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Reminder: August 2017 Mid-Atlantic Council Meeting in Philadelphia, PA

August 4, 2017 — The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council:

Tuesday, August 8, 2017 – Thursday, August 10, 2017

The Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council will meet next week, August 8-10, 2017, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The meeting will be held at the Courtyard Philadelphia Downtown, 21 North Juniper St., Philadelphia, PA 19107, Telephone 215-496-3200.

  • Meeting Agenda
  • Briefing Materials

The meeting will be broadcast live via webinar. For access to the webinar, go to http://mafmc.adobeconnect.com/august2017 and select “enter as guest”.

New York Offshore Wind Open Houses:

During the Council meeting, representatives from the New York State Energy and Research Development Authority (NYSERDA) will hold public open houses to provide fisheries stakeholders with an opportunity to learn about and provide input to the New York State Offshore Wind Master Plan.

NYSERDA representatives will be available for discussion at the following times:

  • Tuesday, August 8, 11:00am‐7:00pm
  • Wednesday, August 9, 8:00am‐7:00pm

The open houses will be held in the same hotel as the Council meeting (Courtyard Philadelphia Downtown) in the PHJ Library on the first floor.

Click here for additional information.

Summer flounder remains big hit throughout New Jersey

July 10, 2017 — Summer flounder seem to be holding on to their ranking as the fan favorite against a number of contenders.

Last week, Bill Mendenhall Sr. and Jr. made their trek from Downingtown, Pennsylvania, to the back bays of Margate, like they have done since forever.

They racked up 94 fish with regular partner Skip Van Lew on a rental boat from Ray Scott’s Dock in Margate to come away with two keepers both at the minimum 18 inches.

The Mendenhalls were back Monday with another fishing partner and topped both of those amazing numbers with 112 flounder and three keepers. Bill Sr. was high hook with all three keepers (picture on B8), one 20 inches long, and he racked up four doubleheaders, according to Robin Scott.

A signficant number of flounder are being caught throughout the back bays, inlets and inshore waters, but there sure seems to be a carpet of fish under the 18-inch minimum there and on the inshore lumps in the ocean.

One of the quality catches recently was reported by Sue Burns at Point Tackle in Somers Point. Dave Filarski weighed a 7.8-pound flounder he caught with a mackerel strip near the Longport Bridge. Filarski docks at Seaview Harbor Marina in Great Egg Inlet.

Another was recorded at Avalon Hodge-Podge by Rob Myers,of Pittsburgh. He weighed a 5.5-pound flounder caught in the back bays of Avalon with a minnow.

Noel Feliciano weighed five flounder Sunday, including a 4.7-pounder.

Read the full story at the Press of Atlantic City

Lawsuit takes aim at kings of the tuna industry

June 5, 2017 — Clandestine phone calls. Surreptitious emails. In-person meetings to avoid a paper trail.

The purpose of all the secrecy? To keep the price on packaged tuna — the quick source of protein found in cans and pouches — artificially high.

New details of exactly how the country’s three largest tuna companies, including Pittsburgh’s StarKist Co., allegedly spent years sharing information and collaborating are included in a pile of amended complaints submitted last month in federal court by numerous grocers, restaurants and suppliers.

It’s the latest round in an ongoing court battle alleging price fixing in the packaged seafood industry. Bumble Bee Foods and Tri-Union Seafoods, which trades under Chicken of the Sea, both based in San Diego, are also named.

The U.S. Department of Justice, which is conducting its own investigation into alleged price fixing in the industry, announced in early May that Bumble Bee Foods agreed to pay a $25 million fine after pleading guilty to conspiring with competitors to fix prices. The DOJ said the company also is cooperating with the antitrust investigation. It’s the third charge to be filed in the investigation.

The DOJ had released information that triggered the amended complaints, according to one attorney.

A spokesperson for Starkist, Chicken of the Sea and Bumble Bee declined to comment on pending litigation, but in 2016 attorneys representing StarKist urged the court to dismiss the case. They argued that it’s not unusual for people working in the same industry to know each other and to meet at industry gatherings.

But a lot of retailers are arguing that the evidence shows the exchanges were not so innocent.

The latest court documents — which are heavily redacted — include details such as Walmart and Ohio-based grocer Kroger charging that executives “used misleading subject lines on emails to affirmatively conceal the conspiratorial nature of their communications from those not involved in the conspiracy.”

