Florida Attorney General McCollum: Red snapper fishing ban 'excessive'
|
|
Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum waded into the controversy today
over a federal ban on red snapper fishing, saying the impact on the
state's $4.5 billion recreational fishing industry is "excessive."
McCollum, a candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, sent
a letter to the secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce, Gary
Locke, expressing concern over the economic impact on fisherman and
Florida's economy.
The four-month ban was imposed in January by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It prevents
fishermen in the Atlantic off Florida's coast from keeping red
snapper. Federal officials said the ban is necessary to rebuild red
snapper stocks, which they say are a fraction of what they were 60
years ago. Under the requirements of the federal Magnuson-Stevens Act,
the agency is charged with rebuilding the nation's fish stocks. The
agency and the Southeast Fishery Management Council have debated
additional restrictions on snapper and grouper fishing for more than
two years.
Read the complete story at The Daytona Beach News Journal.
|
|
|
|