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NOAA Fisheries Proposes Electronic Vessel Trip Reporting for Commercial and For-Hire Vessels

July 17, 2020 — The following was released by NOAA Fisheries:

NOAA Fisheries is proposing a recommendation from both the Mid-Atlantic and New England Fishery Management Councils to require federally permitted commercial fishing vessels to submit vessel trip reports electronically within 48 hours of the end of a trip.

Upon request of the New England Council, we are also proposing to extend this requirement to vessels issued for-hire (charter/party) permits for New England Council-managed fisheries (i.e., Northeast multispecies).  Vessels issued a Mid-Atlantic Council for-hire permit have been required to submit vessel trip reports electronically since March 2019.  Note, reporting requirements for vessels issued only a federal lobster permit are being addressed in a separate rulemaking.

For more details, please read the rule as filed in the Federal Register.  Comments must be submitted by August 17, 2020 through our online e-rulemaking portal.

Public hearings slated for fish monitoring amendment

July 15, 2020 — With COVID-19 still looming, the New England Fishery Management Council has crafted an array of digital alternatives to help commercial fishermen understand the options contained in the long-discussed and critical Amendment 23 that will set monitoring levels in the groundfish fishery.

The council, which expects to take final action on the measure at its September meeting, has moved the Amendment 23 public hearings to online webinars and has produced an online tutorial to help the webinar uninitiated participate and develop informed comment. It plans a narrated digital presentation on the measure and has scheduled “Amendment 23 outreach office hours” when fishermen can call in or participate via webinar with questions for council staff.

Given the complexities of the measure, however, fishing stakeholders said the council should continue to search for a way to safely hold at least some of the remaining public hearings in person to accommodate industry members not as well versed with the digital world.

“This is such an important and significant action that we hope the council will do everything possible to hold traditional public hearings, but with safe distancing and all the other precautions we need to take,” said Jackie Odell, executive director of the Gloucester-based Northeast Seafood Coalition. “Taking it all online might be fair to some members of the industry, but not to all.”

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

Fishing the canyons: Coral amendment will expand restrictions of Atlantic monument

July 14, 2020 — A June 5 presidential proclamation ended a prohibition on commercial fishing in the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts marine national monument and returned management of the area to the New England Fishery Management Council.

“We’ve said from the beginning that fishery management councils are best suited to address the complicated tradeoffs involved in managing fisheries, and we appreciate regaining our control to do so in the monument area,” said Council Chairman Dr. John Quinn.

The nearly 5,000-square-mile Atlantic monument southeast of Cape Cod was established in 2016 by President Barack Obama. It was the first (and is currently the only) Atlantic monument. Before the designation, key areas were managed as essential fish habitat through the New England council.

On June 17, the council laid out its management of the area and announced the pending implementation of its Omnibus Deep-Sea Coral Amendment, which will expand fishing restrictions in the canyons area.

“To the best of our knowledge, zero fishing activity takes place on the seamounts,” said Janice Plante, public affairs officer for the council. “We’re not aware of any real groundfish fishing activity in the canyons portion of the monument area either.”

Read the full story at National Fisherman

Groundfish Monitoring Amendment 23 Public Outreach – July and August Lineup

July 13, 2020 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

The New England Fishery Management Council will be taking final action on Groundfish Monitoring Amendment 23 during its September meeting. The amendment is intended to improve catch monitoring and reporting in the commercial groundfish fishery.

The Council has scheduled a series of public hearings in July and August that will be held by webinar. In order to help fishermen and other stakeholders prepare for these hearings, the Council has lined up a number of outreach efforts to make it easier for everyone to participate in the webinar hearings and become more familiar with the Amendment 23 proposed alternatives in advance of the actual hearings.

“We encourage everyone to take advantage of these opportunities,” said Council Executive Director Tom Nies. “Join the practice webinar. Call our groundfish staff during the Amendment 23 office hours. Ask questions. Watch the narrated video of the presentation, which we’ll be posting online soon. We’re doing everything we can to make sure the public is aware of all the alternatives in the document and that everyone feels comfortable giving us their comments.”

Read the full release here

NEFMC Discusses Skates, Atlantic Herring, Red Hake, EBFM, Habitat, and Research Priorities at June Meeting

July 10, 2020 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

The New England Fishery Management Council met June 23-25, 2020 by webinar. In addition to the news already released about groundfish, monkfish, and scallops, here’s an overview of the other issues the Council worked on during this meeting.

Research Priorities: After considering input from its various fishery-related committees and the Scientific and Statistical Committee, the Council agreed to submit an updated list of Research Priorities and Data Needs for 2020-2024 to NOAA Fisheries.

