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CONTACT: Food & Water Watch |
Obama Administration Ignores Opposition From Fishermen and Others, Approves Destructive Fishery Management Plan for Gulf of Mexico
Statement of Food & Water Watch Executive Director Wenonah Hauter
WASHINGTON - September 1 - “Yesterday, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Fisheries (NOAA Fisheries) overrode opposition from many fishermen and
others and relied on a highly questionable referendum to approve an
unfair and potentially harmful plan for managing the Gulf of Mexico’s
tilefish and grouper fisheries. The plan, known as ‘Individual Fishing
Quotas’ (IFQs) or ‘catch shares,’ determines who is allowed to fish,
and how much, based on ‘catch history,’ or how much an individual or
business has caught in the past. This method inherently favors those
who fish the hardest and fastest and squeezes out many smaller-scale
and historic fishermen. Worst of all, the process by which the plan was
created and approved was biased and unfair. The Gulf’s Fishery
Management Council held a sham referendum on the plan in which
eligibility for voting was skewed to exclude nearly 70 percent of
fishermen whose jobs were at stake if the plan passed.
“This spring, Food & Water Watch conducted its own re-referendum surveying the fishermen who were excluded from the initial vote, and found that the nearly 90 percent opposed the plan. Had these fishermen been included in the initial vote, it is questionable whether the plan would have passed. Still, NOAA Fisheries has proceeded to approve the plan seemingly without regard for this clear opposition and the risk of massive job loss.
“The plan could be destructive not only economically, but environmentally, too. While proponents may claim catch share programs work for conservation, often they do not—and this plan, especially, is problematic. The plan allocates big portions of the annual allowed catch based on historical catches using longline gear. Last year, studies found that longlines in the Gulf have been catching too many threatened loggerhead sea turtles as bycatch—at a rate nearly ten times higher than permitted. It is unlikely that longlines will continue to be allowed in the Gulf long term due to such turtle interactions. Most fishermen that use other gear types such as hook-and-line received fewer catch shares—meaning that the plan rewards longline usage, while penalizing many fishermen whose catch methods may have fewer negative effects on the Gulf.
“The catch share plan that has been approved for Gulf tilefish and grouper will essentially privatize the fisheries, simply handing control—and thus, the bulk of all profits—to a small handful of people and businesses. The Gulf of Mexico and the U.S. as a whole need fishery management solutions that truly come from within the community, keep public resources public, and work to promote long-term widespread social, economic, and environmental benefits. Sadly, this Gulf catch share plan falls far short.”
“This spring, Food & Water Watch conducted its own re-referendum surveying the fishermen who were excluded from the initial vote, and found that the nearly 90 percent opposed the plan. Had these fishermen been included in the initial vote, it is questionable whether the plan would have passed. Still, NOAA Fisheries has proceeded to approve the plan seemingly without regard for this clear opposition and the risk of massive job loss.
“The plan could be destructive not only economically, but environmentally, too. While proponents may claim catch share programs work for conservation, often they do not—and this plan, especially, is problematic. The plan allocates big portions of the annual allowed catch based on historical catches using longline gear. Last year, studies found that longlines in the Gulf have been catching too many threatened loggerhead sea turtles as bycatch—at a rate nearly ten times higher than permitted. It is unlikely that longlines will continue to be allowed in the Gulf long term due to such turtle interactions. Most fishermen that use other gear types such as hook-and-line received fewer catch shares—meaning that the plan rewards longline usage, while penalizing many fishermen whose catch methods may have fewer negative effects on the Gulf.
“The catch share plan that has been approved for Gulf tilefish and grouper will essentially privatize the fisheries, simply handing control—and thus, the bulk of all profits—to a small handful of people and businesses. The Gulf of Mexico and the U.S. as a whole need fishery management solutions that truly come from within the community, keep public resources public, and work to promote long-term widespread social, economic, and environmental benefits. Sadly, this Gulf catch share plan falls far short.”
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2 Comments so far
Show AllGuess what, Food and Water Watch: The status quo doesn't work. Fishery management has failed for decades. Catch shares, on the other hand, are the only management tools proven to work. The law is clear that catch shares are a privilege that can be taken away, not a private property right. Catch shares can be designed to be used only by small-boat, independent fishermen if that's what the community wants. These management tools hold fishermen accountable for sticking to scientifically-set catch limits and counting everything they catch, which is where traditional management fails miserably. You want to make sure the shares of the catch stay in the community? You can do that with catch shares by writing that into the plan. As long as everyone is fully accountably and staying within the catch limit, you can design a catch share program any way you want. Catch shares are good for fishermen because they extend the fishing season to nearly all year long, so fishermen aren't forced to bring their catch to market all at the same time, which pushes prices down. They're a win-win for fishermen and the resource on which they depend.
I'd be interested in further information on this issue. It is going to affect folks near to relatives of mine. There is too much takeover of crops, water, land, by corporations. Changes in traditional methods of farming and fishing are coming fast, worldwide.