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Papahanaumokuakea Review Spurs Tension With Conservation Groups, Fisheries

June 28, 2017 — President Donald Trump’s targeting of the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument in the northwest Hawaiian Islands for national review has revived a lopsided debate between Native Hawaiians, senators, scientists and conservation groups in favor of the monument’s designation, and an activist fishery council mainly concerned with “maximizing longline yields.”

The Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council vocally opposed the monument’s expansion in 2016 during a public comment process, communicating that to the White House under the leadership of Executive Director Kitty Simonds. Simonds’ PowerPoint presentation at a recent Council Coordination Committee meeting detailed other monument areas in the Pacific under review, including the Pacific Remote Islands and Rose Atoll, explicitly criticizing the designations as an abuse of the Antiquities Act. The PowerPoint concludes, “Make America great again. Return U.S. fishermen to U.S. waters.”

Established by the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Acts of 1976 and 1996, WESPAC is charged with reporting its recommendations for preventing overfishing and protecting fish stocks and habitat to the Commerce Department.

While WESPAC International Fisheries Enforcement and National Environmental Policy Act coordinator Eric Kingma believe that WESPAC’s communications with the president fall within the agency’s purview of advising the executive branch, others, including Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff, consider the comments an illegal “lobby to expand WESPAC turf” and shape public policy.

WESPAC argues that monument expansion hampers longline fishermen from feeding Hawaii, which imports roughly 60 percent of the fish it eats. Pro-expansion groups such as Expand Papahanaumokuakea point out that only 5 percent of longliner take came from the monument; that longliners have recently reached their quota by summer, then resorted to buying unused blocks from other fleets; and that much of the longliners’ take, including sashimi-grade bigeye tuna, is sold at auction to the mainland U.S., as well as to Japanese and other foreign buyers. The bigeye tuna catch, moreover, has been trending upward every year since the first year of logbook monitoring in 1991. In 2014, the Hawaii longline fleet caught a record 216,897 bigeye tuna, up 12 percent from 2013.

Read the full story at Courthouse News Service

Advancing fishing rule aims to protect deep-sea coral in New England waters

May 31, 2017 — Fishing trawlers bring in an average of $6.4 million annually to Bay State ports from fish scooped off seabeds 600 meters or more below the surface of New England waters.

In an effort to save coral on the ocean floor, the New England Fisheries Management Council is advancing a proposed restriction on draggers and trawlers fishing at those depths.

The waters off New England do not get that deep until beyond George’s Bank and lobstermen that fish on the bank do not set traps at that depth, according to council staff. The proposed rule would exempt the relatively small red crab fishery.

The council’s Habitat Committee signed off Tuesday on the proposal, which affect fishing operations in a roughly 25,000 square mile area. If it is passed by the full council it would need to go through the National Marine Fisheries Service, also known as NOAA Fisheries, before it would go into effect.

Environmental groups Wild Oceans, Earthjustice, Pew Charitable Trusts and Conservation Law Foundation urged the council’s scientists to study an alternative proposal, which they said would protect more coral than the plan the council advanced. The council agreed to study the conservation groups’ proposal.

“There could be changes at any point in time. Ultimately when the full council votes on this June 22, we’ve got this preferred alternative going in. That hasn’t changed. But other things may be brought up,” said Habitat Committee Chairman John Quinn, a Dartmouth resident and former state rep.

Read the full story at the Boston Business Journal

Oceana Files Legal Challenge to Northern Anchovy Catch Limit

WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) — November 29, 2016 — Last week, environmental group Oceana filed a lawsuit alleging that a recent National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) specification rule allows commercial fishing for northern anchovy at levels that threaten the anchovy population and the marine ecosystem. The complaint was filed against the NMFS, Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the District Court of Northern California.

The specification rule in question, announced October 26, 2016 under the Coastal Pelagic Species Fishery Management Plan, set an annual catch limit (ACL) of 25,000 metric tons for the central subpopulation of anchovy. In its lawsuit, Oceana claims that the NMFS did not articulate the scientific basis for this ACL, did not base the ACL and related management measures on best available science, and did not explain how it would prevent overfishing and protect the West Coast marine ecosystem’s food web.

In doing so, Oceana claims that the rule violates the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act and the Administrative Procedure Act. The complaint claims that the northern anchovy population has severely declined since 2009, and that northern anchovy are “one of the most important forage species” in the California marine ecosystem.

