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Rule change would ease limits on cod – for now
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. – Fishery officials bought time for some New England fishermen on Wednesday, asking federal regulators to take an emergency step to avoid ruinous cuts in the Gulf of Maine cod catch this year.
 

But the move still left fishermen looking at significant catch reductions some said would destroy their businesses.

Members of the New England Fishery Management Council asked federal regulators to adopt an emergency interim rule, which removes the law's requirement to immediately "end" overfishing on Gulf of Maine cod. To do that, fishermen were looking at a 90 percent cut in their catch, which would have wiped out fishing businesses from the tip of Cape Cod to northern Maine.

Now, regulators are instead required to "reduce" overfishing on the cod – a far lower standard than to end it – while they try to better understand what's happening with the prized species, which was thought to be rebounding just months ago.

Read the complete Associated Press story in The Portland Press Herald

 

 

 

 

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STEVE SCHEIBLAUER: California's “Forage” Fish Protection Strongest in the World, Yet Extremists Still Want to Ban Fishing

Monterey Bay's historic "wetfish" industry is under attack by extremist groups who claim overfishing is occurring. Touting studies with faulty calculations, activists are lobbying federal regulators to massively limit fishing, if not ban these fisheries outright.  Apparently the facts don’t matter to groups with an anti-fishing agenda