Author Topic: ASMFC TO VOTE TO INCREASE COMMERCIAL QUOTA FOR STRIPERS  (Read 1726 times)

Offline CapBob

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ASMFC TO VOTE TO INCREASE COMMERCIAL QUOTA FOR STRIPERS
« on: October 21, 2010, 06:01:59 PM »
Stripers Forever members – on November 9th the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) will vote on the proposal to increase the coastal commercial quota for striped bass.  Stripers Forever is strongly opposed to this idea on all grounds.  A number of states have previously supported an increased commercial quota, and in a few days we will ask you to send e-mails to the governors of these states.  Today, though, we ask for your help to change the vote of Wilson Laney,  the representative on the ASMFC from the U.S.Fish and Wildlife Service


We have prepared a letter for you below to e-mail to Ken Salazar, the United States Secretary of the Interior, with a copy to Mr. Laney.  We need to send a lot e-mails to these people to let them know how important this is to us, and that we are watching!  Your sentiments will definitely count.  Please, send your letter and do your part to keep this proposed 20 to 50% increase in the commercial quota from taking place. 


Send your letters to:  ken_salazar@fws.gov 
and copy to:  wilson_laney@fws.gov



Offline IrishAyes

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Re: ASMFC TO VOTE TO INCREASE COMMERCIAL QUOTA FOR STRIPERS
« Reply #1 on: November 09, 2010, 05:28:02 PM »
Recreational Fishing Alliance   
Contact:  Jim Hutchinson, Jr. / 888-564-6732   For Immediate Release
November 9, 2010       
 
 
ASMFC REJECTS COMMERCIAL STRIPER QUOTA INCREASE

RFA Says It's Time To Address Illegal and Un-Reported Harvest


 

(11/9/2010) - The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASFMC) today rejected a proposed increase in commercial striped bass quota.  According to FishingUnited.com, the final vote of 10-4-1 in favor of status quo was supported by Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, the National Marine Fisheries Service, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  Sources indicated that states supporting measures to increase the commercial harvest of striped bass included North Carolina, Delaware, Rhode Island and New York.  The ASMFC representative from the District of Columbia was absent for the vote and the Potomac River Fisheries Commission voted to abstain. 

 

"We're pleased that there's no commercial increase, but as we've said all along there was no need for any increase in either the commercial or recreational sector, not when there are so many questions with regard to the illegal and unreported harvest we know to be taking place in federal waters," said Jim Donofrio Executive Director of the Recreational Fishing Alliance (RFA).  Donofrio cited evidence from federal enforcement authorities over the past two seasons of a number of striped bass harvest violations in federal waters off North Carolina in January and February when big breeding size fish are staging several miles off Carolina's Outer Banks.  Donofrio notes that it's illegal for any striped bass to be harvested outside of 3 miles from shore, whether commercial or recreational. 

 

"Now that we're done with this debate over increasing commercial harvest of striped bass, it's time for the ASMFC and the federal government to figure out what's going on with the illegal fishery as documented by the U.S. Coast Guard and several Mid-Atlantic state agencies," Donofrio added.   

 

Last month, RFA submitted official comments to the ASMFC on behalf of their national membership as well as the New York Sportfishing Federation, opposing efforts to increase the commercial striped bass harvest based on several issues including the illegal harvest in federal waters while also citing recent stock assessments showing that the 2007 and 2008 striped bass population abundance estimates (in numbers of fish) are the lowest in the past 15 years.  The RFA noted that at a time when recreational anglers are asking ASMFC to look at efforts to reduce the number of bigger breeding striped bass harvested, the proposal to kill more fish in the commercial sector was ill-timed.

 

"There is growing consensus within the recreational sector that our coastal regulations should be modified to minimize harvest on bigger, older fish in the population," said RFA Managing Director and New York Sportfishing Federation president, Jim Hutchinson, Jr.  "I'm rather disappointed to learn that our New York delegates failed to listen to the overwhelming opposition to increased striper harvest within our recreational fishing community, but thankfully there's proper reasoning coming from our neighboring ASMFC states." 

 

Hutchinson noted that a series of hearings were held to gauge public comment on the proposal, which he said was overwhelming in New York as being opposed to the increase.  "The anglers made it clear that it's time to talk about renewed conservation efforts to protect breeding stock fish, and I don't know if there's anyone I've spoken to in the recreational sector who believed that a quota increase was appropriate at this time, certainly not in New York or New Jersey," Hutchinson said.
 
 
Captain Joe of the Irish Ayes

May the holes in your net be no larger than the fish in it.  ~Irish Blessing


 

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