Massachusetts House of Representatives Urge US Department of Commerce to Increase 2010 Annual Catch Limits
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The following release was recieved from the Massachusetts House of Representatives:
BOSTON—State Representative William M. Straus (D-Mattapoisett), joined
by Representative Quinn (D-Dartmouth), Representative Peterson
(R-Grafton), Representative Ferrante (D-Gloucester), Representative
Koczera (D-New Bedford), Representative Canessa (D-New Bedford),
Representative Cabral (D-New Bedford), and Representative Gifford
(R-Wareham), authored a resolution calling upon Secretary Locke of the
U.S. Department of Commerce to increase the 2010 Annual Catch Limits for
the 19 fish stocks in the Northeast multispecies fishery.
“As legislators, we are concerned about the new regulations adversely
affecting what is already a difficult situation for our state’s
fishermen. We believe the new regulations are not only overly
burdensome but also threaten to unnecessarily deplete jobs in the
fishing industry” said Rep. Straus. “This resolution calls on the
Secretary of Commerce to exercise his powers to implement emergency
regulations and increase the catch limits” he added.
“We fully support the efforts by our New England Congressional
delegation to address the inequities in our current fisheries management
regulations which are scheduled to go into effect next week,” said Rep.
Quinn. “We should understand that we must reach a necessary balance
between protecting fish stocks and protecting fishermen and their
families.”
Fishermen and coastal communities in Massachusetts depend heavily on the
Northeast multispecies fishery as a resource and as an important source
of revenue, but recent data (2007) have reported that New England’s
groundfish landings have fallen to $92 million from previous highs of
$313 million annually. This decrease in value has increased concern
about the stability of the local economies and the potential for
fishermen to earn enough money to support themselves and their families.
While values have decreased, certain annual catch limits for 2010 have
been dramatically reduced by up to 75% of 2009 levels, furthering
concerns about economic viability. Many fear that the new 2010
groundfishery management approach will prove similar to past efforts
that did not effectively manage fish stocks. 2007 data demonstrate that
only 27% of the total allowable catch was harvested due to regulatory
measures designed to protect the weakest stocks, costing fishermen and
coastal economies approximately $500 million.
The Massachusetts bi-partisan resolution is mirrored after language sent
by 23 members of the Congressional delegation of New York, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maine, and Massachusetts,
including both U.S. Senators for Massachusetts, to the Secretary of
Commerce for relief from the Federal Plan scheduled for implementation
on May 1, 2010.
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