Author Topic: Now this is SCARY!  (Read 2804 times)

Offline njdiver

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Now this is SCARY!
« on: October 21, 2007, 10:03:07 PM »
Vision 2020: The Future of U.S. Marine Fisheries

The Marine Fishery Advisory Committee (MAFAC) has been requested by NOAA Fisheries Service to create a stakeholders consensus on the future state of domestic and international fisheries. As part of this task, we have been asked to recommend what US fisheries stewardship policies should be undertaken over the next 15 years to prepare for this future. The Committee has researched and discussed many drivers and factors influencing the future of US fisheries and has summarized our major findings (Table 1, the general recommendations) into four theme areas: commercial fisheries, recreational fisheries, fisheries management, and aquaculture. For each theme we sought to identify:
1.   The strongest influences on the future of fisheries;
2.   A desired outcome or state;
3.   A recommended course of action to get there;
4.   Critical success factors; and
5.   Resources commensurate with achieving the outcome.
MAFAC members represent a diverse constituency and have a wide range of expertise, and we will be taking our recommendations back to our respective organizations and associations to inform them of our findings and to help validate and refine the product. In addition, additional stakeholder perspective on the issues we identified is being sought using this website to see if a more broadly-based stakeholder consensus exists on these topics. To accomplish this, we are inviting input from stakeholders in response to the findings contained in Table 1 using the following trigger questions:
I. Are the described end-states in each of the four theme areas:
•   The most likely to occur based on your experience and knowledge? If not, what outcome(s) will be more likely and why?
•   Of equal weight or priority for attainment? If not, which are the highest priority and why?
•   Mutually achievable, or will attainment of one or more outcomes conflict with the attainment of others? Please describe the conflict and possible resolution.
II. For any/all of the four theme areas, please describe:
•   The most important action NOAA and the nation must take (a recommended course of action) to get there;
•   Critical success factors or performance measures to monitor achievement of the outcome; and
•   Requirements necessary for the successful attainment of the outcome (such as statutory, governance, institutional or structural changes, and necessary budgetary and personnel capacity).
Please reply to these trigger questions (via email to Contractor1@fish2020.org). Your written responses will be analyzed and synthesized by our support staff to identify significant commonalities and differences in perspective that MAFAC will consider in finalizing its report to NOAA Fisheries on the future of US fisheries. We thank you in advance for your time and contribution to this important endeavor
Before listing the recommendations, the committee notes the following regarding the demand for and need for quality seafood.
Seafood Quality
1.   Consumers domestically and world wide are informed about the wide array of health benefits from aquatic foods and empowered to tailor their consumption decisions to individual health needs, accurately informed conservation concerns and economic status.
2.   Both industry and government worldwide strengthen food safety programs, including cooperative efforts through CODEX.
3.   Continue free trade policies and pursue elimination of non-tariff trade barriers through WTO, bilateral and multilateral agreements.
TABLE 1. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
Commercial Fisheries
1.   Achieve and maintain sustainable levels of stocks.
2.   Match fleet capacity with available, sustainable harvest.
3.   Limited access privilege programs should have tripled by 2020. Assignable fishing rights or limited access programs should be thoroughly analyzed for applicability in all fishery management plans for participants in the commercial and recreational sectors.
4.   Commercial fishers, processing businesses, and trade associations working with NOAA Fisheries should seek ways to integrate wild stock production with aquaculture productions to maximize the value of domestic seafood production and related industries, including, but not limited to efforts to develop “niche” markets for value added products and wild products.
5.   Work with states and coastal communities to ensure continued infrastructure necessary to support viable seafood industry along our coasts.
Recreational Fisheries
1.   The value of recreational fishing as an economic engine for coastal communities should be recognized and exploited to a greater degree.
2.   A recreational registry must be implemented and used.
3.   Fishery management plans should include analyses of quota transfer between recreational and commercial sectors and should incorporate market mechanisms where appropriate.
4.   Efforts should be directed to enhance a conservation ethic and pride of a national resource amongst all fishery user groups.
5.   The recreational fishing experience could rival or exceed recreational fishing catch, as a prime motivator for recreational fishing.
Management
1.   Coastal and ocean habitat protection must be a primary concern of fishery managers as a basic platform for robust and sustainable fish stocks.
2.   Ecosystem-based management, including assessments that integrate both habitat protection and multi-species interactions, should be the norm and not the exception for U.S. fisheries management.
3.   Cooperative management efforts among states, regional management authorities and federal managers should be maintained and enhanced as a basis for sound domestic fisheries management.
4.   Stock status and catch data must be available to provide the information needed to make informed management decisions.
5.   Stock status and catch data must be accessible to all stakeholders.
6.   Seafood safety and associated human health should be enhanced through enforcement, research, outreach and education.
7.   Public health benefits of seafood should continue to be researched, understood and communicated.
8.   Subsistence fishing is recognized as an important source of protein for rural and native communities. However it needs to be accounted for as part of total catch with an efficient, comprehensive, and uniform method of data collection implemented to monitor catch.
9.   The U.S. should exert strong leadership in the international forums that manage fish stocks beyond countries’ Exclusive Economic Zones.
Aquaculture
1.   Growth of an environmentally sound domestic aquaculture industry should be supported and facilitated by providing a coordinated and efficient regulatory process and additional government investments and funding. The National Offshore Aquaculture Bill should be passed by Congress and implemented immediately.
2.   The domestic aquaculture industry should receive similar financial and technical support to that available to the American agricultural industry.
3.   Efficient regulatory practices and comprehensive monitoring are needed to safeguard wild stocks and limit environmental impacts of facilities.

