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Home arrow News arrow Enforcement arrow Northeast fishery gets new enforcement chief
Northeast fishery gets new enforcement chief
NEW BEDFORD — As of Sunday, NOAA's Northeast Division will have a new special agent in charge, a belated replacement for Andrew Cohen, who retired amid scandals in the division's Office of Law Enforcement.
 

Eric Schwaab, director of the National Marine Fisheries Service, announced Tuesday that Logan Gregory, an 18-year member of the Office of Law Enforcement, will take the top job in the Northeast.

A native of St. Petersburg, Fla., Gregory has held several positions at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration since being commissioned as an enforcement officer in 1993, according to Schwaab.

He has been a special agent, first in the Florida Keys and later in Newport News, Va. He has been an assistant special agent in charge, supervising all enforcement operations in the Northeast Division's District 4, which extends from Delaware to the Virginia/North Carolina border.

For the past year, Gregory has worked at the Office of Law Enforcement's headquarters in Silver Spring, Md. His duties included overseeing the agency's Vessel Monitoring System.

"Under Logan's leadership, the Northeast Division will remain focused on compliance and improving its relationship with the regulated community," Schwaab said.

Local fishing consultant Jim Kendall was moved to remark in an email: "We are no longer known as the fishing industry. We are now 'the regulated community'! What's next? The great unwashed? Leave it to Eric and friends! This doesn't bode well."

Read the complete story from The Standard-Times

 

 

 

 

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HASTINGS: Time to improve the Endangered Species Act

May 18, 2012 - When the Endangered Species Act (ESA) was signed into law in 1973 by President Nixon, he spoke about the importance of preserving “the rich array of animal life with which our country has been blessed.” I believe that goal is as important today as it was back then. However, after nearly 40 years, it’s time to take a fresh, honest look at the law and consider whether there are ways it could be improved to do a better job of protecting and recovering species.