Read the full story at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Regulators increase menhaden quota, which could help ease bait fish shortage

October 27, 2016 — Regulators voted Wednesday to increase the annual quota for menhaden in 2017, giving Maine lobstermen a welcome boost in the supply of a popular bait fish, but no relief for Maine fishermen who want a bigger share of the national menhaden harvest.

The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission has struggled to set its quota for the oily forage fish, also known as pogey, with members split between wanting to maintain the annual menhaden catch at 187,880 metric tons and those who say the stock has rebounded enough to raise the quota.

On Wednesday, as the commission gathered for its annual meeting in Bar Harbor, the menhaden board voted 16-2 to increase the annual quota by 6.5 percent, to 200,000 metric tons, with Pennsylvania and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service holding out for keeping the quota unchanged.

Some member states had wanted to raise the quota by 20 percent or 40 percent, saying that government scientists believe there is no chance that even an increase of that size would lead to overfishing of the population, which appears to have rebounded after years of decline.

“Science says the stock’s in good shape,” said Bill Adler of the Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association. “I find it difficult that we can deal with overfishing, we can do a good job of cutting things down, but then we have success and we don’t know what to do with it.”

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

Public invited to Open Houses on Draft Mid-Atlantic Regional Ocean Action Plan

July 5, 2016 — The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Regional Council on the Ocean:

WHAT: The Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Body (RPB) invites ocean stakeholders and the interested public to attend a series of Open Houses to be held across the region on the Draft Mid-Atlantic Regional Ocean Action Plan. The Draft Plan outlines a series of actions on how federal and state agencies, tribes and the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council may better collaborate to ensure healthy, productive, and resilient marine ecosystems and sustainable ocean uses in the Mid-Atlantic, including state and federal waters off Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York. An opportunity to provide public comment on the Draft Plan will be provided.

Prior to the Open Houses, the draft Plan will be available at:

http://www.boem.gov/Ocean-Action-Plan/

WHO: The Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Body (MidA RPB) is made up of representatives from Federal, State, and Tribal entities and the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council. It was established in 2013 to implement and advance ocean planning through improved inter- governmental coordination and stronger engagement of stakeholders, the general public, and scientific, business and technical experts to identify and address issues of importance to the region. The Open Houses will be hosted by MARCO1 on behalf of the MidA RPB.

LEARN MORE: www.MidAtlanticOcean.org/YourOceanPlan\

WHEN and WHERE:

Virginia Open House

Tuesday, July 12, 2016. 6-8pm

Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center
717 General Booth Blvd, Virginia Beach, VA 23451

New Jersey Open House

Thursday, July 14, 2016. 6-8pm

See the full advisory here

Susquehanna River: Deal reached on fish, eel passage at Conowingo Dam

May 3, 2016 — Exelon Corp. has pledged in a deal announced last Monday to work to enhance spawning fish passage at Conowingo Dam over the next 50 years, seeking to revive the Susquehanna River’s meager stocks of American shad and river herring.

The Chicago-based company and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said they had reached agreement to improve at least one of two fish lifts at Conowingo and meanwhile start trucking migratory shad and river herring upriver past it and three other dams in Pennsylvania.

The agreement comes after years of negotiations between the company and wildlife agencies and conservation groups, which were seeking to revive the once-legendary spawning runs of shad and herring. The number of returning fish each spring has been trending downward since the 1980s, and wildlife agencies and conservationists wanted Exelon to make potentially costly upgrades to fish lifts there as a condition of renewing its federal license to operate the hydroelectric facility.

The company’s license to operate Conowingo expired in 2014, but the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has extended the permit while the parties — including Maryland —attempt to hash out their differences. An even more contentious issue involves what Exelon may have to do about the buildup of nutrient-laden sediment in the dam’s reservoir, which studies have shown could complicated efforts to restore the Chesapeake Bay’s water quality.

Read the full story at the Bay Journal

PENNSYLVANIA: Exelon reaches agreement to restore fish in Susquehanna

April 29, 2016 — Efforts to improve American shad and river herring populations in the Susquehanna River have increased thanks to a 50-year agreement announced on Monday by Exelon Generation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Josh Tryninewski, a biologist for the state Fish and Boat Commission who manages the shad restoration effort, said the river’s shad population has been declining since 2001 because of limited access to adequate spawning habitats.

