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Mid-Atlantic Ocean Plan Requests Public Comments

July 21, 2016 — Coastal managers and policy advisers representing the six Mid-Atlantic states have issued a draft Mid-Atlantic Ocean Plan, a new approach to shaping management decisions regarding ocean resources in the region.

The Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Body (RBP), with representatives from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia, two federally recognized tribes, federal agencies and the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council, led the three-year, ocean planning process with input from thousands of marine stakeholders and released a draft plan on July 5.

The plan focuses on nine major areas of ocean use: national security, ocean energy, commercial and recreational fishing, ocean aquaculture, maritime commerce and navigation, sand management, non-consumptive recreation, tribal interests and uses, and critical undersea infrastructure. The plan is now open for a 60-day public comment period until Sept. 6.

“The plan provides a refreshing understanding of diverse ocean uses from an integrated point of view – that is the intertwined human, commercial and natural ecosystem upon which we all depend,” said Anne Merwin, director of ocean planning at Ocean Conservancy. “And remember, the plan is a living document that will mature as new data becomes available and needs change.”

Under the new plan, state and federal agencies have committed to using better data and working with local stakeholders such as fishermen, offshore wind developers, maritime interests, educators, tourism businesses and recreational organizations on planning and permitting projects that could impact important fisheries, habitats, cultural sites and commercial enterprises in the region.

Read the full story at The SandPaper

Ocean Plans In New England And Mid-Atlantic Released

July 12, 2016 — Both the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Ocean Plans have been released and are open for public comment

Back in May, Rip Cunningham wrote that the soon-to-be-released ocean plans for the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic are about ‘doing the best job possible of coordinating all the previously independent ocean development regulations [and giving] concerned citizens a process to make sure that they are recognized in the development process.’ Rip’s article called on the fishing community to have an open mind about the planning processes and to take the time to read and comment on them. Simply put, he asks people to give the plans a chance and to be active participants.

Now that both plans are released and open for public comment, let’s take a look at what’s in them.

The Northeast and Mid-Atlantic plans have the same basic framework. Using interactive maps and narrative text, they describe the region’s major ocean resources and uses, and lay out actions and commitments to consider and engage those users when decisions are being made that might affect them. For commercial and recreational fisheries, both plans contain a dedicated subchapter describing the industry and a series of maps developed in consultation with fisheries representatives that should help decision-makers understand current fishing uses and trends, the potential impacts proposed development projects would have on fishermen, and which agencies should be reaching out to when potential conflicts arise. Here are some more specifics on each of the two plans:

Northeast Regional Ocean Plan was released on May 25th and public comments are due on July 25th. Click here to read the plan or to submit a comment.

Read the full story at On the Water

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