http://www.fish2020.org/documents/Vision%202020%20DRAFT%20September%202007.doc


Offline Luna Sea 5

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Re: Now this is SCARY!
« Reply #1 on: October 21, 2007, 10:04:32 PM »
nice find
Fish out of Toms River NJ.
Call Nick for open boat, 973-417-5756, or on Channel 68.

Team Luna Sea 6


Offline IrishAyes

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Re: Now this is SCARY!
« Reply #2 on: October 21, 2007, 10:14:05 PM »
And yet another hurdle to be thrown up in front of us. 
When will these jacka$$e$ realize that this country was founded by revolution and we are well on our way toward a revolution by the recreational and commercial fisheries due to these jacka$$e$ thoughts of what is good for us?

Captain Joe of the Irish Ayes

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

Offline njdiver

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Here's where I founf it:
« Reply #3 on: October 21, 2007, 10:19:16 PM »
Draft report recommends limited entry for fisheries

BY SUSAN WEST | SENTINEL STAFF

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration advisory committee sees a future where the right to fish goes to the highest bidder.

In a draft report called "Vision 2020: The Future of US Marine Fisheries," the agency's Marine Fishery Advisory Committee recommends that limited access privilege programs be widely used by regional fishery management councils in the management of both commercial and recreational fisheries.

Limited access privilege programs, often called individual fishing quotas, divide the total annual harvest quota for a species into quota shares that are assigned to fishermen, corporations, or associations. The shares can be sold or leased among shareholders or to new fishermen.

"Where assignable fishing rights have been created, market forces appear to have been effective in determining who the participants are," reported the advisory committee.

Limited access privilege programs have been used in the surf clam, halibut, wreckfish, Gulf red snapper, and Bering Sea crab commercial fisheries, and are on the drawing board for other commercial fisheries. Although the programs have not been used in recreational fisheries, the report endorses their value in addressing overcapacity and allocation issues.

The report contains other recommendations, including further reductions in the fishing capacity of the 23,000 boats in the US fishing fleet.

Predicting that the number of recreational fishermen in the country could reach 18.5 million by 2020, the report urges regional management councils to look at longer seasonal closures, reduced bag limits, and catch-and-release fishing only for some species.

"In the future, angler satisfaction must be derived from the recreational fishing experience rather than the take or "kill" of current levels of harvest," states the report.

The advisory committee sees an urgent need for better scientific data and for more ecosystem-based management, such as marine protected areas and seasonal closures, encompassing habitat concerns and multi-species interaction.

On the international fisheries management front, the report recommends that the US lead sustainability efforts on international commissions and organizations, "using available political, economic, and other strategic tools to force other countries to follow the recommendations of (scientists)."

The report also recommends Congress immediately pass and implement the National Offshore Aquaculture Bill, opening tracts of federal ocean waters to fish farming operations, and provide aquaculture with the type of financial and technical assistance now available to agriculture.

The complete draft report is available online at http://www.fish2020.org. Comments on the report can be emailed to Michele.Shea@mk61.com until Nov. 24.

ridgeroad@earthlink.net


http://obsentinel.womacknewspapers.com/articles/2007/10/20/top_stories/tops0722.txt


Offline njdiver

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Re: Now this is SCARY!
« Reply #4 on: October 22, 2007, 07:55:36 AM »
Here is a site for more information and a request for your input:





http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/msa2007/limitedaccess.html

 

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