Skates: At the end of last year, the Council tasked its Skate Committee with defining a clear problem statement, goals, and objectives for Draft Amendment 5 to the Northeast Skate Complex Fishery Management Plan (FMP). The amendment is being developed to consider whether limited access is appropriate for the skate wing and/or skate bait fisheries. The committee worked on this task in late-March using additional data provided by the Skate Plan Development Team. The Council reviewed the new problem statement, along with an additional objective, and discussed whether it wanted to continue pursuing the development of a limited access program for skates. The Council did not approve the problem statement but agreed to have the committee continue to work on its initial tasking.

Read the full release here

Fish council seeking input on monitor rule

July 6, 2020 — The New England Fishery Management Council has been toiling for two years on the amendment that would set monitoring levels for vessels in the Northeast groundfish fishery and now appears to be hitting the home stretch.

Final action on the measure — known as Amendment 23 — now is expected at the council’s September meeting. The meeting, Sept. 29 to Oct. 1,  currently is set for the Beauport Hotel Gloucester on Commercial Street, but could be shifted to a webinar depending on the state of the COVID-19 virus and its associated restrictions.

The council, which extended the public comment period to Aug. 31, already has held three public hearings via webinar on Amendment 23 and plans more in July and August. The next is scheduled for July 16 at 4 p.m. and interested participants can access all related documents in the Amendment 23 library on the council website, nefmc.org.

The council also is reaching out to commercial fishermen and other stakeholders, offering a variety of platforms to help them understand the complexities of the amendment and ease their participation in the online public hearings.

Read the full story at the Gloucester Daily Times

NEFMC Approves Scallop A21 for Webinar Hearings; Adopts 2021-2022 RSA Priorities

July 2, 2020 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

During its June 23-25, 2020 webinar meeting, the New England Fishery Management Council made decisions that helped advance the development of three important scallop fishery issues. The Council:

  • Selected several preferred alternatives for Draft Amendment 21 to the Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery Management Plan (FMP) and approved the draft for public hearings by webinar;
  • Approved 2021-2022 priorities for the Scallop Research Set-Aside (RSA) Program; and
  • Initiated Framework Adjustment 33 to the FMP to set specifications for the 2021 fishing year and default
    specifications for 2022.

Read the full release here

NEFMC Raises Concerns Over NOAA Decision on At-Sea Monitoring

June 20, 2020 — The New England Fishery Management Council (NEFMC) has written to NOAA Fisheries expressing concern over the agency’s plan to resume at-sea monitoring beginning July 1. The Council voted last week at its June meeting to deliver to NOAA its concerns with the safety and medical impact of the program.

The NEFMC is the second regional Fishery Management Council to express concerns over the observer plan. Last week, the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council wrote a letter to the agency expressing similar concerns. Together, the two councils manage the fisheries in NOAA’s Greater Atlantic region, which is the region affected by the observer order.

In its letter, the NEFMC specifically raises the concern that the potential risks of resuming at-sea monitoring—mainly the increased risk of COVID-19 exposure for both fishermen and observers—outweigh any of the program’s benefits.

“The Council understands that – under normal circumstances – observer data provide important information for both monitoring the fishery and assessing fish stocks,” the letter states. “These are not normal times.”

The Council raises further issues, including concerns from many in the industry that they were not consulted on the decision. It also questions the agency on its policy on safety issues surrounding the program, including testing observers for COVID-19; potential medical waivers for boats with at-risk crew members; quarantine practices for observers; and how on-board observer practices will be modified to minimize the risk of virus transmission.

The full letter is available here

NEFMC Schedules Groundfish Amendment 23 Final Action; Discusses COVID-19, Cod Issues

June 29, 2020 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

The New England Fishery Management Council addressed numerous groundfish-related items as it wrapped up its June 23-25, 2020 webinar meeting. Here are the highlights.

Groundfish Monitoring Amendment 23: This amendment is intended to improve catch monitoring and reporting in the commercial groundfish fishery. The Council has held three public hearings to date by webinar – one in April and two in May – and is now scheduling more public hearings for July and August. The public comment deadline has been extended through August 31, 2020. The Council will take final action at its September meeting.

Read the full release here

Monkfish: NEFMC Receives Report on Estimating Discards for TAL Calculations

June 29, 2020 — The following was released by the New England Fishery Management Council:

The New England Fishery Management Council has received a new report that provides insightful information about monkfish discards and how alternative approaches for projecting future discards might be used when setting limits on total allowable landings (TALs) in the fishery.

The Council sets monkfish specifications every three years using data from the previous three years. In September 2019, the Council signed off on 2020-2022 specifications using data from 2016-2018. Discards during that three-year period were notably higher than the past period, increasing from 13.9% to 18.2% in the Northern Monkfish Management Area and from 24% to 50.8% in the Southern Management Area.

Since discards are subtracted from the annual catch target to get to the landing limit for fishermen (see flow chart below), the large change in discard estimates was concerning, especially in the southern area, because the estimates were reflective of a high discard period that was not expected to continue in the future.

Read the full release here

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