommendations allowing entry of Canadian salmon into Australia was 8 months, or by July 6, 1999.[personal communication]
On Mar. 1, 1999, Bellevue City Council approved $3.2 million in conservation measures to benefit chinook salmon. Elements include reductions in water use, increased development setbacks from rivers and streams, and habitat restoration activities. On Mar. 2, 1999, NMFS and FWS officials were reported to have agreed in principle to write regulations for new species listings that would authorize local salmon and trout conservation programs meeting federal standards. Negotiations were to begin on Mar. 3, 1999, on regulations to establish standards for federal approval of state programs.[Seattle Herald, Seattle Times]
SECTION: FRESHWATER FISHERIES
FWS FY2000 Budget. On Mar. 4, 1999, the House Resources Subcommittee on Fisheries Conservation, Wildlife, and Oceans has scheduled an oversight hearing on the FY 2000 budget request of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.[personal communication]
On Feb. 24, 1999, scientists reported that non-toxic forms of Pfiesteria had been identified in MD?s St. Martin and Big Annemessex Rivers. On Mar. 1, 1999, NC Governor Jim Hunt and Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman signed an agreement to provide as much as $275 million in state and federal funds to NC farmers enrolling in the Conservation Reserve program. These farmers will plant grass and hardwood trees on as much as 100,000 acres of land in the Neuse, Tar-Pamlico, and Chowan River basins to improve water quality in the Albemarle-Pamlico estuary.[Reuters, Raleigh News & Observer, Washington Post]
On Mar. 4, 1999, the House Resources Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health was scheduled to hold an oversight hearing on the U.S. Forest Service moratorium on road building in certain national forest areas and on the status of the long-term transportation policy that the Forest Service plans to develop during the freeze.[personal communication, Trout Unlimited press release]
SECTION: MARINE MAMMALS
Cook Inlet Beluga Whales. On Mar. 3, 1999, a coalition of conservation groups and a former whale hunter filed a 40-page petition with NMFS asking that Cook Inlet beluga whales be listed under the Endangered Species Act as an endangered species.[Anchorage Daily News]
Canadian Sealing. On Mar. 3, 1999, seven sealers appeared in court in Gander, Newfoundland, on charges that they sealed in a whelping patch or pupping area in 1998. An additional 7 sealers are scheduled to appear in court on various charges in Grand Falls, Newfoundland, on Mar. 22, 1999. Sealers are being prosecuted by the Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans for sealing activities captured on videotape by animal rights activists.[Canadian Press]
On Feb. 26, 1999, Mexican authorities reported that as many as 16 gray whales have died along the northwestern Mexican coast since January 1999, including 4 in Magdalena Bay. On Feb. 28, 1999, Mexican scientists reported that the decomposing bodies of 180 sea lions had been found in the northern Gulf of California in mid-February 1999. In addition, a 17th gray whale mortality was reported in Sinaloa state. On Mar. 1, 1999, gray whale mortality was reported as 20 animals -- 7 in the Gulf of California and 13 in breeding lagoons on Baja California?s west coast.[CNN, Contra Costa Times, BBC News, Reuters, Chicago Tribune]
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