“The Fisheries Service’s actions and failures to act have harmed Oceana’s members’ interest in rebuilding and maintaining a healthy and sustainable population of northern anchovy and a healthy ocean ecosystem,” said the lawsuit, which was filed by lawyers from Earthjustice on Oceana’s behalf. “This harm will continue in the absence of action by the Court.”

Read the full legal complaint as a PDF

What Does A Trump Presidency Mean For Hawaii’s Environment?

November 22, 2016 — President-elect Donald Trump has called climate change a “hoax” and “bullshit.”

On the campaign trail, he pledged to dismantle clean energy plans, pull out of an international agreement to reduce carbon emissions and ease regulations on coal, oil and gas production as part of his plan to “Make America Great Again.”

What Trump will actually do after he takes the reins of government in January from President Barack Obama remains to be seen. But nonprofit groups, lawmakers, government officials and others say Hawaii needs to remain vigilant about protecting its environment over the next four years.

They say that means lawyering up to fight court battles, empowering citizens, reminding local decision-makers of their authority and investing more resources into state and county agencies that can backstop changes Trump and a GOP-controlled House and Senate may make at the federal level.

“The state has often felt like it can just leave it to the feds,” said David Henkin, a Hawaii-based attorney for Earthjustice, a nonprofit environmental law organization. “They’re not going to be able to pass the buck anymore. It’s time for them to step up.”

Read the full story at the Honolulu Civil Beat

Herring Industry Scores a Victory in Long-Running Battle

June 17, 2016 — The following piece was authored by Shaun Gehan, counsel for the Sustainable Fisheries Coaltion:

The Atlantic herring fishery has been under constant litigation since 2011. Each major management action since Amendment 4 to the herring fishery management plan was adopted has been challenged by EarthJustice, a Pew Foundation-funded law firm, representing environmental and sportfishing interests. These suits are part of Pew’s multi-year, multi-million dollar “forage fish” campaign.

In what the herring industry hopes augurs an end to this cycle of litigation, Senior Judge Gladys Kessler of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia handed EarthJustice a sound defeat in its latest case. At issue, in essence, were plaintiffs’ contentions that quota was set too high and that NMFS failed to give due consideration to alternative quota-setting methods, including one developed by a Pew-funded group known as the Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force.

Judge Kessler called the approach NMFS took in setting catch targets to be “clearly permissible.”  She also noted that herring’s role as forage was explicitly taken into account by fisheries scientists when assessing the stock’s status. Currently, the Atlantic herring population is roughly twice the long-term average size generally sought to be obtained through traditional fisheries management.

EarthJustice claimed that the Pew-funded research constituted the “best available science for managing forage fish.” Use of the “best scientific information available” in managing fisheries is legally required. As the court noted, however, not only did NMFS consider the reports advocated by plaintiffs in setting quotas, but that as the expert agency, determining what constitutes the best science is squarely in its discretion. The plaintiffs, Judge Kessler noted, “fail to explain why” the studies they prefer “are clearly the ‘best available science.’”

This lawsuit represents the latest skirmish in a long running conflict between Pew/EarthJustice and the fishing industry over herring management. The Sustainable Fisheries Coalition, a group comprised of herring fishermen from New Jersey to Maine, processors and bait dealers, intervened in this lawsuit. While pleased with this result, industry members recognized that significant threats to their livelihood still exist.

For instance, there remains pending a challenge to herring Amendment 5 dealing with issues of monitoring and bycatch. That case was stayed as the New England and Mid-Atlantic Fisheries Management Councils – federally-created bodies charged with developing fishery rules – consider measures to address these concerns.

The herring fishery has one of the lowest rates of bycatch – incidental harvest of non-target species – in the nation, as SFC has repeatedly noted. To improve on this record, herring fishermen have established a “bycatch avoidance network” in conjunction with partners from academic institutions and support of some states. Through this network, vessels communicate areas of high incidental catch so that others may avoid them.

Nonetheless, the Pew-funded Herring Alliance, also represented by EarthJustice, is seeking to impose a requirement that 100 percent of all herring trips be monitored by government observers at industry expense. Such a measure was included as part of Amendment 5, but was rejected by NMFS on the basis that it lacked the funds to fulfill the mandate. It was this decision, among others, that are the subject of EarthJustice’s pending case.

