From APP
Feds make changes to Mid-Atlantic fishery council
Federal oceans administrator Jane Lubchenco is making changes on the Mid-Atlantic Regional Fishery Management Council, replacing fishermen who have represented three states with new members who have connections to environmental causes.
Christopher J. Zeman, a River Vale attorney who represented the environmental group Oceana on issues including sea turtles and their interactions with the scallop fleet, was named by the Department of Commerce to replace Edward Goldman, a recreational angler from Absecon whose term on the council expired this year. Each year about this time the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration led by Lubchenco names members to the eight regional fishery councils based on nominations submitted by state governors.
For a New York State seat, Laurie Nolan, a commercial tilefish boat owner from Montauk, is being replaced with Peter Schafer, director of retail operations at the Wild Edibles fish stores in New York City. Schafer has promoted selling sustainable fish in those high-end outlets, and worked with writer and activist Carl Safina's Long Island-based Blue Ocean Institute to distribute shopping guides that tell consumers how their seafood choices affect the marine environment.
For a Virginia seat, Peter L. deFur, a professor at Virginia Commonmwealth University's Center for Environmental Studies is replacing angler Jeff Deem. DeFur is a wildlife toxicologist who works on risk assessment and coastal restoration issues, and has served on the Board of the Science and Environmental Health Network and as president of the Association for Science in the Public Interest.
Environmental groups have long contended the federal system of eight regional councils is dominated by people with direct economic and personal stakes in fisheries issues, and have pressed NOAA to broaden the pool of nominees. In the 1990s, Safina became the first Mid-Atlantic council member from an environmental background to serve a three-year term.
Lubchenco, a professor and noted marine ecologist from Oregon State University, was tapped by President Obama this year to lead NOAA. She has had ties to the Pew Environmental Trusts, and the appointment aroused unease from fishing advocates who have tangled with their Pew counterparts over fishing limits and catch restrictions.
But on the New England front - scene of America's most intractable fishing problems - Lubchenco is not making big changes at the regional council. Four incumbent members have been renamed to new terms, along with newcomer Glen A. Libby from the Port Clyde commercial fishermen's cooperative in Maine.