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The Mayor aims to focus the attention of Management Council members on the technical details of Governor Deval Patrick's request to Commerce Secretary Gary Locke for an emergency increase in groundfish allocation levels, and for economic aid.
NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Jan. 24, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- New Bedford Mayor Scott
Lang is bringing his Oceans and Fisheries Council to this week's
meeting of the New England Fisheries Management Council. New Bedford is
the Nation's top fishing port. The Mayor aims to focus the attention
of Management Council members on the technical details of Massachusetts
Governor Deval Patrick's request to Commerce Secretary Gary Locke for an
emergency increase in groundfish allocation levels, and for economic
aid. The Governor's report had demonstrated that the harsh regulations
being enforced by NOAA could be loosened without harming fish stocks.
Secretary
Locke refused the Governor's request earlier this month. An estimated
1200 jobs have been lost in Massachusetts as a result of these
regulations. Tomorrow, President Obama will make jobs the focus of his
State of the Union address.
The meeting, which will be held at the
same hotel as the New England Council meeting, will showcase additional
work that has been done in analyzing the Federal Government's raw data
since Mayor Lang held a widely-attended Fisheries Summit in New Bedford
last January. The Mayor's Council is chaired by Brian Rothschild, Dean
Emeritus of the UMass School for Marine Science and Technology.
At
the last meeting of Mayor Lang's Council, Steve Cadrin, a scientist
from the UMass School for Marine Science and Dan Georgianna, the
economics department chair from UMass Dartmouth gave presentations
pointing out errors and flaws they found in the response to the
Governor's request from Secretary Locke, and also in an additional
letter sent to the Governor by NOAA Fisheries Assistant Administrator
Eric Schwaab.
Congressman Barney Frank apologized for what he
described as the deceptive actions of the Obama Administration, and
speaking of the state's efforts on behalf of fishermen, Massachusetts
Secretary of Energy and Environment Rick Sullivan said, "Some fights are
worth fighting."
The presentations and speeches from Mayor Lang's January 13 meeting can be viewed here:
http://savingseafood.org/Lang%5FMeeting%5F2011%2D01%2D13/
"The
Council needs to include input from industry, and they need to consider
scientific and economic data from places other than NOAA," said Mayor
Lang. We believe the School for Marine Science and Technology at UMass
Dartmouth has a track record for producing better scientific and
economic analyses than NOAA Fisheries, and we are bringing that data to
the Council."
Members of the New England Fisheries Management
Council have been invited to the Mayor's Council meeting, and Mayor Lang
is hopeful that they will attend.
"Late last year, I asked the
Commerce Department Inspector General to keep an eye on rule making,"
said Mayor Lang. "I did that because for too long, self-interest,
environmental extremism, and undue influence from special interests have
shaped Council decisions that are harming fishermen in Massachusetts'
largest ports."
Transportation will be available from New
Bedford. A bus will depart from New Bedford Harbor Development
Commission (the Wharfinger Building, 52 Fishermen's Wharf) at 3:00pm on
Tuesday.
This meeting is open to the public and to the media.
When:
Tuesday, January 25, 2011 at 6:00 p.m.
Where:
Sheraton Harborside Hotel
250 Market Street
Portsmouth, NH
SOURCE New Bedford Harbor Development Commission
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