Various federal laws forbid a governmental agency from incurring unfunded obligations or shifting money appropriated for other uses. At the time it rejected these provisions, NMFS noted that even with industry cost sharing, additional at-sea monitors and data collection would impose financial obligations on the government it could not cover. Notably, like all federal fisheries, the herring fleet is required to carry observers in order to collect statistically rigorous data. The issue is thus about monitoring above levels necessary to gather precise and accurate information.

The new measure currently under development would establish a framework under which fishermen could be required to pay additional monitoring costs. Such monitoring could be done by observers on vessels, via electronic means such as cameras, through dockside inspections, or a combination of methods. Additional industry-funded data collection, however, could only occur when NMFS has funds to cover its share of the costs.

Nonetheless, in a letter to both Councils the Herring Alliance this week advocated for mandatory coverage on all trips made by the largest herring vessels. The practical effect of this proposal would be to cause these vessels to cease fishing, save for a handful of routinely observed trips. SFC participants believe this option is unlawful as it would result in an inability to harvest most of the allowable herring catch each year. There is support among fishermen, however, for increased monitoring so long as the costs are reasonable. Herring fishing is capital-intensive and profit margins are small.

The parties to the Amendment 5 lawsuit are set to report to Judge Kessler in early July on how they want to proceed with the case. It is likely EarthJustice will ask the judge to continue the stay while the Industry-Funded Monitoring amendment works its way through the process. In the meantime, the herring industry is savoring a small, but important victory. Counsel for the SFC notes that this decision makes it more likely that the next herring action – quota specifications for the next three years – will be the first herring measure in half a decade not to wind up in court.

 

Hawaii-based longline fishermen allowed to keep catching ahi

November 28, 2015 — HONOLULU (AP) ” Hawaii-based longline fishermen have exhausted multiple catch limits for ahi this year, but federal regulators said Friday a new agreement will ensure the fish will be available in the state through the holidays.

Regulators have approved a deal allowing Hawaii fishermen to attribute up to 1,000 metric tons of bigeye tuna catch to Guam, said Mike Tosatto, National Marine Fisheries Service regional administrator for the Pacific Islands.

The agreement will enable Hawaii fishermen to keep catching ahi as usual and deliver their haul to Honolulu. In exchange, Hawaii fishermen will pay $200,000 toward the development of the fishing industry on Guam.

“We want to inform the public that fish will continue to be available through the holidays,” Tosatto said.

Environmentalists say the arrangement contributes to the overfishing of bigeye tuna in the western and central Pacific.

“There’s just absolutely no way to reconcile that behavior with what the science says, which is that all fishing nations ” including the United States ” need to show some restraint. And need to reduce catch, not increase catch, which is what the fisheries service is allowing to happen here,” said David Henkin, an attorney for Earthjustice.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the New Bedford Standard – Times

 

Obama admin mulls marine monument off New England

September 17, 2015 — The Obama administration appears to be considering a marine monument off the coast of New England, with federal officials holding a “town hall” meeting on the idea earlier this week.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration organized the meeting in Providence, R.I. More than 100 people attended — with some estimates exceeding 300 — to debate the protection of deep-sea canyons and underwater mountains 150 miles offshore.

Environmental groups proposed the monument just two weeks ago, urging President Obama to use the Antiquities Act to permanently protect almost 5,000 square nautical miles (Greenwire, Sept. 1). Such requests are not unusual as Obama nears the end of his term and ramps up his use of the act.

But this time, the proposal came from a coalition of some of the largest conservation groups. Among them: the Natural Resources Defense Council, Earthjustice, the Conservation Law Foundation, Pew Charitable Trusts and Environment America. Other groups also voiced their support.

Within days, NOAA announced a town hall to “discuss permanent protections” off New England. The agency has been vague on details; it has not specified that the discussion will inform the White House for a possible marine monument.

But the agency is not proposing a marine sanctuary, according to spokeswoman Ciaran Clayton. Such sanctuaries, which are created and managed by NOAA, can take years to materialize.

“NOAA hasn’t proposed anything,” Clayton said in an email before Tuesday night’s public meeting. “We’re holding this town hall because there’s been interest from a number of groups on many types of protections. The public meeting is an opportunity for stakeholders to provide input.”

Read the full story at E&E Reporter

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