Shad and river herring are returning to their spawning on the Susquehanna at their lowest numbers since the 1980s, according to Exelon’s news release. The population peaked in 2001, when hundreds of thousands of shad and river herring passed Exelon’s Conowingo Dam, but that number has dwindled to 1,500 shad and 1,000 herring per year.

Read the full story from The York Dispatch in Bloomberg

October 6-8 Council Meeting in Philadelphia, PA

September 15, 2015 — The following was released by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council:

Council Meeting in Philadelphia, PA: October 6-8 

Tuesday, October 6, 2015 – Thursday, October 8, 2015

Doubletree Philadelphia Center City

237 S. Broad Street

Philadelphia, PA 19107

Telephone 215-893-1600

The public is invited to attend the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council’s October 2015 meeting to be held in Philadelphia, PA. Briefing materials for the meeting will be posted on the October 2015 Council Meeting Page. 

For online access to the meeting, go to http://mafmc.adobeconnect.com/october2015/ and select “enter as guest.”

Meeting Agenda

View as PDF

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

9:00 a.m. Council Convenes

9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.  Habitat Workshop

  • A workshop to discuss potential strategies to more fully integrate habitat into the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries Management process

12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.  Lunch

1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.  Habitat Workshop (Continued)

2:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.  Blueline Tilefish

  • Approve range of alternatives for blueline tilefish amendment

3:00 p.m. – 4:30 p.m.  Spiny Dogfish Specifications

Spiny Dogfish Committee of the Whole

  • Review SSC ABC, Monitoring Committee and AP recommendations
  • Recommend 2016 – 2018 spiny dogfish specifications and associated management measures

4:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.  Bureau of Ocean Energy Management – Brian Hooker

  • Update on recent activities

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

8:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.  Executive Committee

  • Review 2015 Implementation Plan
  • Discuss and review 2016 Implementation Plan

10:00 a.m. Council Convenes

10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.  Comprehensive Research Plan

  • Review and approve Council’s 2016-2020 Five-Year Research Priority Plan

11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.  Council Cooperative Research Plan

  • Identify research priorities for near-term cooperative research projects

12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.  Lunch

1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.  Black Sea Bass Allowable Biological Catch 2016/2017

  • Review SSC report regarding data limited methods for recommending black sea bass Acceptable Biological Catch
  • Revise 2016-2017 black sea bass catch limit recommendations if appropriate

2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.  NEFMC Framework for Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs – Michelle Bachman

  • Clam dredge exemption areas on Georges Bank and Nantucket shoals areas

3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.  Unmanaged Forage Scoping Results

  • Summary of scoping comments
  • Identify next steps

5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.  Summer Flounder Model – Pat Sullivan

  • Update on progress

Thursday, October 8, 2015

9:00 a.m.  Council Convenes

9:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.  Industry Funded Observer Amendment – GARFO

  • Identify preferred alternatives for public hearings

11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.  Ecosystem-Based Fishery Management Policy – Heather Sager

  • Review NOAA Draft Policy Statement on Ecosystem Based Fishery Management

11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.  Business Session

  • Organization Reports
    • NMFS Greater Atlantic Regional Office
    • NMFS Northeast Fisheries Science Center
    • NOAA Office of General Counsel
    • NOAA Office of Law Enforcement
    • U.S. Coast Guard
    • Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission
  • Liaison Reports
    • New England Council
    • South Atlantic Council
  • Executive Director’s Report – Chris Moore
  • Science Report – Rich Seagraves
  • Committee Reports
    • Executive Committee
    • SSC
  • Continuing and New Business

Photo gets fisherman cited for illegally catching fish

YORK, Pa. (AP) — June 30, 2015 — A Pennsylvania fisherman apparently has a Facebook photo to thank for landing him in hot water with the state Fish & Boat Commission.

The York Dispatch reports (http://bit.ly/1egAnGr ) that Juan Arevalo reeled in a 21- or 22-inch bass near the banks of the Susquehanna River the first weekend in June.

Arevalo says he was aware that it was illegal to catch a bass at that time, so he threw it back.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at the New Jersey Herald

 

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