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NEW JERSEY: Anglers Argue Over Fishing Limits

September 13, 2017 — STAFFORD, N.J. — A trip to Annapolis, Maryland might be what saves the 2018 New Jersey fishing season.

Saltwater anglers and their allies crowded the Stafford Township municipal chambers, where the Marine Fisheries Council held its regular Sept. 7 meeting. Although the first hour was filled with its usual reports and comments, the Council’s second hour saw passionate arguments and discussion from Council and audience members about what to do with the ever-shortening fishing season and its negative impact on commercial fishermen throughout the state and beyond.

Jim Hutchinson Jr.’s Sept. 8 article at TheFisherman.com quoted boat captain Adam Nowalsky that cuts felt in fish seasons and quotas for 2017 will be mild compared to what’s expected for 2018, based on the early returns from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries surveys. Those quotas and seasons are set annually.

Captain Victor Hartley III of Miss Ocean City explained to Jersey Shore Online that although regulations dictate what size fish may be kept, anglers must count all fish caught toward quotas.

“We don’t have enough quotas is one issue, and the other issue is we don’t have enough days,” Hartley explained. “We don’t have the time to catch anything.”

Read the full story at Jersey Shore Online

Two arrested for alleged fisheries violations in Annapolis area

January 31, 2017 — Two people have been arrested after an inspection by fisheries officers last week.

Fisheries officer Jacklyn Titus said that on Jan. 22 fisheries officers from the Digby detachment conducted an inspection of a vehicle and a scallop vessel in the Annapolis area and it resulted in discovery of a number of alleged violations.

“As a result of the detected violations, two individuals were placed under arrest,” she said. “Officers seized 1,600 pounds of scallops valued at approximately $21,000 and they seized the vehicle.”

Read the full story at the Annapolis County Spectator

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